Skip to main content

Articles

Featured Products

Stay in touch using the DEVBUSS RSS feeds.
 

News

Marcus Ash Discusses Microsoft's New Portable Media Center

Written by W.G. Ryan  [author's bio]  [read 23640 times]
Edited by Derek

Page 1  Page 2 

PERSONAL MEDIA CENTER

Q: A few weeks ago when I first saw your demo, I was a bit dubious for about the first 3 minutes. My original impression was Microsoft going off in another direction just because some other company is successful there. I quickly changed my mind though once I heard the strategy and the plans for PMC. As someone who�s a fan of the iPOD, I saw something that would really scare me if I was working for Apple. I have my opinions on the specifics and I�ll ask you about a few of them shortly, but could you tell me what Your opinions are on the competitive advantage you have entering this market?

A: For Microsoft, PMC is really about completing an end-to-end experience around digital media. While music is the most popular and most abundant source of digital media content today, we decided to focus on building a next generation device that would allow a user to consume all of their digital media on the go. Microsoft is making big bets in digital media not just around music, but also around TV, digital photos, home movies and online video content. With great applications and experiences like Media Center, Windows Media Player, Movie Maker, Digital Image Pro and PhotoStory, the Windows platform is an extremely rich environment for digital media creation, management, storage and consumption. Add all of these digital media platform assets together and we think it makes sense to build a portable device that does more than just music.

Kind of a long winded answer but in short our competitive advantage is our ability to pull together all of these sources of digital content on the PC with a consistent user experience and give users an abundance of media to choose from to entertain themselves while they are on the go.

Q: The only other competing product that I can think of (there are many little fringe competitors, I�m not speaking about them) is the iPOD. While it�s an impressive product with a loyal following, I don�t see any comparison with PMC. The iTunes service also helps in making it attractive, but MS already seems to have it�s own version, and from what I saw, there�s really no comparison. Anyway, I�m I right in assuming that iPOD and iTunes are your primary competitors in this market? If not, could you tell me who is?

A: We like to think that we are creating a new market and are raising the bar on what people want out of a portable entertainment device by offering so many different ways to enjoy your digital media. There are some companies in the portable a/v space now like Thomson with the Video Lyra and Archos with their Cinema to Go products. Being able to play back media on a device with a lot of storage is only one part of what we offer with PMC. It is the end-to-end experience of acquiring the content on your PC, delivering it in an easy and reliable way to your PMC and playing it back with a great user experience on a portable device that puts PMC in a different league.

Also, if you look at the embedded linux market, there�s no one major competitor really. There is mathematically, but the largest category of Linux was the culmination of home grown versions. Well, when 50 different products comprise a category, it�s hard to say you are competing against it. It seems to me that the same may be the case with Personal Media. There are 100 different MP3 players, that do this or that, there�s personal DVD players with x or y support, there�s the iPOD, there�s PocketPC and Smartphone etc.

Q: Do you think this market has a similar dynamic? Basically that the largest current segment is a hodge podge of different marginal competitors?

A: Great question. I think if you look at the portable entertainment device space as a whole, you end up with a variety of different products each trying to service a particular focused need. I don�t think there is one killer product out there yet that meets all (or even most) of the entertainment needs for consumers. The iPod is probably the best known product, but it is focused on music.

Rather than try to pick the winner, I see the following trends emerging:

1. More sources of digital content are coming into the mainstream. Six years ago hardly anyone knew anything about MP3, now MP3 is ubiquitous. Look at the growth in digital cameras over the past few years. Online video is still a nascent market but all signs point to huge growth given the uptake in broadband.

2. Storage technologies are pushing PC class storage capabilities down to mobile factors. 60GB HDD that are small and power efficient are now available for use in all kinds of small devices.

3. Processing power keeps increasing. My first cellphone in �98 was the size of a brick, now my cellphone is light, thin and has way more functionality (built-in camera, SD slot, �)

When I add all of these things up I see devices in our future that will let a user chose how they want to be entertained. That is the power of PMC, depending on your mood and situation, you can choose the right form of entertainment to suit you. If I need to focus on typing up some e-mail, I can setup my PMC to listen to my favorite music as a background task. If I am sweating my butt off on the exercise machine at the gym and want to completely distract my mind, I can watch the latest episode of Friends. If I want to show my mother the latest pictures of her granddaughter, I can put the device in slideshow mode and hand it to her.

The real challenge is making the user experience simple enough so that the user can quickly put the device in the right entertainment mode w/o getting frustrated. This is the challenge that we are trying to step up to and deliver on with PMC.

Q: How does PMC fit in with or against the Multimedia functionality available on PPC or Smartphone? I know I have both such devices and I�ve been quite pleased with what they offer, and I�ve heard the same sentiment from many others. That�s not going to stop me from buying a PMC, but if someone just paid a few hundred dollars for a PDA or a Smartphone, they may not want to spend more money on something that their PDA can "already do" The flip side I�ve heard is that "why would I buy one for a few hundred dollars when I can get a PDA and have all of its functionality for the same amount of money? More so with the smartphone? And since both support memory cards, they have �even more functionality� I personally know the answer to this but I think this is going to be a common refrain when PMC comes out, people already use it in regard to the iPOD. Would you agree that this is at least the perception to some degree? If so, how does MS plan on addressing it?

A: Pocket PCs and Smartphones can be tailored by their users for other purposes but they are designed around communications and information first.

Portable Media Centers are all about entertainment. The user interface is designed for easy access to your media. We didn�t put anything into the v1 product that isn�t related to enjoyment of digital media. The content is the killer app for PMC and we didn�t want anything getting in the way of the user and access to their content.

Both products serve different needs and will be marketed around these needs. We have some work to do on the consumer messaging side b/c this could be quite confusing, especially since both products belong to the same brand, Windows Mobile. Once you use both devices, you immediately get the difference.

It is also interesting to note that our PMC consumer research tells us that people that are looking to purchase a portable entertainment device aren�t all that interested in personal information management (PIM) functionality, they just want to be entertained. Also vice versa, people that are looking to purchase a communications device like a Smartphone are much more interested in making phone calls than anything else.

All of that being said, we are a market driven team and if our consumers tell us that they want Pocket PC functionality on a Portable Media Center device, there is a strong possibility we will move in that direction J Also worth noting that we are working hard to make sure that all of the new Windows Media Player functionality for transferring content to the Portable Media Center is available for Pocket PCs through the Pocket PC Media Player.

Next Page