Microsoft is said to be in the process of slashing Windows Phone 8 licensing fees, to help it gain market share against its Android and iOS-based rivals.
The software giant is said to be mulling a similar gambit to shore up OEM support for low-cost Windows 8.1 tablets and other devices.
During Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, Spain, Infosonics CEO Joseph Ram Sascha Segan told PCMag that his company is “hearing Microsoft will drop the license fee quite a bit, as far as 70 percent, which will make their product more competitive in terms of price.” Infosonics is a provider of low-cost Android handsets to Latin American markets as well as unlocked devices for the United States.
In a smartphone market currently dominated by Android devices like Samsung’s popular Galaxy handsets and Apple’s iPhone, Microsoft lags far behind. The company made a bold move to reverse its mobile fortunes, when in September, after months of rumours, it announced the acquisition of Nokia’s mobile hardware unit for $7.1 billion (£4.2bn). Nokia is Microsoft’s premier Windows Phone partner.
There are signs that Microsoft made a good bet in snapping up Nokia. Kantar Worldpanel ComTech released a report 4 November that pointed to encouraging Windows Phone growth in Europe and Latin America. “Nokia dominated in Latin America for many years, and while its popularity declined with the fortunes of Symbian, it now has an opportunity to regain the top spot,” Dominic Sunnebo, a strategic insight director at the research firm, said in a statement.
Microsoft may be looking to keep that momentum going by courting OEMs with lower licensing fees, a tactic that the company is exploring to help its Windows 8.1 operating system claw market share away from Android and iOS tablets.
Nokia’s Windows Phones are generally praised by reviewers for their top-tier build quality, snappy performance, and class-leading cameras on some models. Its new flagship, the Lumia Icon, sports a crisp 5-inch full-HD OLED screen and a 20-megapixel PureView camera. Yet despite desirable hardware, the handsets are hobbled by an anaemic Windows Store apps marketplace when compared to the Apple App Store and Google Play.
Nokia also made waves at this year’s MWC by unveiling a new line of affordable smartphones for emerging markets based on the Android Open Source Project (AOSP). Dubbed the Nokia X line, the low-cost smartphones sport a custom user experience that resembles Windows Phone’s tiled interface and swaps out Google’s built-in services with counterparts from Microsoft (Skype, OneDrive and Outlook.com).
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Originally published on eWeek.
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