Zune phone makes sense, but Microsoft says don't count on it
Politics may prevent it, says analyst
IDG News Service - They're back: Rumors of an impending Zune phone announcement from Microsoft Corp., this time probably at CES.
Ever since the launch of the Zune, with its far superior music-playing software compared with the player built into Windows Mobile, people have urged Microsoft to incorporate the Zune software into a phone. That idea has spurred rumors of a Microsoft-branded phone that includes the Zune software and is targeted at consumers. The latest speculation has Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer introducing a Zune phone at the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas in January.
Microsoft flat-out denied that it will introduce a phone anytime soon, but experts said it should.
"Microsoft's only chance is to build a phone," said Satoshi Nakajima, who spent more than a decade at Microsoft and is now president of Big Canvas, an iPhone application development start-up. If Microsoft were to package hardware and software, much like its Xbox effort, it could better control the end result and potentially earn more revenue than it does on Windows Mobile, he said.
But Microsoft, which has historically said that it won't release its own device because it would compete with its phone manufacturer customers that use Windows Mobile, said not to count on such an announcement.
"Microsoft has no plans to make a phone. Our core focus has been and will continue to be providing software plus services and working with our partners to deliver great phones," the company said in a statement. "Our partners have been integral in our success to date, and we are excited about the innovation we are bringing to the market together."
Microsoft shouldn't let the competitive issue hold it back, some analysts said. If Microsoft clearly differentiates its phone, which would be based on software from recently acquired Danger and incorporate the Zune and potentially Xbox gaming functions, as squarely targeted at consumers, it might convince Windows Mobile phone makers that it doesn't compete, Nakajima said.
Microsoft could further distance the new system from Windows Mobile by spinning out a consumer-focused company that includes Xbox, Zune and Danger and produces the consumer phone, Nakajima suggested.
Indeed, if Microsoft clearly defines a new phone or software as aimed at consumers, it can placate Windows Mobile customers, said Avi Greengart, an analyst at Current Analysis Inc. "There's no doubt it makes sense," he said, of a Microsoft phone that would combine Danger, Zune and Xbox functions. "They'd have an advantage in controlling the hardware and software," he said.
But one analyst said that internal corporate politics and larger industry realities might prevent Microsoft from building its own phone. The Zune hasn't made much of a dent in the music player market, so that might not be the key to drawing more people to Microsoft mobile devices, said Jack Gold, an analyst at J. Gold Associates.



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