Microsoft is and always has been a tools and platforms company.
Are we agreed on that? Whether it be BASIC, WINDOWS, DIRECTX, OFFICE, VISUAL STUDIO, LINKEDIN, BING, COPILOT, OR GAME PASS, their business is about one or the other, preferably in synergy. Windows helps Office and Visual Studio, and DirectX helps Windows and Visual Studio.
MS does hardware when it helps support at least one major product line. Whether it be a CP/M card or mice or gaming consoles, hardware has to line up with either a platform or a tool.
It's not about consumer vs enterprise but about synergy. And profit margin.
Nadella may blame himself for killing Windows Phone but MS didn't lose the mobile platform business because of him. That happened before him when WindowsCE was backburnered, starved, and killed.
Windows CE was years ahead of the market and killed just as the market for it started to emerge. Windows Phone was a belated effort to undo that mistake and buying Nokia s bigger mistake. It took most of a decade for Android to evolve the capabilities (true multitasking in particular) that CE had since its infancy.
WindowsCE served a purpose and it extended more than one core platform (Windows APIs, Visual Studio, Office, Browser, to name a few) into both mobile and embedded systems. It had synergy up the wazoo.
Windows Phone, for all its virtues, was like ZUNE a too late me-too product into a market that had already defined itself. WindowsCE and its Smartphones were ahead of the market and windows phone was behind it. It never had enough market share to attract the light apps that define mobile and even today Windows still lacks, for all the widget models MS tries to graft on Windows.
They missed the boat and they know it.
They tried again with the Duo but the market isn't there. Not because it wasn't a good product or lacked *some* synergy but because it didn't fit the market. And the true market of smartphones isn't the consumer but the telecom. The needed synergy isn't with the OS or the apps but the services it links to. The Duo provides added value to the user but not to the telecom. To them it was just another phone. And a pricey one.
And the same thing applies to a MS Android phone, regardless of user features.
Android phones are commodities, fancy features or not. And commodities are by definition low margin products. And MS has little interest in low margin products unless they serve a strategic purpose. mice where useful during the transition to GUIs and when an MS mouse could command a premium (and bigger margin) but once those advantages faded, they offloaded the business. Like they offloaded Expedia when it was no longer needed to promote CD-ROM PCs.
Where's the value of a MS Android phone to justify a premium? MS already offers a hundred apps on any Android phone and already lets you tightly link the phone to Windows. They're even dropping Android emulation because it (apparently) isn't adding enough value to Windows. Maybe Windows doesn't actually need light apps when the same benefits can come via browser?
The time for a Microsoft phone, CE, Windows, or android is past. Way too late.
It offers no value to MS.
What MS needs to do is figure out, like others are already doing, is looking for ways to leverage "AI" on wearable tech.
Microsoft Glasses maybe.
Microsoft Band 2.0? Possible.
MS commbadge? hmm...
Don't fight the last war, look to the next one instead.