The action is a marked change for the company, which has always charged for new versions of Windows, one of its main profit drivers.
The ‘free’ strategy is designed to put Windows in as many devices as possible.
The company would then make up for any lost revenue by selling services such as Office over the Internet, or cloud.
Windows only features on roughly 15 percent of computing devices including phones and tablets, and is largely irrelevant for many consumers. It lags Apple Inc and Google Inc, which regularly update their software systems free for customers.
“The way to motivate consumers is to make upgrades transparent and painless – meaning free and low-to-no effort,” Gillett said. “Microsoft had to match the expectation set by the mobile and Web leaders.”
At an event at its headquarters near Seattle, Microsoft also tried to burnish its flagging reputation for innovation.
Unexpectedly, it unveiled a holographic lens device that allows users to see three-dimensional renderings of computer-generated images. Microsoft HoloLens, which looks like a wireless visor, raises the stakes in the emerging market for virtual reality, being targeted by Facebook Inc’s Oculus.
MICROSOFT HOLOLENS |
Executives also showed off an Xbox app for games on Windows 10 and a new version of its browser code named ‘Spartan,’ which lets users make notes on Web pages and share them.
Microsoft announced its new Windows 10 operating system in September, billing it as a move to unify all kinds of device users. It skipped Windows 9 altogether, to put some distance between the new system and Windows 8, which confused many users by ditching the start button menu and using a new layout.
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