Microsoft says Windows Phone is a ‘distant third,’ admits OEMs were annoyed by Surface

Microsoft COO Turner Windows Phone
Microsoft COO Turner Windows Phone

Microsoft is making a big shift from being a software company to being a devices and services company, which means that we should expect the firm to have its fair share of hiccups over the next few quarters. Paul Thurrott reports via Twitter that Microsoft COO Kevin Turner admitted during the company’s financial analyst meeting on Thursday that Microsoft has had its fair share of growing pains with its new business model and said that the company in particular has a lot of work to do with Windows Phone, which he said was a “distant third” behind iOS and Android.

[More from BGR: iPhone 5s slaughters quad-core rivals in performance tests despite dual-core CPU and just 1GB of RAM]

Turner also said that there was some “consternation” among the company’s OEM partners when Microsoft decided to get into the hardware game by developing the Surface. Microsoft emphasized, however, that just because it’s becoming a devices company that doesn’t mean that it will make all devices based on its Windows Phone, Windows RT and Windows 8 operating systems.


This article was originally published on BGR.com

Related stories

Elop to get $25 million payday once Microsoft-Nokia deal is sealed

Microsoft will now give you up to $350 for your iOS, Android devices

Windows 8.1 pricing and packaging revealed, upgrade plans detailed