Blog

  • Irish cookery teacher + more

    Irish cookery teacher

    Irish cookery teacher terrified into handing over website name to Lady Gaga | Irish Business | IrishCentral – the smart thing would have come to an agreement with the Irish cookery teacher and agree to licence the name to her for cookery blogging purposes only. Instead they’ve risked a social media shit-storm for a box-ticking exercise. In this day and age, that’s an act of gross negligence and incompetence by whoever signed off on this and I feel for the Irish cooker teacher involved. More Irish related content here.

    Consumer behaviour

    Under the Influence: Consumer Trust In Advertising

    The Demographics of “Cell-Mostly” Internet Users

    Economics

    The typical American family makes less than it did in 1989This isn’t a lost decade for economic gains for Americans. It is a lost generation.

    Lexington: The American Dream, RIP? | The Economist  – the cyberpunk novels like Gibson’s Sprawl trilogy were right

    The Decline of Great Industrial Cities – Euromonitor International – interesting data, will this be mirrored by suburbanisation in China and other emerging markets?

    How to

    (mt) Media Temple » WordPress Performance: From A to Z

    Infinite scroll: its impact on SEO and how to fix it | Econsultancy

    Ideas

    The Feynman Lectures on Physics Website – great reading material

    Innovation

    Integration of graphene photodetector into computer chip could revolutionize telecommunications | Science Recorder

    Audi’s Diesel V10 SUV Supercar Somehow Gets 30 MPG | Wired.com – its like the car of my childhood dreams has been built by Audi

    Media

    Netlabels : Free Music : Free Audio : Download & Streaming : Internet Archive – surprisingly good electronica in amongst this lot

    How Google could fix the press release | Econsultancy

    Online

    Quitting Facebook: What’s Behind The New Trend To Leave Social Networks? Eurasia ReviewReasons for quitting Facebook were mainly privacy concerns (48.3 percent), followed by a general dissatisfaction with Facebook (13.5 percent), negative aspects of online friends (12.6 percent), and the feeling of getting addicted to Facebook (6.0 percent; other/unspecific, 19.6 percent).

    Retailing

    Supermarkets in Africa: The grocers’ great trek | The Economist – partly because South Africa is turning into a basket case, and partly because of commodity market driven growth in other African countries

    Mobile Statistics – Study debunks commonly held beliefs about showrooming – Internet Retailer

    Security

    Schneier on Security: Surreptitiously Tampering with Computer Chips – that’s Intel’s business screwed in China

    Software

    Offline reading with the NewsBlur iOS app – NewsBlur – great performance tweaks

    Yahoo hires Google’s Technical Lead for Android’s Open Source Project — Tech News and Analysis – the hire will bring outsized kudos to Yahoo! engineering teams as much as anything else

    Bump Mobile Contact Sharing App Acquired By Google, Will Stay Alive For Now | TechCrunch – interesting move, kill a competitor to NFC?

    Google and Samsung soar into list of top 10 Linux contributors | Ars Technica – Microsoft and Yahoo! seem to have dropped right off

    Jolla’s Sailfish OS gains Android compatibility, making it an easier sell for manufacturers — Tech News and Analysis – expect homebrew ports as well

    Telecoms

    Nokia’s Last Great Deal: Zero to $7.2 Billion – WSJ.com – interesting article on the next chapter for Nokia as an infrastructure business

    Web of no web

    Google Glass Not Expected To Reach Europe For Years – voice recognition a barrier to rapid expansion

    Wireless

    BBC News – Mobile phone emergency alert system to be tested in UK – interesting implicit message of we know who and where you are

    China Mobile Marketing & Mobile User Insights — China Internet Watch

    Apple Clearly Doesn’t Care At All About Winning Smartphone Market Share – Business Insider

  • Hilton Worldwide + more

    Hilton Worldwide

    Hilton Worldwide Files for an IPO – Euromonitor International – interesting analysis of their business. Hilton Worldwide can trace its history back to a Texas hotelier in the early 20th century. It expanded to New York in 1943. Hilton Worldwide was one of the first users of computing with its centralised hotel booking system. It also pioneered the airport hotel with the first Hilton Worldwide airport property at San Francisco airport. Hilton Worldwide is being taken public by private equity company Blackstone.

