Windows Weekly 351 (Transcript)
Leo Laporte: It's time for Windows Weekly. Paul Thurrott, Mary Jo Foley, both here today. We're
going to talk about the latest news from Barcelona, including the Nokia X. Paul
and Mary Jo have some interesting stories about that.
Is Microsoft charging less for Windows Phone? How about Windows? And some pics of the week, too. It's all coming up next on
Windows Weekly.
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Weekly, with Paul Thurrott and Mary Jo Foley, episode
351, recorded February 26, 2014
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It's time for Windows Weekly, the
show where we talk about everything going on at Microsoft. And it was — 2013, I
think we can safely say, was a banner year for this podcast, an amazing year
full of — full of juice —
Paul Thurrott: (Laughs) What?
Mary
Jo Foley: (Laughs)
Paul: We really milked that plant for all
it was worth.
Leo: We — it was aloe everywhere. But
now, ladies and gentlemen, here we are in 2014, and people are asking: Can
Microsoft keep up the torrid pace of news and innovation that it set in 2013?
And clearly the answer is, yes.
Paul: As long as you go by the theory
that all press is good press.
Leo: Yeah.
Mary
Jo: Yeah.
Paul: (Laughs) Then they'll have no
problems.
Mary
Jo: (Laughs)
Leo: Hey, that's Paul Thurrott, back from the ski slopes. We missed you, Paul.
Paul: I missed you as well.
Leo: Took two people to replace Paul
last week. Daniel Rubino was great.
Paul: (Laughs) I had to school my
children on the ski slopes last week.
Leo: Yeah.
Paul: They were disappointed to discover
I can, in fact, ski.
Leo: Oh, man! Who knew that old guy
could actually tear up the slope?
Paul: (Laughs) Sorry,
guys. Get used to the view of my back.
Leo
and Mary Jo: (Laugh)
Leo: You know, it's really nothing to be
proud of — of something — you're very fast at falling.
Paul: (Laughs) Right, right.
Leo: I mean, that's — you know —
Paul: Gravity works well with me, Leo, is
what I'm saying.
Leo: I'm just saying. (Laughs)
Paul: Right.
Leo: It's not like you're going uphill.
(Laughs)
Paul: That's true. That was actually
particularly difficult.
Leo: (Laughs) Anyway, thanks to Peter
Bright — Dr. Pizza — and to Daniel Rubino of Windows
Phone Central — WP Central. They were great. But we're really glad to have you
back. We always miss you when you're gone, Paul. And actually, you haven't been
gone that much.
Paul: Yeah. I try to —
Leo: He doesn't want to be Wally Pipp'd.
Paul: (Laughs) I don't know what that
means, but —
Leo: It sounds good, though, doesn't it?
He's the — he was —
Paul: It sounds like something I don't
want to go for.
Leo: He was the Yankees' first baseman
before Lou Gehrig showed up.
Paul: Ah, gotcha.
Leo: Took one day off, never played
again. (Laughs) So here we are at the beginning of a new year with many new
things to talk about. Mobile World Congress is going on. Last year, you were in
Barcelona, purely by accident.
Paul: Sort of, yeah.
Leo: (Laughs) It wasn't planned. Do you wish we were there right now?
Paul: Yeah, sort of. You know, the weird
thing about this week for me is, I actually don't mind that I'm not at this
trade show. I — trade shows mostly kind of suck and are tiring. But a lot of people I know from Microsoft and the press and whatever
else are there.
Leo: Yeah.
Paul: And so I don't care about what
they're writing on their websites, but what I do get to see is what they're
doing on Facebook, and that does — that is vaguely irritating because there's some good restaurants and things over there, so —
Leo: Aw. One of the
best cities in the world, yeah. But I think, also, a lot of big
announcements — and I know you would have been the first on your feet during
Stephen Elop's speech to say, "Damn you, Nokia!
Damn you!"
Paul: Oh, no, I would have said — what is
it? — "Emperor Tyrannus!" And I would have
jumped on the stage —
Leo: (Laughs) "Tyrannus!"
You were tweeting a little bit about the whole thing. So — I thought, by the
way — and I want to commend Stephen Elop because we've
seen some mighty bad presentations from companies like Samsung and Samsung that
—
Paul
and Mary Jo: (Laugh)
Leo: — that try — and even Apple doesn't
have — has lost —
Paul: By the way, that — I don't — what
was — was it the S-4 announcement last year that had the dancers and —
Leo: Yeah, S-4. Yeah.
Paul: That was the dumbest —
Leo: The worst.
Paul: — fricking thing I've ever seen in my life press event ever. Ever.
Leo: Set a new low that companies would
be hard-pressed to accomplish. I kept thinking on Samsung's announcement this
week, Where's the dancing kid? Where is the tap-dancing kid?
Paul: Yes. Where's the cast from Chicago?
Leo
and Mary Jo: (Laugh)
Paul: Yeah, it was that — I will never —
I —
Leo: Wasn't that amazing?
Paul: Yeah.
Leo: Well, Samsung apparently learned
because — and we were a little worried because at the beginning of the Samsung
event, which was on Monday, we were a little nervous because it started with
chamber music. They had a whole orchestra there. And we thought, Oh, this doesn't bode well. The Broadway sets —
Paul: No, they reined it in.
Leo: But they reined it in.
Paul: Yeah.
Leo: Nevertheless, —
Mary
Jo: They could have had some dancing
Band-Aids, but they didn't.
Leo: Yeah, right. They could have —
Paul: Reined it in, you know, within
reason.
Leo: (Laughs) So but I — but I began
this to say that I thought Mr. Elop did a very nice
job of the Moto X announcements. He had more phones to announce than almost
anybody — he had one, two, three, four, five — I think, five phones to announce,
did it all in forty-five minutes, did not do a lot of fluff, did not do a lot
of hype, and —
Paul: By the way, he usually — he and
they, they being Nokia, usually do a pretty good job.
Leo: They did a great job — positioned
them, I thought, quite well —
Paul: Yep.
Leo: They started with the 220, which is
— now, by the way, this is still the Nokia that is owned by a Finnish company.
Mary
Jo: Right.
Paul: Yeah.
Leo: This is not the post-Microsoft
Nokia.
Mary
Jo: No.
Paul: Not yet.
Mary
Jo: That still has not been approved,
that transaction, so —
Leo: And in fact, Mary Jo thinks this
might have something to do with what you saw.
Mary
Jo: Perhaps, yes.
Leo: So they announced the 220, which is
a very, very low-end, 35-euro device for — really, for the poorest countries.
Paul: This is a dumbphone.
This is the Nokia-branded —
Leo: Feature phone, yeah.
Mary
Jo: Right.
Paul: Feature phone. Is it a feature
phone or just a phone-phone?
Leo: Well, I mean, it has —
Paul: So are you talking about an Asha
phone, or —
Leo: It's — it's not an Asha, is it?
It's a —
Mary
Jo: Right. There was one that wasn't
even an Asha phone, right?
Leo: Yeah, the 220.
Mary
Jo: It was below that, even.
Paul: Just a Nokia phone.
Leo: But I think it is Cymbian of some —
Paul: I think these things are in boxes
of Cheerios when you live in, like, Nigeria or Mongolia or something.
Leo: (Laughs) That was the 220.
Paul: They just pop out with the milk,
you know.
Leo: They did announce a new Asha model.
And then — but most — we don't really care about any of that. And Microsoft
will own both those phones when the acquisition goes through.
Paul: Lucky them.
Leo: (Laughs) Hey, it's a market.
Mary
Jo: It is.
Leo: These are big markets. But then the
Moto — I'm sorry, I want to say "Moto X's."
The Nokia X's: the XL and the X-fit and the X — I don't know what else.
Paul: They're going to have a U.S.
version; it's going to be called the 2XL.
Leo
and Mary Jo: (Laugh)
Leo: Programmer sized. Actually — so
that was one thing that we learned is that there is no U.S. version for these.
These are really phones designed for emerging markets. They are, but this is —
I —
Paul: Well, they sort of — I mean — by
the way, the interesting little side note there is: not available in North
America —
Leo: Yeah.
Paul: — not available in Japan —
Leo: Yeah.
Paul: — And I
want to say the third place was —
Mary
Jo: Korea. It's Korea.
Paul: — Hong Kong or Taiwan or something.
Leo: Korea.
Mary
Jo: No. Korea.
Paul: Korea. So it's — that says to me
that it could be available in Europe.
Leo: Could be.
Mary
Jo: It is going to be, I think. In some countries, at least.
Leo: And —
Paul: So it's not completely emerging
markets, but it's — yeah, yeah. Price-sensitive markets, maybe.
Mary
Jo: They call them "growth
markets."
Leo: Yeah, I think that's a better —
Paul: I call them "third-world-y
markets."
Leo: (Laughs) Third-worldish.
I think "growth" is a good way to put it because, really, what's
going on here is that all or much of the growth for smartphones has happened in
Europe and America and Asia; but there's a lot of growth still to go.
Paul: Yeah.
Leo: In other — well, parts of Asia,
like India and China, and Africa, there's a lot of growth to go. And so that's,
I think, why "growth markets" is a good way to put it. These are the
markets where smartphone saturation hasn't hit. I thought — now, you guys
completely disagree with me, but I thought these were a very credible attempt.
Paul: Mary Jo may not completely disagree
with you. How do you feel about these phones?
Mary
Jo: So the first thing I want to say,
before we talk any more about this, is I'm not defending what Microsoft's doing
with this and Microsoft's —
Paul: Appeaser! Appeaser!
Leo: Microsoft hasn't done anything with
this, right?
Mary
Jo: Right. But so many people attacked us
on Twitter this week, saying, like, "I can't believe" — just because
I was trying to explain what was announced, I was attacked. Like, "I can't
believe you're backing the play." I'm not backing the play. I just want to
say that. I'm just explaining the play. (Laughs)
Leo: I think — okay, I will back the
play. Mary Jo and Paul don't back the play.
Mary
Jo: You will? Okay.
Leo: I will back the play. I think this
is exactly —
Mary
Jo: Okay. I will not back the play.
Leo: Okay. So let's talk about it, then.
Mary
Jo: Okay.
Leo: So it seems to me, these are phones
designed to be very low-cost, to get people into the Microsoft ecosystem of
Bing and OneDrive, of XBOX Music. This is to ease
them in gently —
Paul: Yep.
Leo: They are Android phones, I admit,
but there's no Google Mobile Services built in, it's all Microsoft Mobile —
Paul: But I don't understand — you know,
so I get that these are very price-conscious markets. I get that it's possible
these devices will come down further than the other ones. Whatever, I get all
that stuff. But how much could Windows Phone cost? I mean, and how much could
Windows Cost Microsoft when Microsoft owns Nokia? I don't quite understand —
Leo: So you're — you believe that what
they should have done is, instead of using Android, they should have just done
it with Windows Phone.
Paul: Yeah. I mean, I would even say — if
you look at Nokia X and this kind of simplified UI that they have, why not have
— why couldn't that be a front end on top of Windows Phone? I mean, why not run that — why not — you already have all these Windows
Phone apps. I don't understand —
Mary
Jo: I don't think this is about the
cost of the operating system. I don't.
Paul: No?
Mary
Jo: I think this is about Microsoft —
sorry, I keep saying Microsoft; I should be saying Nokia — Nokia saying,
"We're never going to catch up on apps, to Google." And I think the
play is actually about apps, and it's not about OS.
Leo: I agree 100 percent. In fact,
that's why —
Paul: But —
Leo: — Elop made a big deal about how easy it would be for developers to modify their apps
so that they could be in the Nokia app store.
Mary
Jo: Right.
Paul: But why would they?
Mary
Jo: If they — yeah.
Paul: And —
Mary
Jo: Why would you? Because
it's one more market. If it takes you eight hours —
Leo: Growth markets.
Mary
Jo: (Laughs) Yeah.
Leo: Growth markets.
Mary
Jo: If it takes you eight hours to put
your app in the app store —
Paul: I don't know. I don't think there's
anything that separates — the problem is — the problem is, if Google decides to jump into this market, it's over. If Google offers Google
Play services in the same markets, it's over.
Leo: Well, perhaps —
Mary
Jo: Maybe, maybe not.
Leo: — but first of all, Google got out
of the mobile phone business pretty effectively; and second, this is — this is
— they have a — they can steal a jump on Google. You're right — if they don't
do it, Google will. So if you're going to try, try now. Go for it.
