Microsoft shakes things up this week with some high-profile departures, and a reform of the Entertainment and Devices division that has CEO straight controlling the future of Microsoft's user technologies.

When it comes to smartphones, Windows Phone 7 should debatably be the de facto stage for business professionals, but Microsoft might be delivering too little, too late.

Microsoft is everywhere with commerce computing. The huge majority of association depends on Windows as a server operating system, and Active Directory as a directory framework. Lots of businesses utilize Microsoft Exchange as their messaging platform, Windows as the desktop operating system, and Microsoft Office for workplace efficiency applications.

Microsoft isn't now concerned in these areas for the majority of these technologies Microsoft almost own the market. It holds a most excellent role in all areas of business technology...apart from smartphones. Somehow, Microsoft approved the business smartphone market to RIM, and the BlackBerry OS.

The difficulty with Microsoft's efforts at a mobile platform for smartphones is Microsoft sees the planet by the look at a desktop. Windows Mobile luxury smartphones as they are a lot minor notebook PC and attempts to relate the similar values and knowledge’s as it does for Windows desktops.

What Microsoft educated the hard way, and yet RIM is now realizing is mobility needs a dissimilar idea. Smartphones, and currently the rising tablet market led by the Apple iPad, are peripherally connected to traditional computing, but need more inventive idea about what "mobility" is.