    Consumer behaviour

    Selling to China’s digital divas: Microsoft – Campaign Asia – 18-34 year old women in China own on average just under 5 digital devices, the most popular being a smartphone

    Edelman Trust Barometer – The Emerging Markets Supplement – I’ll dig into this and there maybe a post with more detail here later

    DailyTech – Generation Y Wants iPhones/Tablets, Not Cars – imagine American Graffiti without the drive-in or the cars, but with iPads and iPhones

    Design

    Thuraya SatSleeve | Thuraya – reminded me of the OmniSky wireless sleds that used to clip on the back of Palm devices

    Gadgets

    Alcatel’s Crazy Idea: A Remote for the Smartphone – I don’t think that these are so crazy at all, having context dependent peripherals

    How to

    Matt Cutts Answers Whether Or Not Nofollow Links Can Hurt Your Site – nofollow links don’t hurt your search ranking

    Ideas

    Mutual Mobile | trend report on automotive – (PDF)

    Ireland

    TDs and Senators get reality check on mortgage arrears – The Irish Times – not really that surprising

    Luxury

    2013 White Paper on Travellers – The Rise of Social Travel | Group M & CIC Data – on Chinese travellers

    Media

    Sina Made Enterprise Weibo Verification Available for Singapore Companies — China Internet Watch

    When aggregators attack: Techmeme’s headline-rewriting is just part of a larger shift — paidContent

    Riptide: what really happened in the news business – great paper on the collision of digital technology with journalism and news gathering since 1980 (PDF)

    Online

    Twitter makes IPO plans official: files confidential S-1, but expected value is about $14B — Tech News and Analysisthat this is a confidential filing means the company’s annual revenue is less than $1 billion. Usually when companies announce plans to go public, they have to file an S-1, the securities filing that companies use to provide details about their planned initial public offerings. Under the JOBS act of 2012, however, companies with less than $1 billion in revenue can file confidentially.

    @ twitter: We’ve confidentially submitted … – why use a press release when this will do

    LinkedIn CEO: We’re aiming for 3B profiles and a map of the world’s economy | VentureBeat – reminds me of doing Yahoo! knowledge search press briefings with Jeff Weiner; similarly grand vision

    Retailing

    Chaos Reborn: Kowloon Walled City Rebuilt as Arcade | WebUrbanist – this is so cool

    Security

    NSA Spies on International Bank Transactions – SPIEGEL ONLINE – not terribly surprised

    VPNs caught in Cameron’s porn filter – O2 network lists privacy service as adult content | TechEye

    Google security exec: ‘Passwords are dead’ | Security & Privacy – CNET News – 2-part verification etc

    Software

    Cloud Phones Threaten iPhone Android – Business Insider – standard app versus web argument. The question is whether it will open up the market to a multiplicity of smartphone OS’ or just a few winners

    Wintel destined to eventually fail, says Acer foundermany downstream players moving to Google eco-system… For an ecosystem to have a chance of growing and staying strong, it must have leadership adopting strategies that allow all partners to earn profits. – Surprised Stan Shih was that blunt about their relationship with Microsoft

    Wireless

    Microsoft Nokia merger: Android Lumia had been built | BGR – of course they would, you have development teams doing all kinds of things like this, but it doesn’t mean that Nokia was ready to capitalise on it

    CannyVision – The most forward-thinking Apple yet – interesting speculative analysis

    How significant is Apple’s deal with Docomo? 66% of ex-Docomo users left to buy an iPhone – The Next Web – potentially cut churn by 66%?