Mary
Jo: Yeah. And I think —
Paul: I agree, it's sort of turns the
Chrome OS thing on its head, right? It's —
Mary
Jo: It does. It does.
Paul: "Let's use their stuff against
them" kind of thing.
Mary
Jo: Right.
Paul: It's interesting.
Mary
Jo: Yeah. I mean, I think it gives
Windows Phone —
Leo: Also, somebody's saying one more
thing: Windows Phone, multiple SIM support.
Paul: Well, that's coming in A1.
Mary
Jo: It is.
Leo: It's not there now.
Paul: Well, but — (Laughs) it will be
there by the time these phones show up. I mean —
Mary
Jo: Yeah.
Leo: It will? Okay. All
right.
Mary
Jo: Yeah. I don't think it, again, is
about the hardware and I don't think it's about the operating system. I think
it's about the apps. And I think this gives Windows Phone developers — of
course it makes them angry. I would be angry, too, if I were one of you. But I
— but it also gives you a chance to make your app better so that people will —
you know, they might try the Google version, but if you have an app that's
comparable or better, it gives you an — it gives you an audience entryway.
Like, you're going to be — see your apps before these people in the store who
might only know about Google apps, and now they have a chance to look at your
app, too.
Leo: I — in fact —
Paul: I guess —
Leo: — I think this is good for — I'm
surprised developers would be angry. That's a short-term point of view. I
understand they are.
Mary
Jo: Oh, they're very angry. (Laughs)
Paul: There's so much — there's so much
here, though. And you know, all of the rumors about
this thing were basically wrong, right? At one point, some people believed that
this was going to be — that this was something old. You know, that they had
been working on Android before they did Windows Phone, and that this was some
kind of legacy from that. Some people, myself included, assumed that this thing
was an Asha replacement and that — you know, okay, that makes a certain amount
of sense. Bringing this in as yet another mobile phone platform at Nokia is a
little strange. I mean, especially given the timing. You know?
Mary
Jo: Yeah.
Leo: Well, and my — yeah. I mean, obviously
this was stuff done long before the acquisition deal happened. They could have
stopped it. They could have said, "Never mind."
Paul: I mean, [unintelligible] over on
the Microsoft side were talking about three OS's are too much.
Leo: Yeah.
Paul: Now we have six. (Laughs) I mean,
it's — it's a little strange.
Leo: I think we — I think you're going
to look back in three years and say it was a brilliant move. Because — and
here's the scenario I see. You're going to move a lot of people with their
first smartphone into the Microsoft services sphere. Admittedly, not the
Microsoft OS, but remember, it looks a lot like Windows Phone.
Paul: Yeah.
Leo: And then it will be a natural step
for them — you know, you've got lock-in. Apple learned
this. You've got lock-in. People don't care about operating systems.
Mary
Jo: Right.
Leo: That doesn't matter. You've got
lock-in. You've got them in OneDrive, you've got them
in XBOX Music, you've got them in Bing Search, and now they're going to look at
their next phone. They don't care what operating system it is.
Paul: As long as their stuff is there.
Leo: As long as their stuff is there.
Paul: Actually, that I agree with. I will
say that, especially in this market, you spend a hundred bucks on a phone, 125
bucks on a phone, whatever it is. That's not where anyone's making money, ever.
Mary
Jo: Yeah.
Paul: There's no money being made on that
thing. The money is made on the services, the lock-in type stuff — it is that
stuff. And the — yeah, I agree with that. If you're using outlook.com for
email, using SkyDrive, using Sky — all that kind of stuff, I — yeah, you want
those people to stay on your platforms. That's more meaningful than — yeah,
than the OS.
Mary
Jo: Right.
Paul: And this is kind of the argument we
make about Windows, too, and how there isn't a lot of new application
development on the desktop, and that's just the reality. So what's more
important here? Do we push Office everywhere, or do we worry about this Windows
brand that's sort of a legacy, traditional thing?
Leo: And I think that this is them
saying, "We've got to do this before Google does." Because the same
lock-in can happen on a true Android experience with a Google phone if Google
should do it. So do it now. Get them. This is a race at this point.
Mary
Jo: Yeah. I think —
Leo: And if you're a Windows Phone
developer, this is going to be good for you in the long run.
Paul: But I'd feel less weird about this
if Microsoft wasn't buying Nokia. (Laughs) You know?
Mary
Jo: Yeah.
Paul: If that one thing wasn't happening,
I think 50 percent of my issue with this would just be blown away. I —
Leo: Oh, I bet you —
Paul: Microsoft inheriting this thing is
so weird.
Leo: I bet you — in fact, you know this
happened. Stephen Elop walked into Satya Nadella's office and said,
"Look, we've got these. We can announce them. We can take a write-off.
What do you want me to do?" And I think this is Nadella's strategy. This fits — what is Nadella all about? Devices and services.
Mary
Jo: Yeah. I think this predates him,
though. I think it was —
Leo: Is it Ballmer? You think this is
Ballmer's last —
Mary
Jo: Yeah, I do. I think, if you look at the actual wording of the press release
when Microsoft agreed to buy Nokia, it was very vague around "Nokia mobile
devices." I think Microsoft — and I've seen some other people say this,
it's not me originating this idea, but some people said maybe Nokia went to
Microsoft and said, "Buy us because we're about to launch an Android
phone, and if you don't, we're going to be up against you."
Leo: Well, that was the rumor, wasn't
it?
Mary
Jo: Yep. Play hardball, right? (Laughs)
Leo: At the time —
Paul: Maybe Steven Elop said, "Listen, I want to be CEO, and if I'm not, I'm launching a line of
Android phones and you can go screw yourselves."
Leo
and Mary Jo: (Laugh)
Mary
Jo: I've seen people say that, too. I
don't agree with that one, but — (Laughs)
Paul: I mean, that's crazy, obviously.
Leo: I don't think — you know, the
kernel — what does it matter what the kernel of the operating system is —
Mary
Jo: Right.
Leo: — as long as you get in the
Microsoft ecosystem, I think it's a win.
Paul: Oh, that's a — by the way — so
you're right, but I just want to be clear. To an entire generation of Microsoft
people and to people who follow Microsoft, what you just said is, Here, see, and we are going
to burn you at the stake for that."
Mary
Jo: (Laughs)
Leo: But it's — but I think Satya Nadella recognizes — and
maybe Ballmer did too — and after all, it was Ballmer that renamed the company
a devices and services company — that the platform is no longer desktop
software, desktop operating systems.
Paul: Right, yeah.
Leo: It's services.8 That's the platform.
Paul: And I've been saying this forever.
I mean, "devices" doesn't mean "always
Microsoft devices." I mean, there will be Microsoft devices, but what it
really means is "Microsoft software running on devices." And
sometimes, those operating systems are going to be made by Apple, they're going
to be made by Google. You know, whatever.
Leo: Exactly.
Mary
Jo: I think you have to go back to
Leo's point, which is really good. It's like, which of
the two things is stickier for users, services or the apps, right? So if you
put an Android phone with Google apps running Microsoft services into the
market, you get people stuck on SkyDrive and XBOX Music, and — sorry, not
SkyDrive, OneDrive. You know, you get them hooked
into these things — outlook.com, right? Finally, when it's time for their next
phone, they're going to be like, "I need something that runs those
services." I think that's the hope.
Leo: So if you're a Windows Phone
developer, what you should be looking to do is making sure you have a version
on the Android — Nokia Android store.
Paul: That's a little bit of a leap, by
the way. I mean — and this is one area I've not looked into, but what is
Nokia's developer story for Windows Phone developers on this platform? Is there
some porting tool, some cross-platform something? I — is there? It could be in the future, but —
Mary
Jo: I haven't heard any story. I
haven't heard a story for Windows Phone developers. I have heard —
Paul: So then you basically need to learn
how to program for Android.
Mary
Jo: The story — the people that are
going after the Android developers —
Leo: Who really — I mean, come on. Which
would you rather have, the Windows Phone developers or the Android developers?
(Laughs)
Mary
Jo: And they've already got the Windows
Phone developers.
Leo: (Laughs) Which group do you want?
Paul: Yeah, listen, I'm — I have to take
that stance, Leo. I hear you, I guess is what I'm saying, but —
Mary
Jo: But I bet they will have a
back-porting — or a porting kit, right?
Leo: Of course they will.
Paul: Of course they will.
Mary
Jo: They're going to have something
like that.
Paul: The thing is — I mean, I've often
thought this for the Apple stuff, too. Microsoft's developer tools are so much
better than anything that's out there in the world, and that if they could
create a situation where you could have a project that would —
Leo: Right. Cross-platform,
yeah.
Paul: — make an iPhone app or an iPod app
or an Android app and share code, that would be
amazing. It would be amazing.
Leo: We will know over the next few
months if that's what's going on. You'll go to Build and you'll see that, right? I mean, it's such a —
Mary
Jo: Yeah, I bet we will.
Leo: Yeah. So you'll know if this is a
strategy — if this is a long-term strategy. Here's the risk, and the chatroom's already pinpointed it. If you do get developers
moving over to Android, then you might as well write off Windows Phone.
Paul: Yeah.
Mary
Jo: Yeah.
Leo: Might — you know, just say,
"Why are we still making Windows Phone? Why don't we just make Android
phones?" But I wouldn't do that because I think Windows Phone is really —
Paul: Listen, Martin Luther. I'm getting
tired of your attitude over there.
Leo: (Laughs) I — okay you're going to
like this.
Paul
and Mary Jo: (Laugh)
Leo: Windows Phone is probably the best
mobile operating system out there. It's clean, it's fast, it's efficient. The only thing lacking right now in the ecosystem is apps.
Paul: Yeah.
Leo: Microsoft's services are the most
important part to them going forward.
Mary
Jo: Yeah.
Leo: They need to make an enterprise
phone that works with their services. They need — I mean, they need to get
growth markets, they —
Paul: Oh, I — yeah. I keep waiting for
the little things. You know, those Bing apps that I think you guys probably
talked about last week showing up on iPhone and on Android. You know, things like that. I mean, these are not tectonic
shifts or anything, but I think when you see those kinds of apps start
appearing from Microsoft, that's going to indicate the tsunami is coming, that
these are the early — early warning signals, you know?
Mary
Jo: Yeah. I'm going to say something.
More blasphemy here, but I think the way to cover Microsoft these days if
you're a Microsoft reporter — and if you're a Microsoft developer or a customer
to think about them — is, everything that you think is
the opposite of what you always knew is true is now the reality. Like, we
shouldn't be surprised anymore.
Leo: It's Bizarro World.
Mary
Jo: It's Bizarro World, right. And I saw so many people, right up until Nokia announced these
phones, these X phones — they were saying, "This is not going to happen.
There's no way this is going to happen." And all the evidence was to the
contrary. Again, you're going to see Microsoft do things like Office on the
iPad. You're going to see things that we never thought we would see. But just
remember: it's a really different Microsoft than the Microsoft we all know as
the Windows and Office company. Different
company.
Paul: It's like watching a chimp ride a
bicycle.
Mary
Jo: (Laughs)
Leo: It's the first good news about
Microsoft in years, I think.
Paul: Yeah.
Leo: It's the first thing that Microsoft's
done that gives it a future.
Paul: Wow.
Leo: I'm —
Mary
Jo: But, you know, the part, again, I
think is the hardest part that they haven't made a good sell on is, What do you tell your developers who've bet on your
platform? The people who've —
Paul: Right. And what's the transition
plan, here?
Mary
Jo: I know.
Paul: That's part of what I was trying to
bring up earlier. I mean, they've done this thing where they —
Leo: No, I think you're right, but when
has Microsoft really shown much care for those people?
Mary
Jo: Oh, they love developers.
Leo: Oh, okay.
Mary
Jo: And they have — I mean, they've made some mistakes, like Silverlight, right?
Paul: You know what, though? They love
developers, but —
Mary
Jo: Yeah, they love developers, but —
Paul: — developers, by and large, have
not followed them to these newer platforms. We've been talking about this
forever. You know, it started, kind of, with Longhorn. I mean, basically, the
first attempt to get by Win 32, everything has had
kind of a muted response. And as they move forward with .net and the WinFX stuff that turned into — whatever the — I don't
really follow the transition there — Avalon and WPF and WCF and yadda yadda yadda.
