WillysJeepMan
Active member
It DOES keep a project going when there are legal and financial obligations to do so. Perhaps that is technically NOT project inertia, but there are other factors in play beyond commercial viability. That is my point.If W10M was just another product like the Kin, which had absolutely no strategic relevancy, then you might have a point. W10M isn't just another product though, so you don't.
A notable part of W10M is developed as part of the larger W10, so there isn't a lot of pressure to drop it. More importantly, W10M can't be removed from MS' OS portfolio without invalidating their entire OS strategy, which MS has been working towards for over a decade. MS isn't going to do that, at least not yet. Nadella just recently went on record saying that MS plans to give W10M and the UWP a few years to prove themselves and I don't think he was lying about that.
Last but not least, project inertia can keep projects going, particularly the smaller ones, but it doesn't keep projects going which are deemed unnecessary, where the development costs run into the hundreds of millions of dollars annually.
IMO (and in the opinion of many mobile app developers), MS has invalidated their entire mobile OS strategy by "rebooting" it a few times over the past 15 years. People seem to forget that Microsoft was dominant in mobile OSes back then... maybe even more than Apple is today with iOS. Microsoft has not recovered from that... it has been a steady downward decline.
Are fans of W10M looking at Microsoft as the scrappy underdog when it is more accurate to view Microsoft as the great Empire that is a shadow of their former self? Microsoft has burned the bridges of trust in the mobile OS arena with developers and customers.
No worries. Historically (as in going all the way back to the Casio Cassiopeia days for mobile OS, and beyond) I've been the odd man out in my view... unconventional, but far more often correct than not... due primarily to my work for IBM and with Microsoft.Yes, I'm still calling BS.
Since we're talking bout predictions, I guess there isn't much else to say except we'll see. If W10M is still regularly updated and evolving a year from now, then I'll have been right.
If not, I'll gladly concede to you and everyone else here. We'll see...
I'm confident enough in my view of the landscape to NOT invest money in the W10M arena.