Zune: So you want to be an iPod killer

Microsoft will never beat Apple at its own game, but Apple's instinct is Microsoft's opportunity

Some of the biggest iPod fans go to great lengths to overcome Apple's controls and modify their iPods. Just check out iPod Hacks, a site devoted to voiding iPod's warranty and bypassing Apple's strict gadget lockdown. Many of the hacks involve the installation of Linux with a special iPod interface called Podzilla. Once installed, people can write or download software for playing unsupported media files, customizing the interface and installing special applications that do all kinds of things the iPod was never intended to do. You can play iDoom, an iPod-specific version of the first-person shooter classic, Doom; turn the iPod into a universal TV remote control; add a word processor; and even use the iPod as a security "key" for locking and unlocking Macs.

This is what people do, even when Apple bans it. Imagine what would be possible if Microsoft encouraged modification of the Zune.

Let people transform the Zune into an Xbox game controller, a TV remote control, a portable presentation device, a wireless PC hard drive or a Vista gadget emulator. Give me a wireless keyboard and a Zune version of Pocket Outlook, and I'll never buy another iPod. Build ClearType into Zune and make it the ultimate eBook reader (and sell eBooks on Zune Marketplace).

Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer told Bloomberg earlier this month that a Zune phone is in the works. Assuming this FUD turns to fact, competition between Microsoft and Apple in the cell phone business changes the dynamics of the Zune-iPod battle entirely. Microsoft has long experience in this market, and has had some success. For example, there are four times as many Windows-based cell phones in the world as there are BlackBerries.

I'll reserve judgment on any Zune phone. But I do urge Microsoft to compete with the coming iPhone (the iPod-like phone coming soon from Apple) with a real killer app: VoIP software that uses Zune's Wi-Fi option to make free or cheap phone calls over the Internet. Imagine downloading free software that transforms your future Zune (complete with microphone) into a cell phone that does not require signing up with -- or ever paying -- Cingular, Verizon or Sprint!

Microsoft can do all this by creating a free development environment and other tools that facilitate the creation of new Zune options. (The right way to do this would be to go open source, but that's probably asking too much.)

This approach would leverage all Microsoft's strengths:

- Operating system expertise

- Development tools and programmer outreach

- Experience with fostering the broadest possible ecosystem for software development

- Extensible embedded operating system and cell phone operating system support and development

- Peripheral hardware and third-party software partnerships

- Strong channel relationships

History shows that the functionality of stand-alone gadgets always gets folded into multipurpose devices. Apple's instinct to maximize elegance at the expense of extensibility made them No. 1 in the media player market, but the future belongs to customizable, multifunction players.

Apple's instinct is Microsoft's opportunity -- to leapfrog Apple and usher in the next-generation media player that anyone can upgrade, customize and extend.

Microsoft will never beat Apple at its own game. But the reverse is also true: Apple can't win at the Microsoft game. If Microsoft turns Zune into a media-optimized, extensible mini-PC that really works, the iPod is as good as dead.

Mike Elgan is a technology writer and former editor of Windows Magazine. He can be reached at mike.elgan+computerworld@gmail.com or his blog: http://therawfeed.com.

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