Tag Archives: Microsoft Office Suite

Why Microsoft's Tablet Is Officially a Flop

By Caroline Bennett, The Motley Fool

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Remember when Microsoft unveiled the Surface last year? Ads for its answer to Apple‘s iPad seemed to be everywhere, with business-casual breakdancers flying across TV screens, the Internet, billboards, and pretty much any other place you can stick a commercial. Given how heavily plugged it was, you might think the slick new tablet would perform outstandingly since its October release.

You would be very wrong.

The Surface’s sales figures are out, and they’re far below Microsoft’s expectations. Should Microsoft be concerned, and will this affect its strength as an investment?

Breaking down the stats
According to Bloomberg, Microsoft originally purchased 3 million Surfaces from its manufacturers, and within the past five months, the company has sold only 1.5 million. Ouch.

Out of the total amount of Surfaces sold, 0.4 million units have been the Surface Pro, while 1.1 million have been the cheaper Surface RT. This might look like a depressing stat for the Pro, but the more expensive version was released four months after the RT, and so far the Pro is selling at a faster rate. The Pro has sold 0.4 million units in little over a month, while it took five months for the Surface RT to sell 2.75 times that amount.

If the Pro and RT continue at this rate, Microsoft will be able to sell off the rest of its Surface inventory by October. But when Apple is selling 58.31 million iPads annually, Microsoft’s Surface is hardly taking a bite out of the market share.

But what I really want to do is make pens
Surface’s sales stats aren’t good news for Microsoft’s foray into hardware, but the tech giant’s CEO, Steve Ballmer, doesn’t appear to be worried. In a recent interview with MIT’s Technology Review, Ballmer said he was “super-glad [Microsoft] did Surface,” but that the company was trying to use this product as a gateway to a new idea: the computerized pen.

Huh?

“We’ve been talking about pen computing for years, but it was hard to do that with OEMs who were not equally incentivized,” Ballmer said. “Now we’re trying to lead a little bit with Surface Pro. We have a model that allows OEMs to move with us.” In other words, Microsoft created Surface to be a playing field for the company’s new ambitious device.

Going beneath the Surface
These disappointing Surface statistics are certainly a loss for Microsoft, but that’s no reason to rule out the company. Internet Explorer is still the dominant force in Web browsers, and Microsoft Office Suite is practically the default administrative tool belt for offices everywhere. And now, according to its CEO, the company’s tablet was less an attempt to rip off Apple’s iPad and more a springboard for a new innovation. We’ll see how this holds up in time. For now, it’s hard to deny that the Surface looks and acts like an iPad, but certainly doesn’t sell like one.

It’s been a frustrating path for Microsoft investors, who’ve …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Will Google Get to $1,000 Before Apple Gets to $500?

By Tim Beyers, The Motley Fool

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Each week, I endeavor to report the results of the Big Idea Portfolio, a collection of five tech stocks that I believe will crush the market over a three-year period. I’ve done it before; my last tussle with Mr. Market ended with me beating the index’s average return by 13.35%.

Real money was on the line then as it is now, which means any one of the five stocks you see here could cause me a lot of public embarrassment. This time, most of my stocks fell as Google made a series of interesting moves.

First, over a six-hour span at South by Southwest (SXSW), the search king showed off wearable technology, including 12 pairs of talking shoes hacked together in three weeks to demonstrate the potential of connecting gear (and brands) to the Web. A Google X engineer also showed up to demonstrate the Glass interactive spectacles.

Source: Google.

Cool as these devices are, they’re also only part of Google’s growth story. Imagine using search to index and retrieve data about your energy usage compared to average temperature. Then imagine paying your energy bill through Google Wallet and cross-referencing that. Orwellian possibilities abound when you index, well, everything.

Google wants all of us thinking this way. A new service called Keep proposes to challenge Evernote by providing a simple system for archiving anything. Think of it as a slimmed-down productivity tool that does for Google Apps what OneNote does for Microsoft‘s Office Suite.

Other Googlers pitched access to information as a humanitarian need at SXSW. In one session, Amit Singhal, who oversees search for the company, told the story of an African farmer who hiked several miles to an Internet cafe to search for ways to halt an ant infestation of his potato crop. Google held the answer.

Add it up, and I wonder if the search king isn’t fitting itself to be the chief data aggregator and distributor in a hyperconnected world. As Singhal put it: “[E]ven a farmer in Africa, or a mother in an Indian village, or a fisherman in Malaysia, will have as much access to knowledge as kings used to.”

Why not? Google is already the original Big Data company. It was the search king’s early efforts to boil an ocean of online data efficiently that led to MapReduce and the Google File System, two mechanisms for crunching multiple terabytes of data concurrently across a vast array of cheap servers. Today, these breakthroughs undergird an open-source technology called Apache Hadoop that’s used in a number of Big Data projects.

Google, meanwhile, sticks to its own knitting for the biggest Big Data project of all: indexing the Web, every minute of every day, continuously. Mix in Android and Chrome OS devices and a heaping helping of broadband, and Singhal’s dream soon becomes a reality.

Of course, there’s a business purpose here, too. More networks and devices also mean more data, and Google …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance