Microsoft sifting through iPhone SDK, apps a possibility
Mom-and-pop shops and giant corporations are clearly still trying to wrap their heads around the iPhone SDK, probe its capabilities and limitations, and figure out just what kinds of apps to bring to the table, and Microsoft is no exception. The company maintains a fairly active Mac development division -- a bit of a redheaded stepchild for the company, but a profitable one at that -- so it totally makes sense that they'd want to bring the iPhone into the fold from that angle. Indeed, the head of Microsoft's Specialized Devices and Applications Group (of which the Mac fiends are a part) have assigned a small handful of engineers to figuring out how, if at all, they can add value to Apple's talkabout; some sort of Office extension is an obvious one, but recent acquisition TellMe is also looking into whether it can shoehorn any voice recognition goodies on there as well. The strange bit, of course, is that this flies in the face of Microsoft's own Windows Mobile, which itself could use all the engineering help it can get to roll out its long-promised killer revamp as quickly as possible; then again, Office Mac is itself an affront to Windows, so maybe it's business as usual in Redmond.
[Via iLounge]
[Via iLounge]




















Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
MatthewJ @ Mar 26th 2008 6:02AM
I don't know how you could consider it an affront to Windows Mobile? Perhaps you're assuming that if the iPhone didn't exist, its users would all be on WM devices? I don't think thats accurate at all, given how rabidly most of them avoid MS products. The same goes for Office on Mac OSX. Why wouldn't MS want to maximise its profitability by making it available for all platforms? Its not like 10 years ago where the lack of Office available for Mac could have swayed people to use Windows instead, these days they could just fire up OpenOffice or Google Documents. Microsoft is a huge company, so its unsurprising that specific departments have a certain amount of autonomy and intend to make money!
Randy @ Mar 26th 2008 6:21AM
MS is not a cross-platform company. They pay only lip service to cross platform interoperability but they have history of taking a standard and applying their own proprietary hooks to keep you locked in.
I've never used it personally, but I'm told by people who do, that Mac Office only contains a subset of the functionality that Windows office has.
I'm curious to know what, if anything, MS will bring to the iPhone. But whatever that "thing" is, it likely will not have all of the functionality of it's Windows Mobile equivalent unless it serves MS's SOP of locking you in somehow. IMO, It's more likely that they have a few engineers looking to see what they can copy and attempt to do similarly or better.
badqat @ Mar 26th 2008 6:42AM
Microsoft copies? Really?
As bad as Windows Mobile can be, it can only get better if they copy things from the iPhone.
PSM @ Mar 26th 2008 10:41AM
Until the iPhone has 3G, and until 3rd party apps are proven to be sufficiently open, I am stuck on Windows Mobile, so I encourage MS to steal all they can too!
Rich @ Mar 26th 2008 6:43AM
Microsoft already release software on Symbian (i.e. Live Messenger). It's not surprising that they're looking at the iPhone too.
wakanya @ Mar 26th 2008 12:20PM
I'll be totally happy if they add Visual Studio Add-on for iPhone.
most unlikely though...
Sergio @ Mar 27th 2008 11:23AM
coding on the go?
bernard @ Mar 26th 2008 7:04PM
Mac fiends?