    China approves new iPhone for all its networks – Rethink Wireless – an engineering feat certainly and potentially better for roaming, but don’t hold your breath for a China Mobile deal. China Mobile has more to gain by holding out for longer

    Xiaomi Turns Profit on Sales of IPhone-Beating Handset – Bloomberg – bad news for Nokia and Samsung

  • iPhone 5c / 5s

    Apple iPhone 5c and 5s event

    I had a late evening in the office so decided to stay up late and follow the Apple event where they unveiled the Apple iPhone 5c and the iPhone 5s. Here are my thoughts from the launch permeated through a couple of days thoughts.

    Evolution rather than revolution

    The Apple share price declined 5 per cent by the end of trading after the announcement as Wall Street hadn’t been blown away by the new products. The expectation of continuous revolution is unrealistic, innovation is lumpy. The relative low-key approach should have been a clear sign; Apple held the event on campus rather than the Moscone Center in San Francisco. Secondly if one looks at the launch of the Samsung Galaxy 4 one could see the lull in innovation.

    Unfortunately consumers didn’t get the message here is a couple of sentiment curves I took a picture of during the first 24 hours after the launch:

    iPhone 5c
    iPhone 5c

    iPhone 5s
    iphone 5s
    I was shocked to rate in the 10 percent most positive sentiment group.

    They may not be buying iPhones, but they are interested them

    What Apple doesn’t have in market share it more than makes up for in terms of defining the direction of the smartphone industry.

    It’s about experience

    The smartphone industry seems to be marketed on speeds and feeds, from Apple going to VLIW (very long instruction word) processor architecture or MediaTek and Samsung going to eight-core processors. It is getting progressively harder to compare devices on paper even with the same operating system.

    Where the performance does show out is in the experience. Xiaomi have done a lot of work in terms of not only redesigning their fork of Android but also optimising the code to run faster on the hardware they select. Which is the reason why they can sell a decent handset at a lower price point. This increases the disruptive nature of their direct to consumer model.

    Why 64-Bit?

    There are a number of aspects to that answer, the big part is that one is not sure which is the the most relevant:

    • OSX has been 64 bit since 2006, there is the opportunity for more underlying code share. Knowing Apple, I would expect this to result in a leaner OSX rather than a bloated iOS. Expect to see speculation of Apple equivalents of the Microsoft Surface tablets, and then promptly discount them. People like to keep their hands on the keyboards too much.
    • Reducing processor cycles by taking in more data per cycle and reducing power consumption. This only works if applications are designed to work wtih 64-bit, there is likely to be some work required on applications to make them work.
    • Addressing a lot of memory is something that made 3D popular in the desktop computing world, allowing for more programmes and information to be held in RAM for quicker access but there is no indication of what this will be used for.

    The M7 co-processor

    The M7 co-processor has been heralded as a way to do indoor mapping, or a boon for the quantified self. All very fine utopian visions: data is collected, what happens to it after that is both a work of wonder and of the darkest imaginations as the Edward Snowden affair has demonstrated. What I find more interesting is that Apple opted for a discrete component rather than putting this on the die of the A7. It would have probably made more sense, given Apple’s focus on computing power per Watt since Apple’s Worldwide Developer Conference (WWDC) in 2005. It’s not like it couldn’t have multi-core sleep mode.

    Was it because:

    • They didn’t have time to architect it into the processor?
    • They didn’t want to telegraph what they were doing to Samsung? (It’s interesting that Samsung said straight away that they were dong a 64-bit processor next year, especially as they fabricate Apple’s chips)
    • They want to use the M7 in non-A7-powered products?

    The 5c is about the supply chain

    Probably the most debated aspect of the phone line-up is the iPhone 5C industrial design, specifically the steel reinforced polycarbonate chassis. Moving the iPhone 5c down the Apple food chain would mean lots more milling machines churning out even cheaper phones and would be likely to act as a bottle-neck for Apple trying to get significant numbers of the iPhone 5s out into the marketplace.

