Windows
Phone started off life as a promising alternative to Android and iOS
five years ago. Microsoft positioned its range of Windows Phone 7
handsets as the true third mobile ecosystem, but it's time to admit it
has failed. If a lack of devices from phone makers and even Microsoft
itself wasn't enough evidence, the final nail in the coffin hit today. Microsoft only sold 4.5 million Lumia devices in
the recent quarter, compared to 10.5 million at the same time last
year. That's a massive 57 percent drop. Even a 57 percent increase
wouldn't be enough to save Windows Phone right now.
Microsoft
and Nokia have sold a total of 110 million Windows Phones compared to
4.5 billion iOS and Android phones in the same period. IDC recently reported
that 400 million phones were sold in the recent quarter, meaning just
1.1 percent of them were Lumia Windows Phones. Microsoft does not have
any compelling Lumia handsets, and the Lumia 950 and Lumia 950 XL were
both disappointing flagship devices with unfinished Windows 10 Mobile
software.
With
Lumia sales on the decline and Microsoft's plan to not produce a large
amount of handsets, it's clear we're witnessing the end of Windows
Phone. Rumors suggest Microsoft is developing a Surface Phone, but it
has to make it to the market first. Windows Phone has long been in
decline and its app situation is only getting worse.
With a lack of hardware, lack of sales, and less than 2 percent market
share, it's time to call it: Windows Phone is dead. Real Windows on
phones might become a thing with Continuum eventually, but Windows Phone
as we know it is done. It won't stop Microsoft producing a few handsets
every year as a vanity project, but for everyone else it's the end of
the line. Farewell, Windows Phone.
0 comments:
Post a Comment
What's On Your Mind?