Telstra has revealed the addition of almost one million new mobile services in the six months to December 2011, but Sensis revenues plummeted 24 percent in 12 months.
Apple has the same sort of dominance in the online music and portable music player business that Microsoft has in the desktop software space. However, Microsoft plans to change that by going head to head with Apple in both the iPod and iTunes markets.
According to a report from Reuters, sources familiar with Microsoft's
plans (which generally means company insiders) have confirmed that the
software giant is developing an iPod rival and an online music service
to compete with iTunes.
One look at the music and video cataloging capabilities of the recently
launched Windows Media Player 11 was enough to reveal that a service
similar to iTunes is on the way from Microsoft. Last month, a
collaboration between cable entertainment group MTV and Microsoft was
announced that saw the debut of beta version of a new online music
service called Urge. The service integrates with Windows Media Player
11 and offers both subscription and pay per track pricing models.
Then, early this month, it was revealed that a Microsoft led consortium
of nine companies based in Japan planned to develop an iPod killer. The
consortium includes mobile handset manufacturer NTT DoCoMo, Toshiba Cor
and Napster Japan, among others. It was believed that an MP3 player to
take on iPod would probably come in the form of a mobile phone. Apple
itself realises that the iPods of the future will need to have mobile
telephony functionality.
Microsoft has reportedly already developed its iPod rival and is
demonstrating it to future business partners in the music industry. The
sources indicate that Microsoft's entry into the music market is being
overseen by the man who led the development of the company's Xbox
business, Robbie Bach, now president of Microsoft's entertainment and
devices division.
The entry of Microsoft into hardware markets such as portable music
players, the Xbox gaming platform, and more recently the introduction
of a webcam range, signals an attempt by the company to capture new
markets outside its traditional commodity desktop software base. It is
notable that all of this is happening as Microsoft founder Bill Gates
hands over the reigns as head of development to Ray Ozzie. At 50, the
world's richest man is no longer driving the direction of the company
he co-founded with Paul Allen.
Whether Microsoft under its new leadership can match the performance of
its halcyon years under Gates going forward into a new era of consumer
computing remains to be seen. Notably, Microsoft's biggest rival in
this space is Apple, a company which is once again ruled by the man who
did a lot to popularize consumer computing, Steve Jobs. An Ozzie versus
Jobs matchup should be interesting to watch. Some may speculate that
Ozzie is punching above his weight and that Microsoft needs a Gates to
drive the company's direction, just as Apple needed Jobs to get it back
on track.
David Bass
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