    The mistake that pundits made was the association of plastic as a cheap material. If it is done well with the right blend, the right tooling and the right design plastic isn’t a cheap material but a great material. In modern parlance it has been associated with disposable throwaway products, but it’s like thinking of wood as a cheap material because we associated it with tooth-picks.

    More information

    Apple’s iOS 64-bit iUpgrade: Don’t expect a 2x performance leap | The Register

  • Get Lucky & more things

    Get Lucky

    I missed this earlier on in the summer with the weight of Get Lucky -related content that appears. Get Lucky is undoubtedly a classic that will be played for years to come, so long as Daft Punk allow it. I thought that the 1990 on was particularly well done with the Steve Silk Hurley-esque horns in the background. Kudos to my former colleagues at RFI Studios for flagging this one up.

    Coffee infographic

    The coffee shop (Alchemy Coffee, Hon Hai Street) just up the block from my office has this great hand-drawn infographic that guides consumers through the veritable jungle of coffee choices that they may want to order. Confused by a flat white or a latte; not any more you aren’t. Really simple information architecture that other coffee shops and coffee drinkers could learn from. More Hong Kong related content here.
    Untitled

    Disenchanted

    I found out about this comic through Mark Millar’s Crossed web comic series. Disenchanted looks at what happens when no one believes in you any more and when you don’t matter through the lives of fairie folk. Call it a deconstruction of religion or a reflection on the post-colonial futures of former societies if you will; one thing I can tell you is that it will definitely be an interesting read. It starts October, but put it in your RSS feeds now. Millar’s work promises to be a dystopian fantastic realism in a comic.
    disenchanted-logo

    Sublime Wizardry

    Sublime Wizardry have backed Public Enemy on tours, which is as good a measure of quality as any. Sublime Wizardry is a crew from Germany and the UK. They include Tony Burrell who has been a DJ producer since the mid-1980s and other former members of 32 Troop alongside rapper Native Sun:

    Really interesting talk on the future of books by Hannu Rajaniemi, in terms of its form rather the media that it’s published in (paper/pixels).

  • The Nokia Microsoft Post

    Nokia Microsoft deal

    In the week since the news broke my thoughts on the acquisition by Microsoft of Nokia’s device business have slowly coalesced into the notes that make up this post.

    The two Nokia’s

    The acquisition is a tale of two businesses, the first business is a business services, cloud computing and network hardware business: HERE maps (Naviteq) and Nokia Siemens Networks. This business has improved as many of the major developed world markets have expressed concern over Huawei and ZTE infrastructure. It depends on having high-quality, high touch relationships with the world’s wireless telecoms businesses and internet businesses.

    Of the two I suspect that Naviteq could be the most profitable because of the cost of gaining high quality up to date geo-location-based information that can be integrated into business support systems. Nokia’s infrastructure business faces a number of challenges:

    • The high cost of research and development to remain at the table for fifth generation networks. This problem was exasperated as Nokia was on the wrong side of the WiMax/LTE battle
    • They are in a field where there are other well established hungry western players (Alcatel-Lucent and Ericsson) and ‘safe’ Asian competitors (Samsung)

    The other Nokia is the devices business that is more familiar to consumers; this is the Nokia Microsoft business now. Like the first Nokia I outlined this one too needs high quality, high touch relationships with carriers in countries where they represent the primary distribution channel. In developing markets with high pay-as-you-go phone usage the channel partner structure maybe more complex; and I haven’t even discussed the grey market channel yet which makes up to 80 per cent of sales in some countries.

    The relationship with carriers is wrapped up in technology choices and Nokia’s handset business was adversely affected in two ways:

    • A number of carriers including NTT DoCoMo and China Mobile had bought into Symbian as an operating system and had actively supported it in their products. NTT DoCoMo had contributed to the Symbian stack and bought phones from the likes of Panasonic that ran SymbianOS S60
    • Nokia had successfully got a number of carriers including China Mobile on board with its future internal operating system MeeGo

    The Nokia Microsoft pivot was sudden and burned bridges of trust that would take time to rebuild. Secondly Symbian S60 and to a lesser extent MeeGo encouraged consumers to use a phone as a phone; they were designed with a design philosophy from the ground for both voice and data usage. Android and iOS fall decidedly more towards being connected personal digital assistants (PDAs) that also make calls. From a user experience point of view there is not a million miles of separation between iOS, Android and the Treo range of Palm OS-based phones of the early to mid-noughties (guess where Apple got its ringer mute switch from).

