Mostrando las entradas con la etiqueta Surface. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando las entradas con la etiqueta Surface. Mostrar todas las entradas

miércoles, 16 de septiembre de 2020

Former Microsoft leader and FiftyThree co-founder Georg Petschnigg on TikTok, Surface Duo, more

Georg Petschnigg. (WeTransfer Photo)

Georg Petschnigg learned a lot during an 10-year career at Microsoft, where he worked on various consumer products such as PowerPoint and Microsoft Courier. He also got an inside look at how the tech giant integrated various acquisitions of companies including Visio, Danger, and Nokia.

We caught up with Petschnigg to get his take on Microsoft’s bid for TikTok, its new Surface Duo device, and more. Petschnigg left Microsoft in 2011 to help launch FiftyThree, best known for developing the popular drawing app Paper and presentation tool Paste. File-sharing company WeTransfer acquired Paper and Paste in 2018, expanding the company’s reach into creative tools. Petschnigg is now chief innovation officer at WeTransfer.

What was your initial reaction to Microsoft’s pursuit of TikTok?

My first thought was that a Microsoft acquisition of TikTok makes total sense when you think about Microsoft’s business and history. Microsoft has put significant muscle and resources into artificial intelligence and machine learning, and invested hundreds of millions over the years in building out Microsoft Research. These investments have paid off in many ways, like with Azure Cognitive Services and Cortana, but Microsoft doesn’t have a great AI-based vehicle for entertainment.

The beauty of TikTok is that it combines content distribution to a large audience with technical, media and user interface inventions with ML at the core. These are all areas that Microsoft has experimented with, but hasn’t truly put together in a compelling end-to-end manner for consumers. In this way Tik Tok defines a new paradigm for software which Microsoft wants to be part of.

If Microsoft does indeed acquire part of TikTok’s operations, how do you expect the company to handle it? Will it follow similar acquisitions in the past or be different?

Microsoft has gotten smarter in handling acquisitions over the years, especially when it comes to integrating tools or apps into their broader ecosystem. I saw many acquisitions at Microsoft and incorporated key learnings when Paper and Paste, the creative/productivity apps I developed at FiftyThree, were acquired by WeTransfer in 2018.

A good model here is the acquisition of Accompli which became Outlook for Mobile or Bungie (developers of Halo). The leadership of those teams were empowered to drive cultural change within Microsoft. Accompli helped Microsoft understand mobile development for iOS and Android. Bungie brought in AAA gaming DNA. With TikTok, Microsoft could accelerate the embrace of ML at the core of software development. That said, TikTok would probably remain a standalone app vs. being integrated into the larger Microsoft suite.

(Bigstock Photo)

What are the biggest upsides or opportunities to Microsoft acquiring TikTok? And what about downsides or challenges?

There’s enormous opportunity to interpret content within videos. TikTok has perfected a blend of entertainment and machine learning – every time you watch a video, TikTok interprets your micro-interactions (scrolls, dwells, taps) to determine the next video to show you and keep you entertained.

Microsoft’s entertainment business has primarily focused on gaming and they haven’t developed any entertainment apps for consumers. With TikTok, they acquire a partner to extend consumer reach with a really powerful AI core.

An acquisition also means that Microsoft draws a spotlight to itself around data collection, a conversation that, by and large, they’ve managed to address better than say Google or Facebook, but certainly will draw them into a geo-political fray.

You say TikTok is Cortana for entertainment. What do you mean by that?

Up until now digital assistants like Alexa or Siri just never had a good answer if you would ask them “show me an entertaining video.” Often even the jokes it tells are canned. However, showing you entertaining videos is what TikTok is really good at doing — that’s what made me think TikTok could be Microsoft’s Cortana for entertainment.

It’s not a coincidence that TikTok has surged in popularity; the developers created a really powerful and compelling blend of machine learning that gives people content they want to see, and a simple UX that keeps people in the app. When people use TikTok for the first time, it understands their gender, region, age, and content interests. No other app does this so quickly and easily. TikTok also goes against the grain of most media or social apps that require you to choose categories of interest (Pinterest), rate films (Netflix), or follow people (Facebook) before you get to see content.

