Will Mango Help Windows Phone Challenge Android?
The Windows Phone “Mango” update adds new features, but can it help Microsoft challenge Android and the iPhone, asks Nicholas Kolakowski
Will Microsoft’s upcoming software update for its Windows Phones, code-named “Mango”, affect the company’s smartphone prospects?
Certainly Mango represents a substantial revamp of Microsoft’s mobile platform, which is struggling for adoption in the face of competition from Google Android and Apple’s iPhone. In contrast to those platforms, which offer gridlike screens of individual apps, Windows Phone consolidates web content and applications into a set of subject-specific Hubs, including “Office” and “People.”
The new features include a redesigned Xbox Live Hub, home-screen tiles capable of displaying up-to-the-minute information such as instant messages and social-networking data, the ability to consolidate friends and colleagues into groups, and visual voicemail. All in all, Microsoft is planning to add some 500 new elements to Windows Phone.
Slow starter
Mango will be released sometime this autumn. That’s some distance away for a company wrestling to hold onto its market share. Although research firm Gartner estimated that Windows Phone sold 1.6 million units in the first quarter of 2011, recent data from comScore suggests that Microsoft’s share of the overall smartphone market continues to erode — a situation probably not helped by some well-publicised snafus with the first two Windows Phone software updates.
Even if the pre-Mango Windows Phone continues a slide in market share, Microsoft has managed to secure some long-term commitments from its manufacturing partners.
“We have some Windows Mango phones,” HTC CEO Peter Chou reportedly told Reuters on 25 May. “We are very committed to Windows phone products.” However, he offered no guidance on when those new devices might appear.
Analysts generally view Microsoft’s deal with Nokia, which will see Windows Phone ported onto the latter’s smartphones, as a chance for the Windows Phone platform to gain some additional momentum against Android and iOS.
In addition to HTC and Nokia, Samsung and LG Electronics have apparently committed to building new Windows Phone devices preloaded with Mango. Acer, Fujitsu and ZTE are also planning to produce Windows Phone devices for the first time.
In other words, Windows Phone isn’t exactly in danger of dying within the next couple of months — especially since it represents an all-or-nothing bet by Microsoft in the increasingly important mobile space.
The question is whether a Mango-enhanced Windows Phone can draw users who haven’t already gravitated toward Microsoft’s offering. Here the question becomes more problematic. Certainly a more robust smartphone platform helps spark increased adoption — for an example of that, look no further than Android, which has seen its market share increase with each successive version. But all the new gizmos in the world won’t help a platform that people don’t inherently find attractive or useful in their daily lives.
Good features, not enough apps
For enterprise users, Mango offers some key additions, including the ability to search a server for email items no longer stored to a device, and share and save Office documents via Office 365 and Windows SkyDrive. That could help drive Microsoft’s share among business users.
For consumers, the revamped Xbox Live and features like multitasking could make Windows Phone a more enticing prospect. Mango also introduces unique applications like Local Scout, which offers a view of everything to see and do in a particular neighborhood, and an enhanced “People” Hub that includes Twitter feeds.
Despite all those new features, Windows Phone has one weak spot: the number of apps available for download. In contrast to Apple’s App Store and Google’s Android Marketplace, which respectively boast hundreds of thousands of apps, Windows Phone’s online storefront boasts only a few thousand. While Microsoft executives argue that the apps’ quality eclipses the need for quantity, the fact remains that smartphone platforms with thriving ecosystems — i.e., Apple and Google — have seen their market share only increase, while those with comparatively few apps — Palm and Research In Motion come to mind — have seen their device adoption rates soften over several quarters.
Microsoft continues to push developers to build apps for Windows Phone. And Mango will be a giant step forward in the company’s attempts to offer a smartphone platform on par with Android and the iPhone. The question is whether those app-developer efforts — and Mango’s new features — will give Microsoft the momentum it needs to take Windows Phone from an also-ran to a major contender.