    Wireless carrier business models have been built around selling the convenience of being able to make voice calls whenever you want, data is a comparative latecomer to this business. The reason why mobile phones went to digital in the first place was to increase the network carrying capacity of voice traffic. A key benefit of 3G networks for carriers was not selling video clips like 3 first tried to do but efficiently carrying voice traffic as most people of secondary school age or above had a mobile phone.

    So having an operating system that puts a universal VoIP (voice over IP) client at the centre of its offering is not going to win any friends. Microsoft acquired Skype in April 2011 and has progressively put the VoIP client at the centre of its messaging offering and phone software.

    Secondly, Microsoft’s record of mutually beneficial success in the PC industry, portable computing industry and telecoms sectors features a list of troubled companies. Specifically in the telecommunications sector:

    • Nortel – Microsoft and Nortel formed the Innovative Communications Alliance in June 2006 that was focused on unified communications within enterprises (the use of VoIP PBXs would facilitate video, conference and phone calls without paying phone charges to carriers for multinational companies). Three years later Nortel is broken up into pieces and sold off. The reasons for this were legion: the company had been hacked for years and was a victim of industrial espionage on an epic scale, the company had been over-exposed to the telecoms bubble of the late 1990s through its sale of optical equipment. One of my clients at the time RSL Communications had a backbone network based on Nortel optical equipment. It’s ubiquity left the business exposed. Mismanagement that led to a number of restatements of the company accounts with over-valued assets and under-valued liabilities
    • Motorola – Though one tends to think of the RAZR feature phone and the Android phones (pre-and-post Google acquisition); Motorola had taken a number of smartphone attempts. It had built the first smartphone based on Linux running Java applications back in 2003, which had proved to be very popular in China due to it’s handwriting interface. It had also been a part of the Symbian alliance and had used the UIQ interface favoured by Sony-Ericsson. It had even licensed the Palm OS and had an early device in development by 2001. However at the critical time around the launch of the original iPhone Motorola had a Microsoft Windows Mobile-powered smartphone the Motorola Q. That worked out sufficiently well that Motorola abandoned it and focused on Android devices. The company was eventually acquired by Google as much as a defensive move to protect the Android eco-system from Motorola patent suits as much for the handset manufacturer’s business
    • Palm – Palm was founded in 1992, they originally created a device called the Zoomer in partnership with Casio and Tandy – who provided the manufacturing and supply chain whilst Palm built the personal information manager (PIM) software. The operating system came from Geoworks, who also made the operating system for the original Nokia Communicator devices. The Zoomer was not a financial success but Palm did manage to sell synchronisation software to Hewlett-Packard and handwriting recognition software to Apple for the Newton range of PDAs. The company was acquired in 1995 and released the Palm-Pilot range of devices in 1997 running the Palm OS that had been developed the previous year. The Pilot 1000 and 5000 were replaced by the Personal and Professional – around about this time the devices were also sold with a basic dial-up modem providing stand-alone connectivity. The year 2000 saw Palm at the top of its game with the launch of the Palm V and the company being floated by parent 3Com on the NASDAQ; though the dot com crash saw its valuation drop by 90 per cent in a year. Palm has its first smartphone the Treo 180  acquiring Handspring. The Treo series of smartphones did well in North America and proved a viable alternative to the BlackBerry for many people. I had the Treo 600 and then the 650 from 2004 to 2007. Soon after this Palm started using Windows Mobile on some of its devices and this occurs around about the time that the business past its peak, prior to the strategic investment by Elevation Partners and sale to Hewlett-Packard
    • Sony-Ericsson – Sony Ericsson started with an unpromising origin. Ericsson’s mobile phone business had been crippled by a fire at a supplier in 2000, so it sold a share in the business to Sony who had been on the sidelines of the mobile industry despite some early successes with the Sony CM-H333 in 1993. Sony struggled to deal with the change in market brought about by the first iPhone. The company used Windows Mobile for its Xperia phones for two years. Eventually Sony-Ericsson moved over to Android in March 2010, the company has struggled to remain relevant in the mobile market, but has made headway with Android
    • Sendo – was a start-up founded in 1999, they signed an agreement with Microsoft to be the company’s go-to-market partner for their Smartphone 2002 mobile operating system. The deal gave Microsoft a royalty-free license to Sendo’s designs if the company went insolvent. There was a legal dispute when Microsoft used Sendo’s designs to create the first of the Orange SPV phones made by HTC. Sendo rolled out Symbian handsets and cancelled its Microsoft-powered devices. Microsoft eventually settled out of court with Sendo, relinquished their shareholding in the company and Motorola eventually absorbed the business and intellectual property. However the the company name became a by-word within the industry damning Microsoft
    • LG – In late 2008, the Korean chaebol signed an agreement with Microsoft that focused on a strategic collaboration on mobile technology, which was widely expected to mean Windows Mobile phones. The mobile devices unit suffered continued losses, eventually in February 2013 LG said that there was no demand for Windows Phone devices and moved its portfolio exclusively over to Android where it competes with a respectable performance against Samsung