And now we have WinRT and WinPRT and all that stuff. I mean, it's a lot of churn, a lot of similarities, some
good languages — Typescript now and C-sharp and all that stuff. It's all great,
but none of this stuff applies to Android at all. I mean, they need to — that's
going to be the interesting bit. Maybe that's what happens at Build. Maybe
start talking about that stuff. I mean, that would be another part of that
tsunami. If that's the next transition, we're on the part of the map that has a
picture of a dragon on it. We don't know what's going on out there. Yeah.
Mary
Jo: (Laughs) Chris Winthrop brings up a
really good point when we were talking about the developer strategy. You know
who was all in the camp here this week was Xamarin,
right? Xamarin's already got tools to help people —
Leo: Yeah, this is good news for them,
for sure.
Mary
Jo: Right. So they're helping people
port apps —
Paul: Yeah, someone on Twitter made the —
go ahead. I'm sorry.
Mary
Jo: Oh, I was just going to say, Xamarin's already got components for people to start
porting apps to the Nokia X. Microsoft and Xamarin have been getting tighter and tighter ties between the two.
Paul: Right.
Mary
Jo: So maybe Xamarin's a part of this strategy to kind of bridge the gap.
Paul: Yeah, we hung around with Miguel
last year at Build for a little while —
Mary
Jo: Yep.
Paul: — and Microsoft's been trying to
get him over there for literally a decade.
Leo: Miguel de Icaza,
who was, for a while, a Linux widget developer.
Paul: Yeah. But he's all — .net on Linux.
Leo: Did the first .net on Linux, and Xamarin is now .net everywhere.
Paul: So he's an awesome guy, and
obviously a smart guy, but — I mean, if this is what they're going, they — that
needs to become part of the Microsoft stack. I mean, I —
Leo: And it's — Web9405 in the chatroom makes a good point. Nokia X is nowhere going to
eat Microsoft Windows Phone market share, is it?
Paul: Well, except for one thing. So —
and that's part of something we'll talk about a little — in a little while. So
yeah, I think when you look at the market now, you say, "Well, these
things aren't really competing in the same place." Actually, that's not
completely true, and so — we'll get to that the next —
Leo: Okay. Good. I think it's — I think
— so remember how I began the show? "Oh, 2013, what a year, what a
banner" — 2014's going to be even more interesting.
Paul: Yeah. It's February. (Laughs)
Leo: You're watching a company in
transition. We've seen so many companies, like Kodak, attempt to make a
transition like this and fail, but I am impressed. I feel like this is what
Microsoft needed to do. It recognized — perhaps a little late —
Paul: Yeah. You know what?
Leo: — but it recognized that desktop
software wasn't the future.
Paul: Microsoft may fail at all this
stuff, but I think you could even go back to Windows 8, as much as we hate to
give credit there. But you may disagree with the whole Windows 8 strategy, and
you may not like Windows 8 and all that, and I get that. But give them a little
bit of credit for saying, "We need to move quick and do this. We've got to do this right now. Like, we need to change this
now." And I think a lot of us don't like the way it turned out, but this
is a company that by all rights should be moving as slowly as possible and
protecting its turf and circling the wagons and all — whatever that is. But they
are getting out there and doing this stuff, so yeah.
Mary
Jo: Yeah. Remember, John Thompson, who
was leading the CEO search, supposedly — according to the Wall Street Journal —
said to Ballmer, "We have to stop being so slow. You've got to make some
decisions here. Let's go."
Leo: Yeah.
Mary
Jo: And they've been doing that since
last year.
Leo: And that means being bold. And you
know what? It could fail. Nobody's saying it's not — it's foolproof.
Paul: Yeah, it could fail.
Leo: And Paul is very aware of all the risks
because that's his — that's the kind of guy he is.
Paul: (Laughs) Of course. I'm risk
averse.
Leo: "It's not going to go
well." (Laughs)
Paul: Yes, I abhor change, and I am
afraid of risks, yes.
Mary
Jo: (Laughs)
Leo: But, you know — and I — you guys
are — this is your beat.
Mary
Jo: Right.
Leo: And so you're way ahead of me on
this one, but I like it when this — I love it when a plan comes together.
(Laughs) And I'm slow.
Paul: I like to think there is a plan.
Leo: And you have history that shows that
maybe there isn't, but I just think sometimes you see disparate moves by a
company, and then suddenly they start to make sense. And I think that that's
the stage we're going to be in for the next few months, and we'll see if it's
at Build. And you're right, Paul —
Paul: Honestly —
Leo: — Microsoft history is not good,
but maybe —
Paul: We talked — Mary Jo and I both
talked to different parts of the company at different times, and I think she
would agree that one of the things you hear from a lot of these people, whether
it's, you know, maybe the Lync guys or Office general or whatever, they really
do talk about how this "devices and services" thing is a big deal for
them, and how important it is and how it impacts — it's not just some bologna that
the mothership's talking about. Like, "We're
putting our apps everywhere that it makes sense." And there are many
things you could look back on 2013, but if you were to compare, say, the
Microsoft mobile app collection that was available at the beginning of last year
to the beginning of this year, I think you would see astronomical growth there
on both iOS and Android, not just Windows.
Leo: Yeah. And Microsoft was at risk of
losing everything. You know, the world was changing out from underneath it, and
the fact that they — they're not famous for being quick on this. They didn't
recognize the Internet until 1995. But when — but —
Paul: And even then, they were kind of
half-assed.
Mary
Jo: (Laughs)
Leo: And even then, they weren't sure
they believed it.
Paul: Yeah.
Leo: But this —
Paul: Well, they went with everyone's
favorite browser program. Spyglass, was it called?
Leo
and Mary Jo: (Laugh)
Paul: Seriously. Like — (Laughs) I wrote
a better browser in Visual Basic III. You know, that
thing. But anyway, you know, they did what they did.
Mary
Jo: I think the biggest risk in this
whole bold strategy is whether or not users in these growth countries want
Microsoft services, right?
Paul: Yeah.
Mary
Jo: Do they really want to go to the
Nokia store, or do they already have stores that they're using and comfortable
with?
Paul: Maybe you're looking at it from the
wrong angle, though, right? Because those people know Nokia
devices.
Leo: I mean, you've got to — don't you
presume they're coming from feature phones? Yeah.
Mary
Jo: Yeah, I mean —
Leo: They're probably from —
Paul: They may just use what comes on the
phone.
Leo: Right.
Paul: In other words, if you got a Nokia
device —
Mary
Jo: They might — but they can also —
yeah. They're — Nokia has said they're going to support third-party app stores
for these devices, and there's going to be side-loading of apps possible, too.
But yeah, I mean, I'm just thinking, like, in China, do people want OneDrive? Do they want XBOX Music? Or have they already
decided on services that are different from this, and it's going to be hard to
unseat those?
Leo: Well, you're screwed if that's the
case, anyway. Whatever you do.
Paul: Yep.
Mary
Jo: Right.
Leo: So you're right, it could be over
anyway.
Paul: Oh, but now you're on the device
next to that stuff, and —
Leo: But go all in on Azure, this is it.
Mary
Jo: Yeah.
Paul: So I don't know how these new
phones are set up, but I would imagine that they're set up to back up your
photos to OneDrive or something like we have on
Windows Phone, and frankly, if that's something that's built in and easy to
enable, and it's not something you can enable on some other storage thing on
that phone, then you're going to use that and suddenly you've got a reason to
care about OneDrive because your stuff is there.
Leo: Yeah.
Mary
Jo: Yeah.
Paul: I don't know.
Mary
Jo: It's a bold strategy, definitely
bold. And we have been hearing talk right up until Mobile World Congress, — and
we're still hearing it — that even the Windows teams and the Windows Phone
teams inside Microsoft have thought about and have explored and are exploring
the idea of putting Android apps on those devices. So it's a totally new world. Crazy new world. And maybe this Nokia X strategy will
give them some — either clues or ideas, leverage. Or maybe they won't need to
do this now because of those devices. So yeah, it's all — everything's in play.
Everything's in play.
Leo: And that's the world that Satya Nadella's inheriting, and I
think a bold strategy is called for and I — Yeah, I think you're — I think it's
interesting that John Thompson was calling for this in a way, right?
Mary
Jo: Yep.
Leo: "Let's move. Move, move, move!"
Mary
Jo: Right.
Leo: And this all — now that Ballmer
transitioned, it kind of all makes sense.
Mary
Jo: They were both kind of like,
"Maybe." (Laughs)
Paul: They were kind of — yeah, it's
like, okay.
Leo: Well, isn't Nadella a services enterprise guy?
Paul: Oh, yeah, sure.
Mary
Jo: He is.
Leo: What I was afraid of —
Paul: The problem is, we haven't really —
I mean, there's been a lot of vague talk, right?
Leo: No, I know.
Paul: Yeah, mobile first — yeah, yeah, we
get it.
Leo: He said, "Software, software,
software," though.
Mary
Jo: He did.
Paul: Yeah, and I like that. I like that.
Leo: I feel like — you're right, we
don't know this guy.
Paul: Well, maybe build is going to be
the first big —
Leo: This is the thing to watch, is
Build.
Paul: Yeah. I don't know, maybe he shows
up at Build, right?
Leo: He should.
Mary
Jo: Right. Yeah,
totally.
Paul: Oh, he should.
Leo: Did Ballmer not show up at Build?
Paul: No, he did. That was an awesome —
Mary
Jo: No, the last build, it was great.
Paul: That was his best keynote ever.
Leo: Yeah.
Mary
Jo: Yeah. He did the keynote.
Leo: Oh, no doubt. Nadella's got to be there.
Mary
Jo: Yeah.
Leo: For me — and this is selfish
because my only interest is that we get an interesting story to tell for years
to come. (Laughs)
Paul: Oh, Leo, this is going to be
interesting no matter what happens, I think.
Mary
Jo: Yeah, it is.
Leo: Right. Exactly.
Paul: I can guarantee you that.
Leo: I feared a fairly dull story
Microsoft's been a dull story for some time — witness the stock price. Last
year shook everybody up. I feared a Microsoft that moved into IBM territory,
that just became an enterprise company —
Paul: Yeah. I — listen. There's an
inherent hypocrisy to my advice: Maybe Microsoft should give up on the consumer
stuff. I mean, they're so good at the business stuff, you know?
Leo: (Laughs) Right, right.
Paul: The second they do that, they
become incredibly uninteresting to me.
Leo: Boring. And then you're stuck.
Mary
Jo: Wait a minute,
guys. [unintelligible] come on.
Leo: (Laughs)
Mary
Jo: Let's get real, here. (Laughs)
Leo: Mary Jo loves the enterprise.
Mary
Jo: The enterprise is not boring. SharePoint?
Paul: Too much [unintelligible], I can't
take it!
Leo: (Laughs) That's why you're here, Mary Jo. You're here to remind us that enterprise can be
scintillating.
Mary
Jo: Enterprise pays the bills, my
friends.
Leo: It does.
Paul: Let me just provide some load-out
advice from Call of Duty.
Mary Jo and Leo: (Laugh)
Leo: Hey, I've been playing Titanfall. I was pissed, though.
Paul: Yeah?
Leo: I didn't know that the beta would
run out.
Paul: Yes.
Leo: So I only played a couple of
rounds. I did the whole tutorial —
Paul: It's basically, like, three days.
Leo: Yeah, it was brief. I'm pissed! Now
they got me, though. March 11, I'm in line at Gamestop.
(Laughs) Anyway, speaking of Load-outs —
Paul: Yes.
Leo: Okay. Because
that's kind of part of the fun of it. You can hear the — can you hear
the rhythm of the falling rain?
Paul: Oh.
Leo: (Sings) Tellin'
me what a fool I've been ...
Paul: Is it really raining?
Leo: Yeah, it's pouring.
Mary
Jo: Oh, wow.
Leo: Yeah, we're happy. We need it. You
know, it's been so — oh, it's horrible. It's been, like, 75 degrees every day
and the sun's been shining. It's just terrible.
Mary
Jo: Stop.
Leo: I'm done.
Paul: Leo.
Leo
and Mary Jo: (Laugh)
Leo: That's so mean.
Mary
Jo: It's only been 22 here, so —
Paul: Speaking from the one part of the
planet that has been experiencing lower than normal temperatures for the past
six weeks in a row —
Leo: So mean of me.
Paul: — I'd like to kindly suggest that
you go — no. (Laughs)
Mary
Jo: It was snowing here again this
morning.
Leo: I'm a bad, bad man, I know. I'm
just teasing you.