Surface Duo. (Microsoft Photo)

You led the incubation for Microsoft Courier. What are your thoughts on the Surface Duo? Do you think Microsoft will be able to establish a new form factor?

I have so many thoughts here, but in short, yes, I think Microsoft will establish the Duo as a new form factor. It will go further than that. It will define Microsoft’s take on mobile productivity and creativity.

The core insight for Courier, and the dual screen design, came from Abigail Sellen’s research in the “Myth of the Paperless Office.” She shared that the fold, two pages side-by-side, are integral to cognitive tasks such as comparing, organizing, sorting – the building blocks of making sense of digital work. Single screen solutions on mobile just do not feel right. The screen is either too small, or in the case of the iPad side-by-side still feels wonky. With Courier we saw the power of the form factor, and the foldable design means you get twice the screen.

Microsoft is very serious about this idea and embraced it. The fact that Microsoft is shipping this device with Android shows that they are putting the user experience first and technology ambitions second. Keep in mind that Ballmer canceled Courier over concerns that it would not fit in the One Windows strategy. Times have really changed.

Lastly I wouldn’t be surprised if Google and Microsoft invest in a new app store based on Android for the Surface Duo. I can see a new ecosystem of applications for productivity and creativity emerging around this form factor.

View the original article here



from WordPress https://cybersonday689753477.wordpress.com/2020/09/16/former-microsoft-leader-and-fiftythree-co-founder-georg-petschnigg-on-tiktok-surface-duo-more/

domingo, 13 de septiembre de 2020

Microsoft’s new foldable Android-based Surface Duo goes on sale Sept. 10 for $1,399

Microsoft unveiled a release date and more details about the Surface Duo, its new dual-screen Android phone that the company says represents a “major new form factor” and “the next wave of mobile productivity.”

The Surface Duo will go on sale Sept. 10 starting at $1,399 in the U.S., with pre-orders beginning today at Microsoft’s online store, AT&T, and Best Buy. It will work on AT&T, T-Mobile, and Verizon networks.

Originally announced this past October, the foldable device features two 5.6-inch OLED PixelSense Fusion Displays connected by a 360-degree hinge that can be used individually or together. It is powered by a Snapdragon 855 chip and has 6GB of RAM along with 128GB and 256GB storage configurations. The Duo has an 11-megapixel camera and works with the Surface Pen accessory. Its battery has up to 15.5 hours of local video playback, 10 days of standby time, and 27 hours of talk time. There is LTE availability but no 5G.

Microsoft does not want to reinvent the phone but “inspire people to rethink how they want to use the device in their pocket,” Microsoft Chief Product Officer Panos Panay wrote in a blog post.

The ability to use two screens together on a mobile product has a real impact on how you create, how you share, and how you feel when using the product,” Panay wrote.

Microsoft optimized apps such as Office, Outlook, Teams, and others for two screens, as described in this blog post from Microsoft Office design chief Jon Friedman.

The Duo features “App Combos,” which opens two apps at once — Teams and Outlook, AllTrails and Google Maps, etc. It also works with the Your Phone app, which lets Android smartphone users make calls, send text messages, check notifications, and more from their Windows PC. Panay noted that users will be able to copy and paste content from the Duo and a PC, and “even mirror the dual-screen experience of your Duo right on your Windows PC.”

Here’s more from Panay on use cases with the new device:

“Join a Microsoft Teams meeting and see participants on one screen while you present your PowerPoint slides on another. Open the Amazon Kindle app and read a book like a book. Position Surface Duo’s screen like a tent and watch a video hands-free. Use Surface Duo in Compose mode to quickly respond to an email, or tilt it into portrait for a more immersive way to scroll through web pages or photos.”

Panay added that “every detail from the layout of the motherboard and multi-cell battery to the placement of inertial sensors, mics and antennas was purposefully designed to unlock an entirely new interaction model across two screens.” He said Microsoft is working closely with Google “to make additions to the Android operating system” for the two-screen form factor. The Duo is the first Microsoft device running Android.

The high price tag for the Surface Duo may be an issue. “I believe these prices will make it a non-starter for anyone other than Microsoft Surface superfans,” ZDNet’s Mary Jo Foley wrote.