    All of this means that the Nokia device business hasn’t been a master of its own destiny since the company launched its transformation almost three years ago.

    What is Microsoft actually buying?
    The Nokia device acquisition by Microsoft

    I remember once talking with a friend of mine who had worked on the Microsoft account for along time and they once told me that Microsoft never buys something that it can build more cheaply itself. Which then brings me to four questions:

    • So what does Nokia have that Microsoft wants?
    • What does Microsoft currently have?
    • What would Microsoft with Nokia have, that neither party currently has?
    • How is Microsoft paying for the deal?

    What does Nokia have that Microsoft wants?

    Nokia historically was strong because of it’s brand. I did a quick search on Google Trends to get some sort of proxy comparison on the relative strengths of different brands and in the data you can see that Nokia Lumia and Nokia Asha have a higher level than Windows Phone or Microsoft Surface.

    Secondly the Nokia brand on its own is still hugely dominant compared to Microsoft’s other mobile brands. To get that kind of brand profile would be very expensive for Microsoft, but more importantly would take time that the company doesn’t feel that it has.

    Nokia had manufacturing prowess, the Nokia Asha handsets have a quality that generally belies their price. The move over to the Lumia left lots of Nokia’s production lines quiet and their supply chain for the factories wasn’t as useful as Lumia used different suppliers and designs for many of the major components. For instance the processor in the Lumia range is a Qualcomm Snapdragon, where as Nokia’s Symbian and MeeGo handsets used Texas Instruments OMAP processors.

    In the end Nokia contracted out Lumia production (at least initially) to Compal. Microsoft has its won relationships with OEMs and ODMs in order to manufacture sophisticated hardware like the Microsoft Kinect.

    Nokia along with Samsung has one of the most extensive sales networks in the world for mobile devices. However the company has been scaling this back as a cost-cutting measure as it tried to transition to a smaller size business during its move to Windows Phone.  This has been partly driven in China by the collapse in market share that Nokia suffered during the transition. Microsoft saves time by building on the existing sales network put in place by Nokia.

    Nokia historically had good carrier relationships, however the pivot and relationship with Microsoft have degraded these somewhat.

    A legacy of the sales network and the carrier relationships is a body of knowledge about market differences, preferences, structures and price points with a greater degree of granularity than a report from the likes of IDC can provide. Much of this knowledge will be in the heads of key (but not necessarily senior) members of staff that Microsoft will have to identify and battle to retain in the coming months.

