Microsoft bloatware is coming to Motorola phones

Strike another one-off the hit list. Microsoft and Lenovo recently
announced an agreement to reload Microsoft apps on Lenovo and Motorola
Android devices.
The preloaded apps are the same we’ve seen in
previous Microsoft deals with Android vendors, including the Office
mobile suite, OneDrive, and Skype. The announcement did not mention when
the agreement takes effect. Lenovo says it expects “to ship millions”
of Android devices loaded with Microsoft apps over the next few years.
The story behind the story:
The agreement to add Microsoft apps to Lenovo devices is part of a
“patent cross-licensing agreement.” Most critics take that to mean that
Microsoft and its powerful patent portfolio was able to make an offer
that most Android vendors can’t refuse.
Prior to Lenovo, Microsoft made deals to bring its apps to Android devices from Acer, Asus, Dell, LG, Samsung, and Sony. Android device vendors have paid as much as $1 billion in patent royalties a year before
Microsoft’s major patent cross-licensing push. That said, Lenovo and
Microsoft did not mention whether any money will change hands as part of
this latest deal.
The real Windows mobile
With
Windows 10 Mobile a complete write-off at this point, Microsoft needs a
strong presence in mobile. Right now, getting the company’s top
apps—which, incidentally, millions of people like to use anyway—is the
best bet for Microsoft on mobile. This sudden push for preloaded
Microsoft apps across a wide spectrum of popular Android devices appears
to say that strategy shift.
Lenovo has worked with
Microsoft closely in recent months. Prior to the Android deal the two
companies collaborated on the experimental—and soon-to-be defunct—ReachIt for Cortana service.
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