Microsoft Uses Marketing Tricks to Create Illusion of Windows (WP7) Demand
- Dr. Roy Schestowitz
- 2012-04-11 16:28:45 UTC
- Modified: 2012-04-11 16:28:45 UTC
Summary: Another attempt by Microsoft to fake fanfare
THE MONOPOLIST from Redmond has already tried AstroTurfing to shore up sales of WP7. Here is one example we wrote about.
Having failed to gain even a respectable share, Microsoft then decided to game some numbers and now
it gives little bribes. TechBytes' host Tim
writes:
"...Let's face facts, Microsoft has gotten it's hand into everything. Once there, they consistently become the 900lb gorilla in the room with a bad attitude that kills competition and is bad for consumers.... "
Microsoft is gaming the ranks by offering little bribes or virtually no-cost presales -- all just to create fake hype. We discussed this in the IRC channels when examples were given. Due to my connection being
far worse than useless at the moment I may not be able to blog as usual (will keep everything short).
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Comments
mcinsand
2012-04-11 16:54:01
Dr. Roy Schestowitz
2012-04-11 17:39:46
NotZed
2012-04-12 02:17:06
It's their last change hurrah and it shows. If such a US centric company like MS can't cut it in the US they have no hope elsewhere apart from tiny markets like Australia (which seems to love everything ms, and even here it doesn't seem to be going anywhere fast).
Even a total MS-fanboi friend of 20 years who has had a windows 7 phone since he could buy one just said he wouldn't recommend it. But he seems to have a strong aversion to android and doesn't like apple, so i'm not sure just what he would recommend - so i'll believe it when he buys something else. His rational is based on the hardware being out of date with it's low screen resolution and so on.
The locked-down hardware specs were a mistake google made with android in the early days - but it didn't last long because things move so fast. If the only option a manufacture has to distinguish their phone is using a faster (single core!) cpu, then it just makes the whole thing so very very common. At best they can hope for 'reliable work-horse', but given it's so locked down as a microsoft appliance I find that pretty unlikely.
More likely it'll end up being the 'no-name-brand' cheap alternative to the device the buyer really aspires to.
Dr. Roy Schestowitz
2012-04-12 07:48:26
NotZed
2012-04-12 09:50:25
I don't think they'd be worried too much about being called a patent troll: more that only being a patent troll wont make them the big money they're used to. As their tried and true business model relies on having a crushingly dominant market position from which to throw their weight around, patents are only a tool used to suppress the competition not one to make big profits from. And that's pretty much what patents are there for: protect the big boys who can afford the lawyers from competition.
Of course, none of this explains Nokia's head-long rush into suicide. Tomi Ahonen's latest post has him quite upset about it's wanton and needless destruction which is only accelerating now they've unveiled their slow-to-market new products which have about as much excitement attached to them as a Honda sedan.
Dr. Roy Schestowitz
2012-04-12 10:13:27