Mary
Jo: You're a bad —
Leo: I watch Good Morning —
Paul: You know it's 8 degrees out today, right, Leo?
Leo: Yes, I do. I watch Good Morning
America just to look out the window — I don't look at the show or the anchors.
I just look out the window and say, "Oh, look at that! Times Square! It's
snowing there, look at that!"
Paul: I actually think the northeast part
of this country is sinking into the ground and it's just going to disappear.
Leo: (Laughs) We're going to take a break, come back with more. There is so much to talk about. I
love it. And that's why, from a purely selfish point of view, I just want
Microsoft to shake the world up. Shake it up.
Paul: (Laughs)
Leo: And that's what they're doing. But
you want — you know, that's exciting. And I think
Build will be so interesting this year. You guys are coming down, right?
Paul: Yep.
Mary
Jo: Yep.
Leo: Yeah. We should do something at
Build. It'd be fun.
Mary
Jo: Yes.
Paul: We were just talking about that.
Yeah, we've got to figure that out.
Leo: Yeah, yeah, yep.
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Leo Laporte with Paul Thurrott and Mary Jo Foley. We're talking Microsoft and Windows
and phones. You know, one thing we didn't talk about —
do you think Microsoft, A. Knew about it? Yeah; B. Supported it; or C. Do you
think they're just going to say — as soon as this acquisition goes through —
which I guess is, what, soon — they'll go, "Okay, thanks, guys." And
(makes a raspberry noise) that's it for the Moto — for the Nokia X.
Paul: They had to have talked.
Leo: They had to know, right?
Mary
Jo: They definitely know. (Laughs)
Paul: Not just — no, they definitely
knew.
Mary
Jo: Yeah, I mean —
Paul: They had to have talked about the
future.
Leo: But wait a minute. Isn't there — as
I remember, when there's an acquisition, a quiet period?
Mary
Jo: There is.
Leo: Where it's — Microsoft does not get
to say to the company they're acquiring what to do. They can't give them —
Paul: Oh, no, of course not. You can't.
But —
Mary
Jo: No.
Paul: But come on. I mean —
Leo: (Laughs)
Paul: I —
Mary
Jo: I mean, the day these phones were
announced, Skype announced they had a version of Skype to support them, okay?
Leo: Oh. Okay.
Mary
Jo: They talked. (Laughs)
Leo: Oh, okay. There you go. That's a
way of tacitly giving approval, isn't it?
Mary
Jo: Yeah. And also, they had the
developer day for the — for Nokia the second day, right after the phones were
announced. And Microsoft people were presenting.
Leo: Right, right.
Mary
Jo: So they knew. Come on. (Laughs)
They couldn't tell the —
Paul: Well, and I would take it a step
further. They didn't just know; I think this tells us, tacitly, that they're
not going to get rid of it.
Leo: The Skype thing?
Paul: The Nokia X line. Like, in other
words, they're not going to kill it the second the deal goes through.
Leo: Right.
Paul: I would think.
Mary
Jo: No. You know what I was trying to
remember, though? Remember when Microsoft actually made the offer to buy Nokia?
There was a lot of talk about what Nokia would retain as a business and whether
they could ever do their own handsets again at some point. Wasn't there a date
when they could?
Leo: Soon.
Mary
Jo: Like, 2015, right?
Leo: Soon.
Mary
Jo: I don't know why that's in my head.
Paul: I don't think it's that soon. I
think it's —
Leo: 2016, maybe.
Mary
Jo: 2016.
Paul: No, it's longer than that.
Mary
Jo: But what — I was thinking, you
know, Microsoft —
Paul: There is a date, yeah.
Mary
Jo: Yeah. They could keep these phones,
and then at some point transfer them back to Nokia if
they — once that date comes.
Paul: Yeah, I mean — yeah, Google sold
Moto to Lenovo, eventually. I mean, they could get rid of it.
Mary
Jo: Right.
Paul: That's a weird little plan. You
know, we're going to buy your company, and then we're going to give parts of it
back.
LEO: It's very strange.
Mary
Jo: Or they could keep it. I don't
think they're going to kill it. I really — you know, and —
Paul: Yeah, I don't think they're going
to kill it.
Mary
Jo: When I wrote a piece this week
saying that, everybody attacked me and said, "They have to kill it. You
have to tell them to kill it." And —
Paul: Yeah.
Mary
Jo: They've already decided what
they're going to do, people.
Leo: Microsoft gets rights to use
Nokia's name in connection with feature phones for ten years; however, 2016 —
at the start of calendar 2016 — Nokia can reenter the devices market using its
own name.
Mary
Jo: Yeah. There you go.
Leo: January 1, 2016.
Paul: But that's —
listen, two years? I mean, come on. It's over.
Mary
Jo: (Laughs)
Paul: It's over.
Leo: Well —
Mary
Jo: Take everything you know and turn
it on its head, Paul Thurrott.
Paul: (Laughs)
Leo: I guess the — I — (Laughs) I guess
the question is: A. Why Nokia wanted that; and why — and B. Why Microsoft
allowed it.
Mary
Jo: Well, I don't think Microsoft had a
choice to allow it or not allow it, right?
Paul: Well, no, but they could have said,
"Look, you can do this."
Mary
Jo: "We're not buying you."
Paul: "We're not going to work with
you on this. We're not going to — if — when we buy you, we are going to kill
it. So please, feel free to waste your time; we can't stop you. But we will
make you look stupid." I mean, I have to think that was —
Mary
Jo: Yeah. I thought —
Paul: If that conversation had occurred,
we wouldn't be seeing this.
Mary
Jo: Right. And a lot of people are
saying, "Oh, they're — these phones are never going to come to market, and
it's just going to die because Microsoft's going to acquire Nokia the next
month, and that's it. They're done." I think Nokia would not have had this
huge developer event and invested all this time and effort into telling
developers and already getting a bunch of developers to start porting if that
was the intention. I don't know, it seems —
Paul: I wrote a tweet the other day where
I said, "I hope the Nokia X doesn't come down with anything Kin-tagious, if you know what I mean."
Leo: (Laughs)
Mary
Jo: I saw that. (Laughs) I know, Microsoft did this, too, right?
Paul: It'd be a [unintelligible] a shame
if anything happened to you.
Mary
Jo: Yeah. Remember, Microsoft did a lot
to prime the market and retail and developers, everybody for the Kin, and then
they killed it in 30 days, so — or was it 30 days? No, it was less than six
months, not 30 days, but still —
Paul: It was a few months, but they —
yeah, that one suffered from, I think, Verizon-related injuries as well, but —
Mary
Jo: Yeah.
Paul: Yeah.
Mary
Jo: I don't know. I think this is going
to stick around, at least for some time, and I think, as a Windows — if I were
a Windows Phone developer, I would just say — take it as an incentive to do
even better apps and try to stick with it.
Paul: I don't like this new world, Mary
Jo.
Mary
Jo: I know you don't.
Paul: (Laughs) It's just —
Leo: It's wild. It's just wild. It's
very interesting.
Paul: This is just not good.
Leo: Microsoft made a very interesting
deal for — and by the way, Nokia also continues to get billions of euros in
license fees and patents every year.
Paul: Right.
Leo: So I mean, this is really
interesting.
Paul: Actually, here's a question.
Microsoft obviously collects Android-related licensing fees from a variety of
hardware makers.
Leo: Right.
Paul: Are those related to the, like,
Android as we know it — Google services and apps plus AOSP — or is it related
to AOSP only?
Leo: It's got to be AOSP. It has to be.
I would guess —
Paul: You think that's the base —
Leo: It goes back, I would guess, to
Microsoft's suits over Linux. Because Linux is the heart of AOSP, and I would
guess this has something to do with Microsoft's assertion that it owns some of
the sourcecode there.
Paul: Okay.
Leo: Remember, they indemnified people
who used Microsoft's Linux or —
Mary
Jo: Yep.
Leo: Yeah.
Mary
Jo: It was actually Nouvelle.
Paul: Microsoft's Linux?
Mary
Jo: No, Nouvelle, it was Nouvelle.
Paul: It was Nouvelle.
Mary
Jo: They were indemnifying Nouvelle
customers. Remember that?
Leo: Because you're — yeah, it's very
confusing.
Mary
Jo: Yeah.
Leo: Yeah. I mean, it's assumed or it's
thought — and I think this is fairly accurate — it's five or six bucks per
handset that Microsoft gets. So they make a lot more on Android than they do on
Windows Phone.
Paul: Sure.
Leo: The next Kin, coming soon.
Mary
Jo: (Laughs)
Leo: To a growth market near you. Hey,
Alan Mulally! (Laughs) As soon as he's not CEO —
Paul: No, no, no, we — not yet, not yet.
Leo: Not yet? There's more to say?
Mary
Jo: A little bit about Windows Phone.
Paul: No, we need to — we have this
Windows Phone story.
Leo: Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah, I'm sorry. I
didn't mean to jump so —
Paul: No, no, it's okay. It's just that
this is kind of tied into what we were just talking about.
Leo: Yeah, yeah. Because it — I was
really under the impression that once Nokia was subsumed that no one would make
Windows RT or Windows Phone hardware except Microsoft.
Paul: Yeah. Why would you?
Leo: But that's not the case. We — in
fact, we talked about this a couple weeks ago. And they —
Paul: Oh, did you?
Leo: Well, you and — I think you and I
did.
Paul: Oh, I'm sorry, I thought you meant this story. Oh, right. Because this just
happened.
Leo: Yeah. No, but I mean, you were
saying, "No, I don't know if they're going to lose all their — I thought
for sure all the OEM's would say bye-bye."
Paul: But no one thought there were going
to be more coming on board. Certainly not —
Leo: Right.
Paul: — nine of them, or whatever the
number is.
Leo: Well, a lot of them are kind of —
I've never heard of these companies. I mean, I don't know what they —
Mary
Jo: And they're in growth markets.
(Laughs)
Leo: I mean, ZTE is China; LG, we know.
Mary
Jo: Yeah. Longcheer I think may be India.
Leo: Yeah.
Paul: But my first question here is: Why?
I mean, what — this Windows Phone thing has been sitting here ready to be
licensed for the past three and a half years. Why now? You know, what happened?
I mean, why — I mean, Nokia owns 90 percent of this
market. Microsoft is buying Nokia. Why would anyone want to license this thing?
Why?
Leo: Well, probably because Microsoft
says they can do it for free.
Paul: It was never said, but I think it's
licensing.
Leo: It's free.
Mary
Jo: Yeah, yeah.
Paul: I think they dropped the price down
to next to nothing, yeah.
Leo: Nothing.
Paul: Or zero.
Leo: Nothing.
Paul: Well, we don't know because no one
has said, but certainly the price has —
Leo: The competitor is Android, which is
free — or AOSP, which is free. So I — and this is a good strategy on
Microsoft's part: get as many — you've got to get as many people hooked into
Microsoft services as possible.
Paul: Well, but do you find it
interesting that no one ever said that that's what happened? Like, I — they
made this big announcement.
Leo: Well, it's free if you don't tell
anyone.
Paul: Okay.
Mary
Jo: Yeah. (Laughs)
Paul: Well, in other words, here we are
with Nokia doing this Nokia X thing. And they're saying, "Look, we have to
target these growth markets. Cost is a huge issue, yadda yadda yadda. This is the
only way it's going to work." You guys have made very logical and
believable arguments for why they should do that. And then Microsoft signs up,
like, nine new partners to use their OS for the same exact purpose, in the same
exact markets. Why couldn't Nokia have done this?
Mary
Jo: Yeah. It may not just be the cost
of the OS, I think. We know that they've been talking about taking away the
capacitive buttons on the front of the phone making it so —
Leo: Cheaper to make.
Mary
Jo: Yeah. If you're a phone maker, now
you could take your same handset and put Android or Windows Phone on it, right?
That plays in, I'm sure.
Paul: Yes. I do think that there will be
things in Windows Phone 8.1 that make it more applicable to these kind of low-end devices. But you know what's interesting
about this is, this is what Windows 8.1 is doing on the PC as well. And it
occurred to me — you know, we have this — we have a story a little bit later
about the potential price drop of Windows 8 on low-end devices, you know, which
are PC devices. Maybe we're making an assumption here that those are only PC
devices. Maybe Windows 8 is Windows 8, whether it's phone, PC, tablet, and that this price drop, these low-end devices — it matches
very nicely to what they're doing on the PC side. It's all Windows. Maybe it's
the same thing. Maybe this is, in fact, part of the same story. It's a low-end
growth market. You can get Windows for next to nothing, Windows Phone.
