Apple CEO Tim Cook, speaking at the 2014 WWDC, noted
that a greater percentage of Mac users upgraded to the most recent
software version than Windows users.
“It starts with dreaming the
impossible, of can we design and build a device that takes the best of
the tablet and the laptop … That's the device that we want to create.”
-Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella, May 20
“We believe you should use the right device for the moment.”
– Apple senior vice president Craig Federighi, June 2
Apple (AAPL) CEO Tim Cook spent a lot of time dissing Google’s (GOOGL) Android at the company’s developer conference this week, but he had Microsoft (MSFT) in his sights as well.
-Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella, May 20
“We believe you should use the right device for the moment.”
– Apple senior vice president Craig Federighi, June 2
Apple (AAPL) CEO Tim Cook spent a lot of time dissing Google’s (GOOGL) Android at the company’s developer conference this week, but he had Microsoft (MSFT) in his sights as well.
It wasn’t as obvious. Cook made
just one demeaning reference to Windows in the June 2 keynote
presentation, noting that only 14% of its users upgraded to the latest
version, compared to 51% of Mac users. “Need I say more?” he joked. He
was similarly oblique at a new product announcement last October when he
mocked Microsoft's purchase of Nokia.
Neither
compared with Cook's lengthy rant on Monday against Android, which
ended with a quote characterizing the world’s most popular phone
operating system as a “toxic hellstew.” (Some have questioned whether Cook had all his facts straight, however).
But a quick review of the major new features Apple decided to add
to the upcoming versions of its software for iOS devices and Mac
computers shows just how top of mind competition with Microsoft remains.
The seamless factor
While
Microsoft is trying to convince customers to buy a single device to
meet all their needs, perhaps a new Surface Pro 3 tablet, for example,
Apple is taking the opposite tack. After all, the company makes almost
all its profit on hardware sales. But Apple engineers are cleverly
seeking to make connections between iPhones, iPads and Macs so customers
still get the seamless experience Microsoft is promising. No need to
compromise on a device that does everything in a mediocre way — choose multiple devices, each the best for their size, while your data slides effortlessly among them, Apple argues.
A
new feature called Handoff will let a user start an email on their
iPhone, for example, and pick up right where they left off on their Mac
computer. Or, a spreadsheet on a Mac will be one click away when the
user shifts to their iPad. And there’s no wonky setup or configuration
process – as shown in the demo, the handoff just works, in typical Apple
fashion.
Similarly, Apple
expanded its Airdrop feature that lets users share files to include Mac
to mobile device transfers, again with no setup required. And new
options for sharing data and purchased media among family members will
make it more rewarding to keep multiple device purchases all in the
Apple family.
In a blow aimed
at both Google and Microsoft, Apple reversed course on cloud file
storage and restored users' ability to control exactly which files to
store and how to organize them. Apple eliminated its similar iDisk product a few years ago
and users were limited to storing files separately for each app. Since
then, Microsoft’s OneDrive, Google’s Google Drive, Dropbox and others
have continued to flourish. So Apple’s new iCloud Drive offers the same
features, starting with letting users save any file and have it appear
on all their devices and computers.
Slashing prices
Apple
also finally cut its previously outlandish prices for extra storage to
meet or beat competitors. Adding 50 gigabytes, or GB, currently costs
$100 a year. Under the new plan, 200 GB will cost only $48. That’s half
what Microsoft charges for the same storage. Google charges $24 for 100
GB or $120 for 1 terabyte (1,024 GB).
Cloud
file storage is one of Microsoft’s critical opportunities to leverage
its huge Office user base. Although the company is finally making iPad and Android versions of Office,
both offer only one choice for cloud file storage – Microsoft’s
OneDrive. Once the billion or so current Office users have all their
files stashed in OneDrive, they'll be more likely to stick with
Microsoft's other products, so the thinking goes. CEO Satya Nadella’s
new openness policy applies to hardware, not the cloud.
To
be sure, Microsoft appears much less threatening to Apple than Google
right now. While Android has greater market share in phones and tablets
than Apple, Microsoft’s Windows phones and tablets remain a footnote,
with less than 3% share.
Still,
new CEO Nadella seems to be making all the right moves to get Microsoft
back on track. While reviewers didn’t universally love the Surface Pro
3, it’s a huge improvement over earlier models. And the company could be
a sleeping giant in mobile if it figures out how to leverage its
customer base of more than a billion people who use Windows computers
and the Office software suite.
But what about Microsoft’s Bing
search engine? It seemed to gain greater prominence as the default in
Mac OS’s Spotlight search and iOS’s Siri Web searches.
Those
moves appeared to be designed to create more of a counter-weight to
Google, the dominant search provider, than an effort to bolster
Microsoft overall. And as Apple makes almost all its money selling
devices, revenue from search isn’t all that important. Better to ensure
no one player dominates, or better yet, play a couple of giants against
each other, sparking a costly arms race.
Meanwhile,
Apple will try to make its ecosystem of devices and software all the
more appealing. “Apple engineers platforms, device and services
together,” Cook noted at the end of the keynote presentation. “We do
this so we can create a seamless experience for our users that is
unparalleled in the industry. This is something only Apple can do.”
Or, at least, so Cook hopes.
Source: Yahoo News
Post a Comment