Microsoft Partner - Channel Insider
Empowering the next generation Channel
 

Sponsored Links
  • Try Windows Azure free for 90 days

  • Introducing the world's first family of systems with integrated expertise

  • FREE Securing Smartphones & Tablets for Dummies Book from Sophos
  • 5 New Technologies That Will Change Enterprise ITAdvertisement
  • Build an IT Infrastructure That Delivers the Future

  •  

    Microsoft CEO Talks Windows in CES Keynote

    in Microsoft Partner



    Article Rating:starstarstarstarstar / 1
    Article Views: 1802

    Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer spent his possibly last Consumer Electronics Show keynote playing up Windows Phone and the upcoming Windows 8.

    Rate This Article:
    Add This Article To:

    LAS VEGAS--Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer took the stage here Jan. 9 for what could very well be his last keynote address at the Consumer Electronics Show (CES). As predicted by many in the tech media, his talk focused primarily on Windows Phone, Microsoft's designs on living-room entertainment and the upcoming Windows 8.  

    But most of all, Ballmer wanted to talk about the "Metro" design aesthetic that increasingly unites Microsoft's properties, referring to it as a "star attraction" across "all the user experiences" offered by his company.

    "I think people will be kind of impressed by how it lights everything up," he told television host Ryan Seacrest, who acted as a host of sorts for the keynote, and the audience of hundreds filling the ballroom of Vegas' Venetian hotel and casino.

    Overshadowing the event was the knowledge that this would be a Microsoft CEO's last CES keynote, at least for the foreseeable future.

    "We agreed to a pause," Gary Shapiro, president and CEO of the Consumer Electronics Association (CEA), which hosts CES, told the audience before Ballmer appeared. "I would be shocked if a Microsoft leader didn't return to the stage in the next few years."

    That made the pullout sound like a mutual decision, despite an official Microsoft blog posting in December framing it as a unilateral one--on Microsoft's part. When Ballmer stepped onstage, he declined to say much of anything about his company's decision, but moved on to the main event with a brisk "Let's get started."

    Soon enough, the giant screen behind Ballmer and Seacrest was flashing images of the company's upcoming products, and a rotating host of executives stepped onto one of the onstage podiums to deliver a somewhat deeper dive into the various features.

    "I'm really excited and upbeat about where we are," Ballmer said about Microsoft's Windows Phone. "If you take a look at it, the other phones all make the sea of icons, the sea of applications what we've really done with Windows Phone is have a better way."

    Microsoft and its partners are using CES as a platform to essentially reintroduce Windows Phone to a broad audience. Although the mobile software platform attracted some solid critical reviews following its initial release in late 2010, by summer even Ballmer acknowledged that Windows Phone devices were selling poorly.

    Microsoft has released a major Windows Phone software update, "Mango," with hundreds of tweaks and new features. In addition, manufacturing partners such as Nokia and HTC have committed to building a new generation of Windows Phones with specs matching those of high-end rivals such as Apple's iPhone and the premium Android smartphones.  

    Ballmer and company then moved on to Windows 8. "People don't want to compromise on what they have today," he said, in a not-so-veiled allusion to tablets and their somewhat lightweight functionality. "They want the best of what they have, and the best of what they want." The upcoming operating system, he said, will operate on both tablets and PCs without forcing users to compromise.

    Despite the near-ubiquity of the Windows brand on PCs, Windows 8 will face some significant challenges to adoption when it enters the market in the second half of 2012. With a start screen composed of large, colorful tiles linked to applications, the operating system has indeed been designed to work on both traditional PCs and tablets; in the latter case, however, it will face a segment dominated by Apple's iPad and crowded with a variety of touch screens running Google Android. Those rivals will surely battle fiercely to keep Windows from gaining traction among tablet users.

    In addition, Windows 8 will arrive a mere three years after Windows 7. That could make the operating system a hard sell to customers and businesses that recently upgraded. Over the past few months, Microsoft executives have taken pains to emphasize Windows 8's enhancements and tweaks to the standard Windows features.

    Ballmer and company also pushed the ultrabooks that are ubiquitous at this year's CES. This isn't exactly a startling move on Microsoft's part: Ballmer has long advocated selling ultrathin laptops with more powerful specs than netbooks small and cheap devices that flooded the market a few years back. For Microsoft, the advantage is clear: More powerful hardware can run a more expensive version of Windows, not to mention software such as Office. Ultrabooks are also being pushed aggressively by Intel, which is seeking a way to make its presence more deeply felt in the mobile segment. 

    Ballmer spent the rest of his last CES keynote discussing initiatives ranging from Xbox whose dashboard recently underwent a "Metro"-style makeover to the cloud-based Office 365. But he closed with a strong message about Microsoft's core focus. "Windows 8 is what's next," he told the audience. "There's nothing more important at Microsoft than Windows."

    Follow Nicholas Kolakowski on Twitter

     



    To read the original eWeek article, click here: Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer CES Keynote: Windows Most Important




    comments dic


     
     
    >>> More Microsoft Partner Articles          >>> More By Channel Insider Staff
     


     



    channel chatter


    HTML PLAIN TEXT

    Keep on top of news for VARs and Resellers with CI's Weekly Newsletter and Alerts.


    [ci] feeds
    XML
    Add Channel News, Product Reviews, Trends and Analysis to your RSS newsreader or My Yahoo!


     


    CHANNEL SPONSORED RESOURCE CENTER
     
     
     
    Start the New Year with business intelligence—it’s a smart move
    Join us on February 1 for an encore rebroadcast at either 5 am or 12 noon EST and discover how business intelligence (BI) supports companies in uncertain business and economic climates. Get expert advice on how to create a strategy that fits your organization's needs and budget and see how quickly it can pay for itself.
    Click Here
     
    Security and Availability Essentials for Running Your Business in the Cloud
    Are you moving to the cloud? Find out what every IT professional should know about security and availability before moving to the cloud. Hear what a security provider’s own CSO has to say.
    Watch Video
    A new algorithm automatically identifies relationships between variables to help reduce researcher prejudice.
    Click HereAdvertisement