Leo: Yeah. I think that makes sense.
Paul: I do, too.
Mary
Jo: The other thing you offer them —
"Hey, guess what? We'll throw in the Android patent coverage for
free."
Paul: Yeah. Right.
Leo: Ah.
Mary
Jo: (Laughs) "How about saving
some money?"
Leo: Yeah. So it's even better —
Paul: Not just save some money, you could
save any potential legal — ongoing legal [unintelligible] that you can be in
court for the rest of your life for.
Leo: And what does Microsoft get out of
it? What they need, which is market share, particularly for —
Paul: Yeah. Volume.
Leo: — volume for services, for Windows
services.
Mary
Jo: Right.
Leo: Then you can win over those — the
hearts and minds, and their wallets will follow.
Mary
Jo: The one I'm really interested in,
in the new list — so on the new list, like we already
said, there's LG, there's ETE, there's Lenovo. Interesting.
Leo: That's funny, yeah.
Mary
Jo: I know. Lava, Longcheer, Foxcon as an original
design manufacturer. But the one I'm interested in is HTC. They said HTC
is going to make more Windows Phones.
Leo: Good.
Mary
Jo: I know. Since I had the 8X up until
recently, I was like, yeah.
Leo: I think if you make a high-end
handset like the HTC 1, offering it in two flavors — Windows Phone or an
Android — doesn't hurt.
Mary
Jo: Yeah.
Paul: By the way, not just the high-end
one, right?
Mary
Jo: Yeah.
Paul: HTC announced, I think, just today,
kind of a mid-range line of phones that looks a lot like the HTC one. It's hard
not to look at something like that and think, Man, how awesome would a Windows
phone —
Leo: Right. You know —
Paul: You know, that device running
Windows Phone.
Leo: It's just hedging your bets.
Mary
Jo: It is.
Leo: It's just hedging your bets. It's a
safe thing to do. And Microsoft — nobody wants to — still, to this day, I don't
think anybody wants to annoy Microsoft.
Paul: (Laughs) Well,
especially Nokia.
Leo: Yeah. Well, they were — they'd be
the first one not to.
Paul: Yeah, yeah.
Mary
Jo: Yeah.
Leo: Is it — now, I see an article that
says licensing costs changed. Maybe this is —
Mary
Jo: Yeah. It's some guy —
Leo: — this is true. This is Sascha Segan, who's very smart.
Mary
Jo: He is. He's really good.
Paul: Yeah, but he's — he quotes a lot of
kind of dubious sources, so, that's why they're —
Leo: Oh, all right.
Paul: — that's why they're —
Mary
Jo: That guy who — he's quoting some
guy I've never heard of who I think is an Android guy, saying, "Yeah,
we're hearing Microsoft's going to drop their licensing fees by70 percent. But
that's also the rumored amount they're —
Paul: That's the PC story. That's the PC
story.
Mary
Jo: The PC one, right?
Paul: Yeah, that's what I — yeah, right.
So I added this at the last minute because it sort of verifies my assumption
and guess, but yeah, I noticed the same thing. It's very dubious sourcing.
Leo: Here's a fact, though, that I think
is good to know, that in 2012's ETE set, Windows phones cost $23 to $30 to
license. That's, like, the cost of Microsoft Windows on the desktop. That's
expensive.
Paul: Right. That's crazy.
Leo: That's an awful lot.
Mary
Jo: That's too pricey, yeah.
Leo: Especially with Android out there
free.
Mary
Jo: Yeah.
Paul: Well, yeah.
Mary
Jo: Sort of. Mostly.
Paul: Well, Android does — ETE might
license, it might not be free, but it's probably not $23 a phone.
Leo: Do they — well, actually, I wonder.
Now, on AOSP it's free because you just take it, but — it's open-source — but —
Paul: I'm thinking the Google Play stuff,
you're paying for that.
Leo: Do you pay for the Google Play
stuff?
Paul: I think so.
Leo: You have to go through a
certification —
Paul: Or do you just pay with your soul
by having to do certain requirements?
Leo: (Laughs)
Mary
Jo: (Laughs) Right.
Leo: Sign in blood.
Mary
Jo: I think if you — yeah.
Leo: They have to certify you. I don't
know if it costs money, but —
Mary
Jo: There was — there have been a
couple reports saying if you take the Google Play stuff on top of Android that
you have to agree to take a bunch of things together, right?
Leo: Right.
Mary
Jo: Like, you have to agree to take
Google+ and —
Leo: Right. Did Google — so there's
AOSP, which is the open-source, free stuff anybody can use — and Nokia used to
fork; there's Google Mobile Services, GMS. You take it all or nothing. It's all
or nothing. You can't pick and choose.
Mary
Jo: Yeah.
Leo: You have to get certified by
Google. But I wonder — I don't know if it costs you anything.
Mary
Jo: Yeah. I think Google has said it
does not. But again, the cost is you have to agree to take everything, and that
— that's a lot of things —
Paul: And it's a little more — yeah, it's
more than that. I mean, you have to position things in a certain way and —
Mary
Jo: Right.
Paul: — present things on the phone in a
certain way.
Mary
Jo: You know what it's like? It's like
when Microsoft, back in the earlier Windows days, used to force OEM's to take a
lot of things to get a cheaper price on Windows. And they got in trouble with
the DOJ for that, but —
Paul: It's a lot like that, actually.
Leo: (Laughs)
Mary
Jo: It's a lot like that. (Laughs)
Yeah.
Paul: Well, they learn from the best.
Mary
Jo: (Laughs)
Leo: But nevertheless, we're saying the
difference of $30 a handset as much as — that's —
Paul: I — the profit margins on these
devices have got to be nonexistent, so —
Leo: Yeah.
Paul: That actually —
Leo: That's a big deal.
Paul: Yeah.
Mary
Jo: Yeah.
Leo: So if it's that much, then I can
see —
Paul: By the way, that's no doubt why
Samsung puts all that crap on those phones.
Leo: Right.
Paul: Because they want to get you
involved in their little ecosystem.
Leo: Absolutely.
Paul: They're not really making a lot of
money on the phone.
Leo: Right.
Paul: They're trying to get you involved
with their stuff.
Leo: But their ecosystem sucks.
Paul: Oh, it's — yeah, ludicrous.
Leo: And nobody wants to use it.
Paul: But I'm just saying, you know that's the plan. I mean, that's the —
Leo: Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah. It's obvious.
You look at one of these phones, it's just obvious.
Paul: Yeah.
Leo: However, it's such
a lousy ecosystem that that strategy seems like a failure.
Paul: Yeah, it was — it was — yeah. It's
got this cross-cultural disconnect that's just kind of bizarre, but —
Leo: Yeah, yeah. If a manufacturer
produces over a certain number of phones, says Devoi,
then Google collects a fee, but they don't say how much. I don't know if that's
—
Paul: I thought there was a fee tied to
Google Maps or something like that. I don't want to say that — whatever it is —
because I don't know. But I — I have something in the back of my head where
Google does, in fact, collect licensing on full-blown Android, and I just don't
remember how or why, but —
Mary
Jo: Well, I think Microsoft does too,
right, for Bing Maps if you're a developer.
Paul: Yeah. No, I'm not suggesting it's —
Leo: If you use maps in your app, that's
different than if —
Mary
Jo: That is. Than if you're putting it
on the phone. Yeah.
Leo: That's different than you're just
putting Google Maps on the phone. Google wants you to do it.
Mary
Jo: Yeah.
Paul: Right.
Mary
Jo: But yeah. So we — like Paul's
saying, we never really knew what the true price was that they were offering
OEM's. I mean, I've seen before reports of $15 per phone, I've seen $5 per
phone. It probably depends on volume, for one thing, just like Windows does,
too.
Paul: Yeah.
Mary
Jo: It's hard to know, huh?
Paul: It's not like there's a bunch of
versions of Windows Phone. I mean, it's —
Mary
Jo: Right.
Paul: — kind of an all or nothing deal.
Leo: Hey, we didn't talk about this —
and we're kind of backtracking a little bit — but a good question from Jeff in
the chatroom. Could those Nokia X phones — are they
spec-sufficient enough to run Windows Phone? You don't need a whole lot of
hardware to run Windows Phone, do you?
Paul: Right. I think the base hardware
platform is fine for Windows Phone. I think what's missing are maybe some of
the sensors.
Leo: Okay. Because
that would be another explanation.
Paul: That's one of the complexities of
Windows Phone. Microsoft doesn't document this very well —
Leo: Right.
Paul: — for the public, and the specs
have changed between Windows Phone versions. But there are things that you
expect to see in a Windows phone. For example, one example that's changed is
the camera button. And so I don't believe there's been a Windows phone without
a hardware camera button. That's actually no longer part of the spec. You could
ship a Windows Phone out without that button — I don't think anyone has — and
in Windows Phone 8.1, you can ship them without the hardware buttons on the
front because they'll have software buttons. And so they — they've been kind of
changing the spec every time, and so some things are optional and some aren't.
And I don't have a complete list off the top of my head, but I suspect that
these devices don't have some of the sensors that maybe Windows Phone licensing
still requires.
Mary
Jo: We've actually never heard whether
it's feasible to put the Windows Phone OS on those kind of handsets, right? We — like, why hasn't it —
Paul: Well, it's the same hardware
platform, right? So Snapdragon —
Mary
Jo: Yeah.
Paul: — whatever. You know, I don't know
what the RAM is. I would imagine it's 512 or 1 meg or
something.
Mary
Jo: Yeah. But Microsoft's never come
out and said, "You can't put it on a handset of that size." I mean —
in fact, when they were in Barcelona this week, they talked about how they're
even lowering their requirements further for hardware, so —
Paul: Yep. They addressed this exact —
that's what I'm saying. In other words —
Mary
Jo: They did.
Paul: — Windows Phone is literally
evolving right now to address this market that Nokia had to make the X for. So
I don't quite get it, but —
Mary
Jo: It's all about the apps.
Paul: Yeah.
Mary
Jo: Back to that.
Leo: Yeah. And by the way, Samsung's
also doing phones that don't have Android, and Samsung service Tizen phones, so there's another operating system. Ars Technica —
Paul: All the benefits of the Samsung
crap with none of that Google stuff to get in the way.
Leo: (Laughs) Actually, Ars Technica just reviewed — and
thanks to the chatroom for this link — Samsung's Tizen OS, and they said, "An impressively capable
Android clone."
Paul: Yeah. It looks like a DOS screen
from 1993.
Leo: It looks pretty bad.
Mary
Jo: (Laughs)
Leo: It is not pretty.
Mary
Jo: Yeah.
Leo: Yeah. Ah, well. It's an interesting
world, and that's what we want as people who cover it.
Paul: You like — you like starting wars
just so you can cover them.
Leo: Yeah. William
Randolph Hearst. That's how we did it.
Mary
Jo: (Laughs)
Leo: We need a war to boost circulation.
Paul: We need a war? No, Apple and
Samsung are going to get — are going to be going to court soon. That'll be
good.
Leo: Yeah, well, there's plenty to
cover, believe me.
Mary
Jo: (Laughs)
Leo: Microsoft and Ford — I was
surprised to see this, although maybe it shouldn't be such a surprise. Ford's
Ford SYNC — which I had in my Mustang, it was great — but — and that's built on
Microsoft's car platform, which I think is a Windows CE platform. But — and I
don't know if the MyFord Touch, which Ford really got
lots of criticism for. Was Ford or Microsoft on top of that? My sense is it was
Ford.
Mary
Jo: Yeah.
Leo: But for whatever reason, Microsoft
—
Paul: Ford has said this is not
Microsoft's fault.
Leo: Yeah, and I don't think it is. I
think the Microsoft —
Paul: "It's not you, it's us,"
I think is what they said, you know?
Leo: I think the Microsoft stuff's good.
If you have basic Ford SYNC, it's great. I've been very happy in my Mustang. It
was the MyFord Touch stuff that they layered on top
of it that wasn't very good. And that was them. Nevertheless, Ford has
announced a next-generation car technology Telematics is going to — in Ford
vehicles, it's going to be based on Blackberry's QNX. It's not a —
Paul: You couldn't be slapped any
sillier, you know?
Leo
and Mary Jo: (Laugh)
Paul: Like, "We're going to base our
next-generation platform on the Amiga." No, like seriously.
