is suddenly a powerful presence on my phone.
Yes,
you read that right. This is the same Microsoft that spent almost a
half-decade trying to offer a credible alternative to Apple’s iPhone
and mobile devices running Google’s Android. And it’s the same
Microsoft that paid more than $7 billion to buy Nokia’s once-mighty
handset business, only to see its mobile business sink further. The
company now clings precariously to a 3 percent share of new smartphone
sales.
Make
no mistake, Microsoft still wants its mobile operating system, Windows,
to be the software in our smartphones. But mobile developers continue
to focus on making apps for Apple or Android devices instead, making
Windows phones an increasingly hard sell.
That
reality has finally sunk in at Microsoft, and a new strategy is afoot.
When Satya Nadella, Microsoft’s chief executive, took the top job at the
company about a year ago, he signaled that the company’s priorities
were shifting. Microsoft, he said, was in a “mobile-first, cloud-first
world.”
Since
then, the company has brought more of its apps and services to the
Apple and Android devices people actually use, rather than the ones
Microsoft would like them to use — those that run Windows.
What’s even more surprising is that Microsoft’s heart seems to be in the effort.
Over the last several months, Microsoft has been taking up more and more space on my own iPhone’s
home screen. I’ve installed mobile versions of its Office apps as well
as OneDrive, the company’s answer to Dropbox, Google Drive and other
cloud storage services.
For
the last couple of weeks, I have also relied heavily on Microsoft’s
latest mobile creation, Outlook for the iPhone. (It’s available on
Android, too; both versions are free for personal use.) Outlook is an
email and calendar app that bears a resemblance to the PC version of the
software, but mostly just in name. Instead of trying to jam all the
features of the PC version into the app, Outlook is thoughtfully
tailored for how people use email on smartphones.
The
new Outlook is not Microsoft’s work, exactly. The app is mostly a
rebranding of Acompli, an existing app made by a start-up that Microsoft
acquired in December for $200 million. But there is no shame in using
acquisitions to inject new talent and technology into a company.
Facebook, Google and Amazon all employ a similar strategy.
The
fact that Microsoft released the new Outlook in late January, when the
ink was barely dry on its Acompli deal, is a clear sign of how quickly
the company feels it needs to move in the mobile business. Last week,
the company bought the maker of Sunrise, a popular mobile calendar app,
suggesting that Microsoft has no plans to let up on its deal-making.
Until
it released its new mail app, Microsoft offered OWA for iPhone and
Android. The name stands for Outlook Web Access, and as the name
suggests, the app was essentially a shortcut to a web page and lacked
the performance and richness of a native mobile app.
The
new Outlook is everything its predecessor was not — snappy and, for
people who are heavy email users on mobile, a genuine improvement on the
standard Apple email app that comes on every iPhone.
“People
end up looking at their email client many, many times a day, but they
do it in short bursts,” said Javier Soltero, the general manager of
Outlook at Microsoft and the former chief executive of Acompli. “For us,
the average session length is about 24 seconds. How do you make that 24
seconds most productive?”
Outlook’s
answer is to use software algorithms to automatically divide emails
into two queues: Focused and Other. Put simply, Focused is supposed to
give me the messages I’ll want to look at in those 24-second glances,
while Other is stuff I might want to look at later or not at all.
Microsoft
is hardly the first to sort like this. Google’s Gmail app for iPhone,
for instance, has an email queue known as priority inbox for messages it
determines you’ll want to see.
Both
Google and Microsoft have similar tricks for ranking important emails.
They look at who you’ve emailed in the past, whose messages you open and
who you bother replying to. They generally downgrade messages from
broad email lists and social media notifications.
The
problem with this kind of intelligent email sorting is that it’s often
hard for users to trust. No one wants to miss a crucial email from a
boss. And if the sorting isn’t reliable, many users will simply look at
two inboxes instead of one.
That
said, I like how Outlook sorts emails and prefer its approach over the
Gmail app. Outlook generally allowed more messages into my Focused queue
than I would like, though it lets you filter similar messages in the
future. Gmail, in contrast, omitted things from my Important queue that I
wanted to see.
Another
way Outlook helps people be more efficient is by integrating a
calendar. When trying to arrange a meeting over email, there’s no more
need to jump out of email and into a separate calendar.
With
a few taps, you can list free times in your schedule in an email. The
recipient of the message can pick one, and your meeting is automatically
scheduled on your calendar.
It
would be easy to dismiss Outlook as a fluke if Microsoft were not also
making so many other credible mobile apps. Early last year, it finally
released high-quality versions of its main Office apps — Word, Excel and
PowerPoint — for iPhone, iPad and their Android variants. Then the company made nearly complete versions of the apps free.
Microsoft
is still hoping to get people to upgrade to a paid subscription to
Office 365, which costs $6.99 a month to use Office on a single
smartphone, tablet and PC or Mac. Households that want to share a
subscription for Office on up to five devices of each type pay $9.99 a
month.
There
are excellent free productivity apps on mobile and PCs from Google,
Apple and others, and the prospect of those apps chipping away at its
Office business is terrifying for Microsoft.
But
Microsoft has sweetened its Office 365 deal by including unlimited
online storage through OneDrive, its cloud storage service.
That’s
not a misprint. You can create an online copy of all of your pictures,
videos, music and other files in the cloud, with no limits. One terabyte
of online storage costs $19.99 from Apple’s iCloud service, while
Dropbox and Google each charge $9.99 a month.
I
can’t imagine personally needing much more than a terabyte of online
backup — it is more than 300,000 photos or 1,000 hours of video. But I
might get there someday as the resolution in cameras increases. It’s
comforting to know I have a copy of all my data in case my computer is
stolen, destroyed in a fire or just conks out.
A
OneDrive app on my iPhone automatically backs up everything I shoot
with the phone’s camera. Its integration with Office is seamless, too.
The
other day, my daughter put together a birthday tribute to her mother in
the form of a PowerPoint presentation. She composed it on a Mac, which
automatically backed it up to OneDrive. We went to a restaurant, my
daughter opened PowerPoint on my iPhone 6 Plus and did the presentation
right there at our table.
My wife was in tears — and it would have not have been possible using Microsoft products a little over a year ago.
0 comments:
Post a Comment