    Nokia historically has had strong design capabilities based on a long history in terms of user research to thoroughly understand the customer use case. The polycarbonate Lumia design language was taken straight from the Nokia N9, and the 41 mega-pixel camera module first worked on Symbian but if some of the design team are still left Microsoft could have a positive asset on its hands.

    Finally, Nokia has a lot of experience in working on nascent areas like mobile payments systems which offer the potential for massive revenues in the future.

    What does Microsoft currently have?

    Like Nokia, Microsoft has an extensive sales network and over the past few years has been expanding across sub-Saharan Africa. Whilst Microsoft has the physical presence it doesn’t necessarily have the right channel for mobile phones.

    With a combined business, certain functions like finance and IT could be merged.

    Microsoft has experience of sophisticated hardware design. The most lauded piece of design that Microsoft has done is the Kinect bar which is surprisingly sophisticated. It also designed the unsuccessful Kin device and the reference designs that all Windows-powered phones have to adhere to.

    In terms of industrial design Microsoft has designed ergonomic peripherals for years. The hardware design if done right can be mated and optimised to the software design that Microsoft also creates.

    Microsoft has a number of killer applications available for enterprise sales including business-grade email and personal information management, customer relationship management software and web search.

    What would Microsoft with Nokia have, that neither party currently has?

    If one looks at Apple’s products the reason why they work well is because of tight integration between software, services and hardware. Microsoft has alluded to this already, in a post-deal interview with C Net Joe Belfiore shed a little light on the fact that Nokia’s hardware designs weren’t aligned with software capabilities as Nokia tried to develop unique features.

    There is also an implication that Nokia would move away the Microsoft mobile team from their US-centric behavioural thinking on issues like Bluetooth sharing of content.

    The second theme that seems to come out is one of speed to act in order to catch up with rival ecosystems and gain competitive advantage. With the Nokia brand Microsoft gets a massive lift in terms of mobile brand awareness in emerging markets. However in order to take advantage of this lift and other performance advantages, Microsoft has to simultaneously and successfully integrate Nokia into the business.

    It is an extra 30 per cent of employees compared to the pre-deal Microsoft. Normally this would be a difficult task, but this is also a Microsoft that is under attack from activist shareholders, looking for a new CEO to replace Steve Ballmer and aligning based on a reorganisation to a function structure.

    Will Microsoft be able to retain the key people at Nokia with the relevant knowledge and be nimble in execution? When I was at college I was told by a professor that seven in every ten takeovers fail to achieve the goals set for them.

    How is Microsoft paying for the deal?

    On the face of it I was surprised to see that Microsoft was paying all cash for the deal, rather than issuing stock. The company has a good cash pile and doesn’t need to borrow, but printing shares wouldn’t have cost anything. It’s the way that Cisco financed its run of purchases through and after the dot.com boom.

    The reality is that the US tax payer is indirectly paying for the deal. Microsoft like Apple has a vast amount of its cash flow sat offshore that they don’t want to repatriate due to US tax law.

    In reality, Microsoft paid closer to 5 billion Euros than 7.2 because of the tax avoidance benefit in the transaction. Secondly, losses in Nokia can be written off against U.S. tax obligations.

    The value judgement on whether Microsoft has over or under-paid will inevitably be coloured by the destruction of shareholder value at Nokia, which has been enormous both in terms of the monetary sums involved and in the decline of Nokia’s contribution to the Finnish economy and stock market.  The second factor to colour the discussion is the likely discount Microsoft shares have as a conglomerate. There are various discussions elsewhere on the web about how Microsoft could realise more shareholder value by being broken down into ‘mini-Bills’. The Nokia acquisition is likely to intensify that discussion further, unless spectacular results can be demonstrated.