Leo: Was Microsoft car being updated? It is Windows CE
right?
Mary Jo Foley: It is Windows embedded, so that operating system has
a lot of different flavors and Microsoft never did update the version of the
embedded to Windows 8 for auto. They said they were going to and then they did
not. So there has been a lot of speculation were they getting out of the market
and I hear that they were not getting out of the market but they are doing some
tinkering with Windows embedded automotive, and probably will have something
new to resurface around next year.
Leo: What other companies are using this?
Mary Jo: A lot of other companies are using it. Let us see a
lot of other companies are using it. Let us see I have got a list here: Nissan,
Honda, BMW, Mercedes-Benz, Aston Martin, Kia and Fiat.
Leo: Well, that is interesting that the QNX Blackberry
pre-update they bought it.
Mary Jo: Yes that is right. That is a special operating
system, like a real - time operating system.
Paul: Well, I remember that they bought it for their tablet
and then to bring Blackberry up to speed with something modern. It was kind of
like their next step yes whatever. In both those products they did great----
so.
Leo: I had a QNX in my Audi; I mean you do not really see
any of this right.
Paul: You do not see any of this right. It is because the
UI is whatever the carmaker puts on top of the range.
Mary Jo: So supposedly the reason that why Microsoft and Ford
parted ways was about cost, is the story that Microsoft wanted too much and
Ford said no and Microsoft said well we did not really want to work with you
anyways because you kind of screwed up with the connect the car stuff so bye!
Paul: Bye and thanks. And besides they were still mad about
that whole Alan Mulally thing.
Mary Jo: It was going to be announced after all that Alan Mulally was not in on for CEO and once Balemer and Mulally were friends,
and supposedly Balemer really wanted to make that
relationship. It was Balemer out and Mulally is out and the
relationship is done.
Leo: I don’t know about those other vehicles but Fords
have a Microsoft Logo on it. Right underneath it on the dash, yes hardware
logo.
Paul: Well with Microsoft is there are two examples of this
where they customized this specifically for the automaker. So Ford Sync was not
something that some other carmaker could get. It was made for Ford, and that is
why I think that you see that, they did or are doing something similar with Kia
I think.
Mary Jo: Yes Kia and Fiat.
Paul: Well I mean in the sense it is like what they did for
Ford, and it kind holes.
Leo: But some of those platforms that you mentioned the
carmakers are doing Siri Two. But it is not just a Siri OS, it is just
integrating Siri.
Paul: Well Google have got their thing, which I think is
going to be very popular. (Lots of talking over one another)
Leo: I think that this is going to go to Android next.
This is one of those things where the cars are a real mismatch. The development
cycle of cars and the development cycle of the softwares and so you are going to see lots of this (Leo moving his hands up and down in the air).
Paul: So Ford obviously targets, but not always but a lot
of their cars are targeted towards the younger people, and you do not have to
be young anymore really to be play. But younger people especially want
technology integration; they want to be able to speak to people in through car
on the phone. They want to be able to integrate the Pandora that they may have
with the phone or whatever. So it is a big deal for the car stuff, it is
ludicrous.
Leo: And Ford is very much global. I guess all these
companies are now global but you know. Ford has got to the point where the platform
is the same everywhere for many of their cars for the Focus, the Fiesta.
Paul: Yes. I remember thinking that it was just like two or
three models, and then they kind of branched out from there, and you probably
cannot buy a Ford anymore, without getting some form of this or at least it is
available. (Long Pause)
Leo: There is a moment of silence.
Paul: I have had a few of those today.
Leo: The mood of silence for the Ford Sync. Let me take a
break and we are going to come back, and we will talk in addition to the rumors
about Windows Phone licensing fees going down, and it is kind of related infact it is in the same article here by Sacha Seeking in C Magazine. The cost of Windows 8 might be
going down for some manufacturers, and Mary
Jo has decided on a phone.
Mary Jo: I did.
Leo: I cannot wait to see which one. (All presenters
talking over each other)
Paul: Is she going to get a Java phone?
Leo: She has got an Asher.
Mary Jo: It is a Nokia X3.
Leo: oh, that would just frost Mr Thurrott. Oh No, noo.
Paul: I had it ordered from overseas. It was really pricey,
but it was worth it.
Leo: Our show brought to you today from Citrix and Share
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ShareFile.com, I am moving right along, and word is that on some devices
Microsoft is not going to charge as much for the Windows Licence,
but it is low-end devices.
Mary Jo: Right, and this is a Bloomberg report, saying that
Microsoft is thinking of dropping the price it charges PC makers and not phone
makers from $50.00 a copy to that they pay Microsoft to put Windows 8 on a new
device to $15.00.
Leo: Oh, that is a big drop.
Mary Jo: It would be………….. If that is true then it is a big
drop but only on machines of $250 or less. There are not many of those,
right now.
Leo: There is no margin. I mean if you made a machine for
250 bucks, you are paying Microsoft $50.00 of it? I mean.
Mary Jo: Even if you go and look in the store right now I was
looking for what Windows devices that are out there for $250.00 or less. I
could only find two. I found an Asus touch screen laptop a really low end one
that had been discounted to 249 and then I also saw the eight inch Dell Venue 8
PRO sorry, 32 gig models was at 249 also at a discount. That is it.
Paul: Those are normal starting prices.
Mary Jo: But they are not normal prices right. Also you know
the question is if Microsoft did take the price down to 15 dollars a copy,
would this suddenly mean that there would be a bubbling up of more machines
that were 250 dollars or less because all the OEMS supposedly would pass those
savings on.
Paul: I think that is the goal that is why I think that
this phone thing is the same thing. I think this is the same story really. It
is funny.
Mary Jo: I bet that it might be the same story, when you said
that out, yes maybe it was confusing the phone and the PC.
Paul: I am really curious about this. I did hear and this
definitely is PCs though because I heard the story I think intimated, I heard from
a source that as part of this deal you do not have to go to the hardware
certification process store to get that Windows logo which comes with all kinds
of good guarantees for users and that sets up the possibility that these
devices or actually a probability that these devices will not be particularly
reliable because Microsoft will not have certified the hardware driver
combinations and will not be providing automatic driver updates for the Windows
updates. So it is kind of iffy new little product category, if you thought that
PCs Windows got too reliable then it is really good news, you know and these
cheap devices are not going to be reliable at all.
Mary Jo: It is a bit like net books really.
Paul: Yes a lot like net books. The difference between this
and the net book licensing that they had for Windows Starter was that those
machines had to meet certain requirements -- screen size, a lot of ram, a lot
of storage, these machines don’t have to meet any of those requirements. It’s only requirement is that it has to last, last, last for
250 bucks if you wanted have a big screen or whatever hardware components that
is fine, it just has to cost less than 250. It really is interesting and it is
the modern net book.
Mary Jo: The other possibility is that we have heard that when
Microsoft comes out with Windows 9 cutting threshold that there is going to be
this new blow-in modern SCU that does not have the desk top and it is going to
work supposedly on phones and on tablets and maybe PCs and maybe that is the SCU
that they are talking about that Microsoft is going to make it cheaper, and
that will be that modern one and it will not be the other one, sorry once
Windows stop.
Paul: I really do think that this is Windows End phone; I
do think these things are co-mingled. I, I we have mixed up some things may be
in the reports because we don’t know and we don’t know what is happening and I
thought this was all related.
Leo: How much is the ……………….is 50 bucks what would
normally for the going cost for Windows.
Paul: Allegedly.
Mary Jo: No-one knows.
Leo: No-one knows.
Paul: They have to have standard volumes discounts and
(talking over) I do not think that Windows is 50 bucks, you know like and it is
not really like the old days when you can get sweetheart deals if you have a
good relationship but I Think that they would at least have volume discounts at
the very least.
Mary Jo: My understanding from what I have known for covering
Windows for years is like the top twenty main PC makers used to all get the
same price after the DOJ kind of slapped Microsoft down for price gouging and
unfair deals. But it was very standard like the entire top twenty all got the
same price per device. The thing is we do not know what that price is and it,
and you know back in Windows 95 days, it used to be way over a hundred dollars
per copy and over time it came down, down and down. We do not know right now, I am sure that the
OEMs know it obviously but we reporters do not know.
Paul: But PC sales for years and years you know have been
going up and up and so if you were to compare Windows License sales like in
1996 to 2006 you would have seen a dramatic increase in volume so with the
price coming down Microsoft is still going to make more money, we are not
really seeing that anymore so obviously PC sales kind of plateaus and then fell
and you can see how far they go down. So that kind of makes it interesting.
Leo: It is interesting.
Paul: It is, it is the weirdest
thing that could be out there.
Mary Jo: There is a lot of hearsay about what the price is. I
mean people are voicing numbers out there I heard that the top twenty OEMs, it
is hard to know. We knew the old price because it became public record when
Microsoft was being sued, that is how we knew what the price was then.
Leo: Microsoft fight I did not know about that update one.
Well everybody knew about Update one, but I guess who ever did not know, but
Microsoft never said anything about it but they have finally acknowledged it.
Mary Jo: It was actually a surprise at Mobile World Congress
they in their Press Conference they said, Hey! We have got an update coming out
pretty soon this spring, bringing up the update for Windows 8.1 and here are
all the features all of which we have already reported.
Paul: They may call it a spring update----did they use that
term?
Mary Jo: Yes they called it the Spring Update.
Leo: That gives you
right up till March 22nd right to release it?
Mary Jo: Yes, yes. They
are supposedly right on the edge of RTMing this and
their Escrow bills that have leaked so it is close. Yes they talked about the
smaller footprint, which we knew about and it will work, on devices with one
gig rams of sixteen gigs of storage what else (all talking over each other)
Leo: What about IE compatibility? (Presenters talking over
each other)
Mary Jo: Right there is the IE picture, that we also written about and there was nothing new except the fact that Microsoft
finally acknowledged that it exists.
Leo: It is pretty much interesting that you guys pretty
much nailed the features?
Mary Jo and Paul:
Yes.
Paul: We did not learn anything new.
Mary Jo: Nothing new goes on……….
Leo: There is nothing new here.
Paul: They did not name it anything though right, they did
not call it anything, and it was just an update.
Mary Jo: They did not call it A1 or an A2 or anything. They
did not call it by a name so?
Leo: It was the spring update. May be that is the name.
Mary Jo: It could be the name.
Paul: Well it was an update for Windows A1, they could call
it A2 it is just not on, I do not know.
Mary Jo: I do not know I think that will be confusing.
Leo: Never mind I do not want to talk anymore on this. It
is a roll up.
Mary Jo: Paul was
wondering isn’t there an update is there going to be another one this year?
Paul: Well the language that I saw, and I did not watch the event so maybe that is why I lost all that kind of
thing. They basically called it the 2014 update for Windows 8.1, and I thought
that is interesting. Is that………does that mean that it is the only update for
this year? You know……I mean, I would be surprised if that were the case, I mean
they are going to think about the monthly opportunities for further updates at
the OS and of course the will all be updated with all that stuff. It seems like
update one is the type is a thing that they can do two or three times a year or
more you know past this one. So I guess we will see.
Mary Jo: The thing that I have heard about that one from some
of my sources is they were kind of on the bench and they will do another update
and when they do another one-----one or two you know. And I had heard that if
there were going to be one it would probably be just one just other update like
this and maybe towards the fall.
Paul: Yes. And that would make sense. Okay.
Mary Jo: Okay. That is all we knew.
Leo: So Mary Jo bought a phone.
Paul: Yes, finally.
Mary Jo: Here it is, I bought it is the IKON.
Leo: And I can tell because it is so big and so square.
Paul: Yes. It is giant.
Mary Jo: Yes big square.
Paul: Can I see the case at the back?
Leo: This is the Horizon only Ikon.
Wow! It is thick and you were worried that it might be too heavy for you. If
you built up some muscle or………
Mary Jo: You guys are going to laugh when I say this. I have
more muscle in my left arm after using this for a week. I noticed in fact
today; yes my left arm is way stronger. Yes my left arm is way stronger.
Leo: Wow.
Paul: That is funny.
Mary Jo: This phone you know is heavy but everybody said to me
that you will get used to it if you keep using it, and I am getting used to it.
(Too much talking over)
Paul: Do not ever pick up the 8X again. Ever.
Mary Jo: I know and I did and it like flew out of my hand.
Paul: It must have felt like a feather after using it like
a medicine ball.