When it was first unveiled last year, the Duo sparked comparisons to the Microsoft Courier, the dual-screen device that Microsoft developed in secret a decade ago before shelving without releasing as a product.

Other hardware makers including Samsung and Dell also sell their own foldable devices that could represent the next evolution in personal electronics.

Panay and other Microsoft execs have been offering glimpses of the Surface Duo device on social media this summer. Google’s Android chief got in on the fun earlier this week.

Microsoft originally planned to debut its larger dual-screen device, the Surface Neo, this year but delayed the release. The Neo will use a special version of Windows 10 for dual-screen devices called Windows 10X.

Microsoft said in May that it would pause development of Windows 10X on dual-screen devices and instead focus first on developing Windows 10X first for single-screen devices.

Revenue in Microsoft’s Surface hardware business jumped 28% to more than $1.7 billion in the quarter ended June 30, its biggest result ever outside the holidays. The increase was due to higher demand for Surface laptops, tablets and other devices due to stay-at-home orders in the pandemic, the company said.

IDC reported that smartphone shipments are expected to decline 11.9% this year as the pandemic affects consumer spending.

“What started as a supply-side crisis has evolved into a global demand-side problem,” Sangeetika Srivastava, senior research analyst with IDC’s Worldwide Mobile Device Trackers, said in a statement. “Nationwide lockdowns and rising unemployment have reduced consumer confidence and reprioritized spending towards essential goods, directly impacting the uptake of smartphones in the short term.”

However, traditional PC and tablet shipments both grew more than 11% year-over-year in Q2, IDC reported.

View the original article here



from WordPress https://cybersonday689753477.wordpress.com/2020/09/13/microsofts-new-foldable-android-based-surface-duo-goes-on-sale-sept-10-for-1399/

viernes, 31 de julio de 2020

Microsoft Surface business surges as upcoming dual-screen Android device surfaces in FCC filings

Revenue in Microsoft’s Surface hardware business jumped 28% to more than $1.7 billion in the quarter ended June 30, its biggest result ever outside the holidays.

The increase was due to higher demand for Surface laptops, tablets and other devices due to stay-at-home orders in the pandemic, the company said. Pent-up demand from previous supply chain bottlenecks also may have played a role in the larger-than-expected Surface revenue increase in Microsoft’s fiscal fourth quarter.

“I believe Microsoft is doubling down on its commitment to Surface and this is demonstrated in a much expanded lineup and features specifically for regulated industries,” said analyst Patrick Moorhead of Moor Insights & Strategy. “In Q3, I believe Microsoft could have shipped a lot more of the new Surface lineup but it couldn’t get enough supply out of Asia. Q4 was quite different and I think represents more of the future growth demand curve.”

The surge comes amid reports that Microsoft’s upcoming Surface Duo device could be released sometime this summer. An apparent filing for the dual-screen Android device was spotted in Federal Communication Commission records this week in another possible sign that it’s ahead of schedule.

Microsoft executives including Chief Product Officer Panos Panay have been offering glimpses of the Surface Duo device on social media in recent weeks.

The company previously delayed the release of the larger dual-screen Surface Neo device, running Windows 10X. Mary Jo Foley of ZDNet reported this week that the new version of the operating system is now slated for release in 2021, with the Neo and other dual-screen devices pushed to 2020 as a result.

In its fourth quarter results, Microsoft also saw a boost from stay-at-home orders in its productivity, cloud and gaming businesses, including subscription versions of Microsoft Office, and the Microsoft Azure cloud platform.

Revenue from Xbox content and services was up 64% for the quarter, helping to drive an overall 13% increase in Microsoft revenue, to $38 billion for the quarter.

Join the conversation along with Intel, Google Cloud, and key technology partner Appsbroker as they share game-changing results from customers, like RiverMeadow and ClimaCell, who have deployed on Google Cloud instances and VMWare bare metal.

The session, presented by Intel and Google Cloud, will take place Thursday, July 30th at 8:00 a.m. (PST).

Register today

View the original article here



from WordPress https://cybersonday689753477.wordpress.com/2020/07/31/microsoft-surface-business-surges-as-upcoming-dual-screen-android-device-surfaces-in-fcc-filings/