    Nokia’s technological choices

    Reflecting back on things, I was surprised by Nokia’s advocacy for WiMax given the telecommunications industry was moving forward with LTE – originally proposed by NTT DoCoMo back in 2004 and supported by TeliaSonera.This choice together with Nokia’s close relationship with Texas Instruments for device microprocessors steered a surprisingly large amount of Nokia’s recent decisions to date.

    The thing that I found most interesting about Nokia’s device strategy pivot under Stephen Elop was the complete abandonment of Symbian S60 OS rather than the S40 OS that current powers their Asha-branded phones.

    If one looks at the current range of Asha phones, Nokia has pulled and prodded the operating system to produce devices described as smartphones without an OS that has multi-tasking. They have even replicated the look and feel of Nokia N9 smartphone that ran MeeGo.

    Nokia could have provided a smoother on-ramp and not upset so many carrier customers by moving S60 down the product line and brought Windows Phone in at the top. Instead they chose a riskier, more dramatic path. This affected carrier partners, the Nokia development community and Nokia users adversely. And this seems to have been a conscious decision by Nokia.
    eBay - Nokia N950 part one
    If one looks closely at this Nokia N950 offered for sale on eBay (presumably by one of the developer community):
    eBay - Nokia N950 part two
    One can see the kind of comment that shows an embittered developer relationship.

    We will probably never know if they were boxed into this dramatic choice by Microsoft, but it seems to dialed the risk factor up even further.

    Finally, the market performance of the Nokia N9 in markets were they were released showed a more mature looking product than the Lumia phones that were launched later. It made the Lumia range look bad and enraged critics by showing them what could have been.

    Why did Microsoft leave so much on the table?

    It was interesting that Microsoft just took a license to patents rather than full rights to Nokia’s patents. I think that this is a bet on Nokia taking a robust attitude to intellectual property licensing. Given that Nokia will be an infrastructure company it could now levy fees on the Android community (and possibly Apple) without consequence.

    This would benefit Microsoft as it would increase the cost of rolling out Android devices, this potentially will give Microsoft room at the bottom end of the market for smartphones. Though I still think that they will be unable or unwilling to compete with the sub $70 per Android handset market segment which is driving smartphone growth in China.

    Which begs the question is there an explicit agreement in place for Nokia to get litigious? Nokia would have to pick its foes carefully, for those players with both infrastructure and handset businesses like Samsung, Huawei and ZTE could be dangerous because of the likely patents they could use in retaliation.

    If things get desperate Nokia could still sell these patents on to the likes of Intellectual Ventures.

    The second item I was surprised to see Microsoft leave behind was Naviteq. The expertise in mapping would have been an asset to all of Microsoft’s business units.

    Mobile would have benefited from having control over their mapping product, online services could look at doing further integration and alignment for consumer audiences. The enterprise part of the business could have used underlying data to help improve applications around customer relationship management (CRM), supply chain management and resource planning.

    I imagine that this could have been for a few reasons:

    • There aren’t that many companies that do what Naviteq does, being purchased by Microsoft may trigger antitrust concerns
    • Naviteq needs a critical mass of users for its HERE maps to provide a decent product
    • Microsoft can get everything they want without buying it
    • It was a deal killer for Nokia who need the cash flow from Naviteq

    What’s the catch?

    • What does Microsoft see that it’s critics don’t in the Nokia business?
    • Will Microsoft be thwarted by activist shareholders?
    • What’s to stop Nokia pressing reset and starting another handset business by acquiring Jolla?
    • Why will carriers want to engage with the newly enlarged Microsoft?
    • Does Nokia have much of a long term future in infrastructure given the competitive landscape of Huawei and ZTE in developing markets and Samsung, Ericsson and Alcatel-Lucent in the more security paranoid western markets?

    More information

    Intel,China Mobile,LGE and Nokia Join MeeGo Handset TSG – Also companies for IVI and Smart TV | TizenExperts
    EU regulators say telecoms block Skype | EurActiv
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    Microsoft confirms takeover of Skype | BBC News
    The story of Nokia MeeGo | Taskumuro
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