Mary Jo: It was, it was I think that it was probably………..ooooooooh. It is a really good phone, I have been using it
since………..I bought it on Friday last week and I have been using it since. It is
a very good phone. It really is great to have that extra screen, much nicer
screen, it is faster. Like the one funny thing was that I mentioned on the show
the last time that I was having some LTE issues, that I was not getting a very good signal, and now I do not know and you never know
if you should believe Horizon employees of what you ask in store of what is
going on right. So I went down to one of the more popular Horizon stores like
in Manhattan in mid-town and I showed them the phone and I am like,” What is up
with the signal?” and they said,’ It is pretty much the same everywhere in New
York, because here is what they said and you guys can tell me if that is true.
They said,” The new cell powers that they are building now are optimized for
Google, and for Android and iPhones and not for web based phones.
Leo: No, no, no
Mary Jo: They actually said that.
Leo: Could that be true.
Paul: That is insidious.
Leo: That is insulting.
Mary Jo: I looked at their phone in the store because they had
some Ikons that were actually seem to be working in
the Horizon store and they only had a couple of bars also, and they were in a
totally different part of New York, than where I am.
Leo: I think that it is possible that the Android phones
and the iPhones sets lie about their number of bars. They did infact……….and we know that they changed the iPhone to show
more signal. I don’t see how that could be true.
Paul: That is cellular technology.
Leo: I don’t see how that is true.
Mary Jo: It sounded so crazy but I thought,” My God, really.”
The one thing that I have noticed though is that I am getting service even
though I am on only two bars here in my building, I now get a service in the
elevators, which I never did, but my 8X had all the bars. Yes, it is kind of
arbitrary.
Paul: I am amazed they said that.
Mary Jo: I kind of stood there like oh, that sounds like………
Paul: If Windows phone comes and goes. One of the stories
of this platform is going to be how they were undercut by wireless carrier
employees from…….
Leo: You really do not want buy that phone with fewer bars
in New York.
Paul: It is incredible.
Mary Jo: They did not discourage me at all which was very good
actually because I have had other times when they have. I just went in and I am
interested in buying this phone and they said it is great, awesome and they
were displaying it. The sales person knew a lot about the Lumia and that was a
good sign too so.
Leo: I feel that the Logik is
going to break; the Windows phone is going to come back, quite soon.
Mary Jo: I hope that you are right, Leo.
Leo: Paul, do
you have an Ikon?
Paul: No not yet it is on the way. I kind of screwed it up
because I went away and then I got back and I said Okay I am ready for it Nokia
and they said we have a little bit of a problem so, and they are going to send
one. I will get one.
Leo: What is the comparable is it a 1020 or 1520?
Paul: So There is no directly comparable phone. It is
interesting to me that phone is clearly an update to the 928 because it has got
a kind of a perky, big phone. The closest thing that we have is a little bit
like a 1020 but it has got…..1520 which has a camera is the big one. I actually
have this one over here, if you look at the for a phone is not super thick, I
mean it has got a little bit of bump there for a camera, I sort of anticipated
that this phone would be like this, just a little down sized which I think
would have been fantastic so I am surprised that they went with yet another
kind of new design and not device and I am curious to experience it.
But that is what they did something like this, I guess that I am really not sure. (Talking over)
Mary Jo: Fifteen mega pixels on camera.
Leo: I think that is fine. I do not think that you need
any more that.
Mary Jo: No. I think that is good 1080 P screen.
Leo: And it is big screen, it is your biggest phone you
have ever had right?
Mary Jo: It is by far. Yes.
Leo: What is it five by five inches?
Mary Jo: Yes. It is a nice phone, I was not quite sure that I
was going to do it, but I am glad that I did. Yes.
Leo: Good. Finally and I like this Mary Jo writes her line,’ Twitch is coming to X-Box One’ I have no
idea of what this means, I am just typing words.’
Mary Jo: I knew we were supposed to talk about it but Paul is going to have TO.
Paul: It is not a huge story but Microsoft did promise this
Twitch Integration with X-Box One and then at the last minute dropped it and
said they would add it back in the first part of 2014. So it is coming back, it
is………what it is basically a way for gamers to broadcast live their game play
and you can also go and chill and watch other people play, and people can watch
them and participate in their games, so on and so forth. So they only way that
we had to share these experiences until this happens is through the recording feature which is cool in its own right. But this gives
you this live experience and so Twitch is an online service that Microsoft is
available on Play stations.
Leo: It is just like a TV station, it turn out that it is
one of the biggest things that they have done. It is huge.
Paul: Yes it is huge. I do not know why anyone would want
to watch people play video games, but…………..
Leo: Hey, Paul every day I go home and I say did Paul have you uploaded anything new from your call on duty and I go in and watch
your kill.
Paul: I even watched this goon when I was camping and I put
a bomb on the other side of the wall and blew it up and killed him through the
wall, which is kind of an awesome James Bond movie that was good I recorded
that.
Leo: And then the fun thing on this game is that you as
the guy you have just killed, and you are going what the hell happened, I do
not know.
Paul: You go watch it again.
Leo: You go watch it from Paul’s angle again there you go. Yes, yes I got it.
Paul: The cheaper the better Leo. I think it is fine for games. (A lot of mumbling)
Leo: So you goal is to kill everyone.
Paul: I won, I won. I want to make sure that I do not hear
it but I wish I did. I want the reaction of the other guy to be going, what the
hell?
Leo: How did that happen? You have said that enough times
now.
Paul: Oh yes, yes.
Leo: Our show today is brought to you from, we are going
to get to our tips and tools, our number, and whatever it is we do on this
show, because I can never remember as every show has its own unique back of the
book. But I will just say this the back of the book is
next on Windows Weekly. Our tip of the week, our software of the week, our
enterprise pick of the week, out fear of the week, Paul Thurrott is going to sneak in an
audiotape, even though there is no audible ad. That is how good Paul is, but first word from Personal
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today. PersonalCapital.com/Windows. Leo Laporte and Mary Jo Foley, we’re talking about Windows and
it is that time of the show when we do the back of the book, the tip of the
week.
Paul: Yes I actually have two tips. The second one kind of
came in at the last second, kind of. Microsoft is soon going to start selling
an X-BOX One Bundle, which includes Tight Valve, well actually it is a code for
Tighten Valve, but basically it is the same price as buying the consoles. So infact what you are getting is a sixty dollar game that
everybody apparently wants for free.
Leo: You do not think that this game is anything special?
Paul: I think that it is fine. I think that it is good, but
I do not think that it is going to change everything. I do not think that it is
going to draw much people as far as know. Is it going to be Gears of War again,
I do not think that it is Alar or Call of Duty or is it going to be
Battlefields, or is it going to be Medals of Honor or is it going to be
Garrisons, or something like that. Maybe.
Leo: Maybe.
Paul: I love video games and hence I get the whole platform
thing but I think one of the worse things is the gamer versus user in video
games are these platforms exclusive is too bad to know that you have to find
all the hardware, but since we play video games. Anyway I do think that a lot
of people want it and hence if you have not got an X-Box One, it turn out that
they still have to wait. So……..
Leo: I wish I had, but now let me ask you this, because I
did download the Tight Valve and play type they call Beta for the three minutes
they allowed me to play. Should I erase that and start over?
Paul: No it is a different App, you cannot erase it.
Leo: I cannot do anything with it so (both talking over
each other). I kind have enjoyed TightFall but it is
very much like the Call of Duty, kind of what Paul described it as.
Paul: Yes. It is a multi-player, which is fine. I think
that it is the Call of Duty right.
Leo: Hey, let me ask you this----is the X-BOX One a lot of
people are writing it off now saying it is a bust. It is too soon to say that
Paul: It is just as soon say that.
It is too soon.
Paul: It is too soon and the other thing is that if you
look over the various Console generations, you know the number two player in
any Console regeneration is not necessarily like a disaster, but sometimes it
can be, but you know if you are talking about the Siga-Genesis
or the super Nintendo, both those things are very popular. I mean there are
thirty big Consoles I mean they kicked everything around that was there at that
time, but you know the X-BOX 360 the PlayStation is roughly popular as each
other so, or sold as much as each other so you know it is not a disaster I mean
I think that stacks of people spent 500 bucks on the piece of hardware and the
aluminum on top of it in their kids bedrooms so………..
Leo: If it has been slow to sell it is because of the
price.
Paul: Yes I think that the price hurts.
Leo: You know I do not think that either the Play station
4 or the X-Box One have any titles that are compelling, yet.
Paul: No, they both launched some garbage, yes and they are
both expensive for what that is worth. I do think there is a hundred dollars’
worth of difference in the X-Box One, I think it is not just the hardware, the
hardware to connect but the just the whole approach they have, you know,
multi-media and all that stuff, and I think there is more going on there, but
whatever, I guess we will see. I mean I think that the PlayStation 4 is
supposed to launch in Japan isn’t it, so it could get worse, before it gets
better.
Leo: The other thing is the resolution compared to a
PlayStation 4 because I think Tight Fall sets an example maybe because it is
720 p or maybe it is something like some little ram P.
Paul: I do not know. It is a complaint that has dogged
video games for a long-time, you know it was Halo 3
when that came out. There was a kind of controversy because it was not even HD;
it was 853 by 480 or some crazy resolution.
Leo: With that you get some better frame rates?
Paul: Yes. I do not know a lot of the graphics, the graphics
comparisons so far in current generation’s games, so far games that run on both
platforms and there is no difference, and that may change over time, obviously.
But I think that the big differences are going to be seen in the platform
exclusives that people who target PlayStations specifically are going to be
involved, which is that kind of platform and they will know a lot about it and
they will be able to do whatever it will do. But you are going to see that on
the X-Box as well. So I do not think that it is……..it is or was supposedly the
big issue with the X-Box 3 versus the X-Box 3 and the 1080p in the X-Box did
not. Microsoft was able to find that out right, and I do not think that over
the course of that platform you cannot say:”Oh, yes
PlayStation 3 is kicking up, they are all graphically comparable. So I think
that it is going to be like that.
Leo: And you other tip of the week?
Paul: Yes, this is the one that just came in and this is US
only and I apologize for that is the case, because I know I hear from a lot of
people around the world that this is not working in their particular locale or
maybe Bing rewards is not available. But if you are in Bing Rewards and you can
join for free, and actually that is part of my tip you can get 200 credits you know
for free, you can an additional 100 gigabytes, additional drive storage for one
year free. And that is interesting because, well it is interesting on a number
of levels. First of all you sign up and there is a way to sign up to get the
200 points, and it is just free. You can make it last beyond a year for another
100 points and you can keep adding this to your account. I have done it twice
so instead of adding 200 gigs it adds 100 gigs for two years, if you do this
for three years, four years etc. I have heard from several people now who have
done this and I think one guy said he was 20/20, or whatever. People have been
stacking these repeatedly. So that works and so that is kind of a new thing and
when we talk about tying people into a platform, you know obviously this is one
way to do it, to put all their hot data in the cloud storage and you know, and
it will stick with the cloud so you know. It is one of the drivers I have ever
seen, and I use it typically in the OS integration, but Yes I was paying for
this so, this was like a way for me to save, you know 50 bucks a year.
Leo: Yes, Cool. So there are links on Paul’s page, so go
to winsupersite.com. And I just follow the link to go to the 200-point sign up
thing and now I have got enough points to (talking over each other).
Paul: You could do a lot with this, but I guess the way
Bing reward works it is like any rewards program. By using the product you will
get rewards, or points or credits, and I actually do not have that many and I
have 800 points but there are people out there with tens of thousands of points
and just browsing, you search on Bing, and you do these kind of big related
activities. So you can set Bing as your home page get some points or credits I
should say, so I guess that it is not that hard to wrack these things up and I
guess you know that if you get a gift certificate these things can be redeemed
for the good in the sense that for a low number of points you get something of
value for 50 dollars. It is pretty, it is up there, it is good, good value.
Leo: Cool. I just entered the sweepstakes to win an X-Box
One and that is pretty darn exciting right there. Thank-you, Bing Rewards. Our
software pick of the week.
