What Are You Getting for Cyber Monday?

Today’s the annual digital version of Black Friday, known by most as “Cyber Monday.” Microsoft’s Black Friday deals are still live today, but there’s not much cheap stuff left. Many of the deals we outlined from Friday are still in effect, but the best picks of the 10 and 15 dollar Xbox games are gone for the most part. Notably, the Acer Iconia W510 Tablet PC is undergoing a fairly steep $100 discount, and the Xbox 360 4GB Kinect Forza Horizon and Speed Wheel Bundle is currently $115 off. The Surface has not had any notable discounts, but you can get a second touch or type cover for $50 off when you purchase one.

We don’t expect Microsoft’s Surface to go on any significant sale today, seeing as it was not deeply discounted on Friday. The device is under fairly high demand and it wouldn’t make sense for Microsoft to have to make back orders on the tablet. What have you found today? Are there any Microsoft-related Black Friday deals that you’ve found to be particularly interesting? Are there any deals that you’ve seen pop up just today? Feel free to share in the comments.

[Microsoft Store]

Microsoft’s Black Friday Deals Go Live

Today’s Black Friday and there are a ton of great deals popping up across the web — even from Microsoft. As early as Thursday morning, the company had already started offering sales on the Microsoft Store website featuring deals that cover all of their products — from Surface to Xbox. This morning, however, all of the Black Friday deals are live and some of them are pretty substantial.

Some of the featured deals are as follows:

- Save $50 on a second type or touch cover with the purchase of a Surface
- Save $250 on the VIZIO 14-Inch Ultrabook
- Many $15 Xbox games
- Save up to 50% on select Windows 7 PCs
- Save $50 on a 4 GB Xbox 360
- Save $14 on a 3-month Xbox LIVE Gold Membership
- Various other accessories and games.

Many of the best deals on Xbox 360 games have already sold out, but I recommend you head on over before some of the other better deals are gone. Microsoft says that these deals are valid through “Cyber Monday,” November 26th. Hit the source link to shop!

[Microsoft Store]

Remember the Microsoft Kin? Here’s Why it Failed

Just a few years prior to the modern Windows Phone, Microsoft tried to attract the youth generation by introducing a new smartphone series, the Kin, that was geared towards social networking. The idea took two whole years and over $1 billion to develop, but managed to flop entirely in under the course of two months.

Microsoft had originally introduced the Kin One and Kin Two in partnership with Verizon Wireless in May 2010, yet the smartphones garnered virtually no sales and were pulled from shelves by the middle of July. Verizon sent the unsold Kin devices back to Microsoft, and while the handsets would eventually return for a brief period as basic feature phones, the Kin essentially had a life span of just 45 days.

If you’re wondering why the Kin was such a bad smartphone, new internal video footage of the smartphones being tested by Microsoft product testers has been obtained by Wired. Throughout one of the videos, posted after the break, you’ll see that the Kin was extremely frustrating due to its lag, touchscreen unresponsiveness and difficulties associated with dialing calls. As one former tester said, the Kin devices were a “pile of shit.”  Continue reading

Do You Think Microsoft Has Failed?

[quote_right]“The problem is that you are locked in with a choice of 100% Microsoft or 0% Microsoft.”[/quote_right]I wanted to touch upon a post made by Charlie Demerjian on SemiAccurate, in which he boldy claims that Microsoft has failed. Demerjian believes that Microsoft is in trouble because its two main products lines — Windows 8 and Windows Phone — are failing. Increasing competition is also cited as a reason why Microsoft is headed downhill:

“Microsoft is largely irrelevant to computing of late, the only markets they still play in are evaporating with stunning rapidity. Their long history of circling the wagons tighter and tighter works decently as long as there is not a credible alternative, and that strategy has been the entirety of the Microsoft playbook for so long that there is nothing else now. It works, and as the walls grow higher, customer enmity builds while the value of an alternative grows. This cycle repeats as long as there is no alternative. If there is, everything unravels with frightening rapidity.”

