MikeSo
New member
Nadella is doing fine, IMO, and the current Microsoft strategy of treating phones essentially as nothing more and nothing less than a 5"+ computing device is a winning one in the long term for the company, I believe.
Microsoft has conceded the "phone market" and know they can't win there. They are now just trying to unify their OS to run on any device, so phone market share become irrelevant for them.
However, while this is good (I believe) for the company as a whole, I don't think it will be great for us as Windows Phone users. We will continue struggling to get apps that the competitors have and phone hardware will be very limited.
So it depends on how you see Nadella's role. Is it to grow Microsoft's overall business and profits? I think he has shown he can do that. Is it to make us get more banking apps? I don't think he cares that much, but we might, if Windows 10 Store pans out the way Microsoft hopes. It's not essential to the overall strategy though.
Microsoft has conceded the "phone market" and know they can't win there. They are now just trying to unify their OS to run on any device, so phone market share become irrelevant for them.
However, while this is good (I believe) for the company as a whole, I don't think it will be great for us as Windows Phone users. We will continue struggling to get apps that the competitors have and phone hardware will be very limited.
So it depends on how you see Nadella's role. Is it to grow Microsoft's overall business and profits? I think he has shown he can do that. Is it to make us get more banking apps? I don't think he cares that much, but we might, if Windows 10 Store pans out the way Microsoft hopes. It's not essential to the overall strategy though.