Paul: So Microsoft this week released their Office 2013
service pack one and service pack one releases for exchange, share points,
office apps and rewards. The odd thing about it is that when I first saw this I
it was my natural reaction to go and install it and with installing it on any
of my PCs and standalone downloader’s said that this application was not for my
computer, you know I first thought that it was………..actually it turns out that
the standalone installer is now only for the standalone version of 2013, which
is……..not a fact, not necessarily the mainstream that most people install obviously,
anymore. It is kind of the old-fashioned way of getting Office. So if you have
got Office on an RT Computer you go to Windows update to get the Service Pack
One update right now I believe. If you bought Office 2013 you can get it. But
if you have Office 365 Home Premium or Office 365 any Business Version, it is
actually not available now and honestly that is kind of the opposite of how
this is supposed to work from the point of view of having Office 365
subscription is that you are always up-to-date, Mary Jo do you know when they said to expect the pack?
Mary Jo: They said in your next update that you are going to
get from Service One Pack Feature some functionality. But you know what I
wonder and I have asked them this and I still have not heard back yet is that
if you already have most of what is in Service Pack One as somebody…………(talking
over each other)
Paul: You will get some minor updates. Not a Service Pack
One. Like the full-blown thing.
Mary Jo: Right. No because you have been getting the security
updates all along if you are a subscriber.
Paul: Yes but you will get the new driver for business and
they noted a few additional features and there has got to be other stuff. The Office 365 kind of streams over time or whatever.
Mary Jo: Right
Paul: You get prompted, but when is the next update? April, May or June.
Mary Jo: What they said is that when you next update arrives
for everybody that is different too right? Different people get it at different
times.
Paul: All right. So I know that we will hear from someone
who has Office 365 when they get it. I am curious about that, I have heard from
people that, a couple of people that forced the update I have not looked into
what that entails because I want to get it naturally so that I can write about
that but I think it is a little a weird.
Mary Jo: The quick to run people are already getting it. They
already have it.
Paul: They are, some of them are. That it Office 365. Or could be Office
365. Okay. I do not.
Mary Jo: You are going to be the last one to get it and
everybody else will get it before you.
Paul: I should not have written that scathing review.
Mary Jo: Should not have.
Leo: Awesome and now moving on to Mary Jo Foley and her enterprise.
Mary Jo: So my Enterprise Pick Of The Week is another update that Microsoft released this week which is Visual Studio
2013, Update Two, CTP2. That is a name that only your mother could love. What
it is the second technology preview of the second updates that Microsoft is
making to Visual Studio 2013. But the part of that makes this really
interesting is that Microsoft is now integrating typescript right into Visual
Studio as of this update. Typescript as enterprise users and developers may
recall is Microsoft’s set of superscript of the Java Script, that they have
been building, working on this for two or three years and Enders Hylesberg who is the father of the C sharp is the team
leader who is doing this. What Typescript lets you do is programs that you
typically use Java script for but you use Typescript instead for. Instead of
being able to write little hundred line programs, you can now write programs of
thousands of lines using this technology. And Microsoft itself is using this
internally. They have used it they said to build the X-Box Music UI or at least
some parts of it. Different projects in Bing are using it, they would not say
which ones, the F12 tools team and the Kinetics and Flar are using and some third parties are using it. They said Adobe is using
elements of it in their digital publishing suite. So this version of Typescript
in this release is not quite finished the release candidate, but they are
almost done, they say they are going to be done in the next couple of months
with this so CTP2 is one of the last test fills that will probably come out
when they do the final update two to Visual Studio 2013.
Leo: It does compile down to standard Java script I hope?
Mary Jo: Compiles down? I believe so.
Leo: The last thing we need is another incompatible
version of Java Script.
Mary Jo: I believe I know this and I am forgetting it.
Paul: They should call it J script.
Mary Jo: I know that it compiles……….it must, it must.
Leo: Some people in the channel say that Typescript rocks
and others say yes it does. It is merely a pre-process. There are a lot of Java
Script reporcessors. That is harmless, what you do
not want is a new flavor of Java script because that would be not so good.
Mary Jo: Typescript is a sub script of super set of Java
Script and compiles down to new plain Java Script. I should have just known
that but……….
Leo: So if somebody asks you the next time say,” Oh yes
absolutely.”
Mary Jo: Oh yes.
Leo: What are you crazy! Our code name
of the week?
Mary Jo: The code name of the week is Golden Gate. And this
actually a pretty cool code name for something that Microsoft has already given
us the official name for it, which is “Express Route” and what this technology
is it is a way to network your private cloud with the
azure public cloud. Microsoft has a couple of different ways that you can do
this. You do it over the Internet, the code name of that piece of technology is
“Brooklyn” get it the “Brooklyn Bridge” and now this is the “Golden Gate
Bridge”. This is the cloud to unprime network thirty
that does not go over the Internet. It goes over a dedicated network that does
not use the Internet, and they are partnering with a few different companies to
enable this. They have already got deals with Equinex,
ATT and Level Three. Who are all going to help you if you are already a
customer that does not want to risk going over the public network to connect
your cloud and azure and to do it over a private network? Right now it is in a
public preview this Express Route/Golden Gate Technology. It just came out last
week in a bunch of the Azure updates that Microsoft released and we do not have
a final date for it. But they are working on adding more partners.
Leo: Very cool. And you just might have a beer for size
for it.
Mary Jo: I might, you know I have not done a hoppy beer in a
while and I am trying to play down the hops.
Paul: I disagree.
Leo: You have done nothing but hoppy beer.
Paul: You are a fine hoppy, Mary Jo.
Mary Jo: Now we are going to go full hops today. We are going
to do the Imperial IPA as the pick of the week from a company in Connecticut
called The New England Beer Company and the beer is called The Gandhi-Bot.
Their label is awesome.
Leo: It is a robot Gandhi.
Mary Jo: It is, it is
Leo: It is weird
Mary Jo: Yes. It is really weird, but the beer is really
delicious, it is kind like to me a hybrid east coast-west coast Imperial IPA,
it is hoppy but not over the top killer hoppy like a lot of the West Coast
double IPAs, and it is citrusy but not too citrusy, It is kind of like a good
Imperial IPA if you like that style. And the best part of this story of this
beer pick is that I could not get this beer in New York because it is made in
Connecticut but they do not distribute it here. But there is a Windows Weekly
listener named Pete who said that he really wanted me to try it, so yesterday
he brought it from Connecticut and so handed it off to me so that I could try
it. (A lot of talking over. I know how awesome is that! Dedicated listeners.
Leo: I gather that the Gandhi in the IPA, India Pale Ale.
Mary Jo: I would think that might be it.
Leo: Isn’t that sweet.
Paul: Would you call it pallid aggressive?
Mary Jo: I would not, but you might? I would not.
Leo: Swift. Like a cheese grater on your tongue.
Mary Jo: No, no, it is a delicious bouquet of citrus flavors.
(Both the men wow)
Paul: You are like the Samantha Brown of beer.
Leo: Yum, Yum Now I want two bottles. Right so there you
go New England’s beer company Gandhi’s Bot. I double hopped IPA. Now we do not
do an audible pick when there is no audible ad but I absolutely agree with this
one and will give Paul, an extra
minute to talk about Influx.
Paul: Yes, this is Daniel Suarez’s fourth book Daemon…….. and Kill Decision. The first two books are combined you
know, they are one story a story with same characters and are among the best
books that I have ever read in my entire life. Kill Decision was good but the
first two are just amazing. I am only part way through this. I have spoken
about this book that I have read with a few friends who have read it. It
gets…..it starts off a little slow and I thought that this is going nowhere,
and then it goes off in some direction that is absolutely wonderful, so if you
like this kind of techno thriller, kind of like a Michael Creighton type
story………
Leo: Lot of science, lot of science. It is good.
Paul: It is an awesome kind of alternate reality or I
should say alternate history kind of thing which I think is wonderful for
really, really well done. Some need nots to video
game stuff, I do not really want to ruin any of it. It is pretty amazing. I am
not done so I do not know if pulls up to Daemon or Freedom, but it is good.
Leo: It is his best ever and you should watch the
triangulation episode from Monday because Daniel was our guest in our studio
and he is always great. I love Daniel.
Paul: He is clearly the new Creighton.
Leo: And you know he is a really nice guy. I am very honored to call him from France. He is just the
greatest guy.
Paul: I should say his previous books type of books that I
have read, I just actually read about this merger up here that------- that I
was talking about that wants me to not drink ever again. I actually own audible
versions of his other books and I never really listened to them though and now
I am going to go and listen to it and the reason is the guy who narrates every one
of these books is incredible, and I do not know if there is a lot of this stuff
in the other books and I am very curious about this now, but they do need kind
of effects, he kind of does voices which can be terrible but is actually………….
Leo: But his Veruna is so good.
Paul: There is kind of a computer Ai thing,
that is in his book, and he is that what you are talking about, sorry.
So the effect that they give it is very distinct, and you know it is computerized it has got like a
reverbs kind of an effect to it. It is really, really well done.
(Lots of talking over each other)
Leo: The other reason to watch the triangulation Daniel
brought Jeff Gurner the guy who reads his books in.
Paul: Oh. Great. I do not know if
they are friends, this works together, they are clearly a great team. I mean
they just write amazing, the guy who does their
narrations is amazing.
Leo: So you get to meet him or listen or watch the video
because he reads an excerpt from the plugs out loud and it is such an amazing
thing to watch the transformation he goes through as he is doing it. I think
that it is one of my favorite triangulations.
Paul: It is notable. I mean there are some good audible
readings in there over the years. This is one of the best books it is really
good.
Leo: I am so glad. Mary
Jo I am sure that she has no interest, and I am showing her pictures.
Mary Jo: No I do. You know Paul got me to read the first two Daniel Suarez books and I do not
usually read that genre at all and I loved them. I liked them.
Paul: Like I said those were amongst the best books.
Leo: You can actually see Jeff Gurner’s particular bit of that show as a Twit bit on YouTube.com/insidetwit,
I think because that is where we put those. So is it really, really good. Really, really, happy.
Paul: All right.
Leo: Yes I agree with your Paul. Great book. I told Daniel that this
your best book yet.
Paul: By the way I had pre-ordered this because I found out
some weeks or months ago that it was coming out, forgot about it, you know and
when I was away last week it arrived. It arrived on a Thursday. Don’t books
come out on a Tuesday?
Leo: DVDs come out on a Tuesday, yes it came on a
Thursday, yes it has the date on it.
Paul: Maybe they wanted us to get it before Tighten Fall?
Leo: It is exactly what it says on my pre-release copy NOT
FOR SALE, February 20th. Now I do not want to keep this, because
although this paperback is historic because Daniel said after this came out he
made some changes. This is alternate reality version.
Paul: Right.
Leo: Uncorrected proof, please do not quote from this
publication without checking.
Paul: This thing starts of so uninteresting, and I thought
My God what happened here, and then it goes through some flips and flops, and
then this is crazy, then suddenly oh! This is crazy. Like if Mary Jo read Freedom, you know from
Daemon the Freedom is very interesting, as Daemon is just crazy, an amazing
story and you think how could they possibly do this again, and in Freedom just
jacks it up like times ten. And it is crazy, it is so awesome, and this book
kind of does a little bit of that, and it is like a pedestrian kind of story
and then it kind of goes off in an awesome direction. It is really got I have
not finished the book, but it so far amazing.
Mary Jo: It does.
Leo: You will like it. Good ending. Paul Thurrott is at the winsupersite.com for he also writes
books, lots of them. Two of them are online right now-----Windows 8.1
Paul: I completely finished to tell you, that I have finished the Windows 8.1 book now, there was a little bit of
editing, you know front matter type stuff to do but it is there.
Leo: Windows 8.1 Book.com go right there and buy it and
download it, if you are doing Windows 8.1 you will need it. And then there is
the music book, what is that?
Paul: X-Box Music.
Leo: I can never remember that.
Paul: It is X-Box Music, I do not
have an URL for that on WinsiteSupersaver right now.
Leo: Right, there you go.
Paul: Yes I have got to get it one URL for the books. One MicrosoftBooks.com.
Leo: Whatever. There you go. Mary Jo Foley writes about
Microsoft all the time like more than once a day at allaboutmicrosoft.com, and
it is a great place to get scoops and information, and we thank you both for
being in here each and every Wednesday 11.00 am Pacific and 2.00pm Eastern time
and 1900 UTC if you want to watch live. If not then there is on demand audio
and video available always of all of our shows after Twit.tv. It is twit.tv/windowsweekly or youtube.com/windows weekly or subscribe
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you can get it each and every week and never miss an episode which is my strong
recommendation, of course I am biased. Thanks for joining us and we will see
you next time!