The opinion piece goes on to add that customers flocking to competitors will do so in a snowball effect. Once a customer ditches Microsoft Office for an alternative, such as Google Docs, it starts a chain reaction of Microsoft products and services becoming unnecessary and irrelevant to that individual.

“The problem is that if you are locked in with a choice of 100% Microsoft or 0% Microsoft, once someone goes, it isn’t a baby step, they are gone. Once you start using Google Docs and the related suites, you have no need for Office. That means you, or likely your company, saves several hundred dollars a head. No need for Office means no need for Exchange. No need for Exchange means no need for Windows Server. No need for Office means no need for Windows. Once the snowball starts rolling, it picks up speed a frightening pace. And that is where we are. The barriers to exit are now even more potent barriers to entry.”

Demerjian notes that Microsoft has upset its manufacturing partners such as Acer and Hewlett-Packard by undercutting them with Windows 8 and the release of its Surface tablet. Even worse, sales of the Surface are expected to be very poor. Ballmer previously noted that Surface sales have been “modest,” but Demerjian claims that Ballmer is not one to underhype anything and, therefore, that statement means that sales have been awful. It is expected that Microsoft moved 4 million Surface tablets in one month, not accounting for the allegedly high number of returns.

“Then again, to put the number in perspective, Apple was said to sell five million iPhone 5s on the first day, mainly because they were severely supply limited, and three million iPad Minis over the first sales weekend. Modest indeed, and no word about returns which SemiAccurate hears are astoundingly high. Surface is a failure too. Apple didn’t have a massive ad campaign to back it up either, they just released the products.”

Microsoft appears to have turned a new page and created itself a new identity with Windows 8, Windows Phone 8 and the Surface, but Demerjian is not buying it — nor does he believe customers, developers, manufacturers or game publishers will or ever will. According to this critic, the death spiral is in full effect for Microsoft. Do you agree or disagree?

[SemiAcccurate]

Ballmer Hints That More Microsoft Hardware is on the Horizon

Microsoft has earned itself a new identity with the release of Windows 8, Windows Phone 8 and the Surface tablet, becoming more like a “devices and services” company akin to Apple. And according to Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer, per Reuters, that innovation will likely continue as the Redmond-based company looks for more opportunities to create new hardware.

“Do I anticipate that partners of ours will build the lion’s share of all Windows devices over the next five years? The answer is, absolutely,” Ballmer said at a tech event in Santa Clara, California on Wednesday. “With that said, it is absolutely clear that there is an innovation opportunity on the scene between hardware and software and that is a scene that must not go unexploited at all by Microsoft.”

Microsoft has made hardware in the past, most notably the widely successful Xbox 360 gaming console, although it usually works with manufacturing partners such as Hewlett-Packard, HTC and Nokia to make devices. Microsoft has also had its fair share of hardware failures, namely the discontinued Zune player and Kin devices. The company is taking a new attempt at doing its own hardware with the Surface, and higher consumer demand for the device shows that it might actually be successful.

By integrating the hardware and software of its products, much like Apple does, Microsoft can have a greater control over the user experience of its devices. Apple devices like the Mac, iPhone and iPad do not have breakthrough hardware specifications, yet Apple seems always optimize OS X and iOS to perform well on those products. Based on what Ballmer is saying, it appears that Microsoft will continue to share this approach in the foreseeable future.

[Reuters]

Microsoft Issues Apology For Office 365 Outages

Office 365 has experienced two widespread service outages in the last week, prompting Microsoft to apologize for the situation. Rajesh Jha, who leads the engineering organization behind Office 365, has personally apologized for the two seperate incidents and provided some details on what caused the service to be plagued by downtime. Moreover, he notes that customers affected by the downtime will receive a service credit.

“I’d like to apologize to you, our customers and partners, for the obvious inconveniences these issues caused.  We know that email is a critical part of your business communication, and my team and I fully recognize our responsibility as your partner and service provider. We will provide a post mortem, and will also provide additional updates on how our service level agreement (SLA) was impacted.  We will be proactively issuing a service credit to our impacted customers.”  Continue reading