To view parent comment, click here.
To read all comments associated with this story, please click here.
I was speaking of the future too, but keep in mind the future is rooted in the present.
I don't see Nokia being hurt too badly in the global space, as they are the dominant player outside North America and for good reason; Symbian in my personal opinion barely qualifies as a "smartphone OS" but it is solid and versatile, and people just seem to love it. As for RIM, they have a strong foothold in the corporate and government worlds here in the US, though I've seen my own organization slowly making the switch to Android now that Nextel has embraced Android powered devices.
From what I've seen of WM7, it's just too little, too late. They've had over 10 years to "fix" WinMo and have failed at every opportunity. I may eat these words in a few years, but I'm going to go ahead and say that they will likely not even come close to competing with Google, Apple, Nokia and RIM for the foreseeable future.
Microsoft should concentrate more on their desktop OS and video game divisions; they really shine in those areas now. Windows 7 in particular is a great OS and deserves the greater part of their initiative.





Member since:
2007-06-12
he wasn't referring to current market share, he's referring to where we'll be in a few years. it's not that hard to see that Nokia and RIM are constantly losing market share in what phones are going to be (right now they're "smart phones").