Comment by deanCommie

5 days ago

> Even the combined resources of Amazon and Microsoft weren't enough to overcome this.

Pedantically, their resources were never combined. They independently tried to compete, and they independently failed.

For what it's worth though, Amazon seems to be doing tidy business with entrypoint tablets and FireOS, which is a fork of Android, but still one they own.

Microsoft's exit of mobile was a short-sighted decision IMO. They have the entire office suite. They have windows and Windows has essentially become an app store model too.

I can easily imagine a future where Microsoft leaned in hard on Microsoft Mobile-exclusives for Word/Outlook/Excel/Teams/etc., bundled it with the rest of Office/Windows subscriptions, and had every office worker in the world carrying a windows phone for their work device.

I know, I know - everyone wanted only an iPhone. But it feels to me like Microsoft didn't try very hard.

They can't properly port the office to android today, imagine years ago, also office in cellphone were never great

> Pedantically, their resources were never combined. They independently tried to compete, and they independently failed.

I'm talking about Windows Subsystem for Android, which leveraged Amazon's app store.

Though honestly, their application strategy since Windows 8 has been fascinating. Watching them:

- ship Linux and Android app support

- replace their first-party browser with a Chrome derivative (and inherit all the PWA support of its parent)

- ship first-party support for .NET and PowerShell on other platforms

- ship React Native builds for Windows and macOS

...all suggest they're really trying not to get into the same hole as what happened with Metro, by giving you a lot of different ways to build something that can then run on modern versions of Windows -- regardless of whether that's even necessarily your goal.