Verizon, and AT&T are messing up Microsoft's deal with Samsung
AP
But it looks like two of the nation's largest carriers, Verizon and AT&T, were not totally cool with the arrangement, reports the Wall Street Journal.
The apps in question are Skype; Microsoft's note-taking app OneNote; and Microsoft's cloud storage app OneDrive.
Verizon's S6 phones won't include the Microsoft apps, sources tell the WSJ. And the ones sold by AT&T will include OneNote and Skype but not OneDrive.
If users want them, they'll have to download them from Google's app store.
In fact, it also struck up a deal to include Microsoft Word, Excel, PowerPoint, as well as OneNote, Skype and OneDrive preinstalled on Samsung tablets as well as a bunch of other devices by nearly a dozen other Android device makers.
Spokespeople for Samsung, Verizon and AT&T wouldn't explain to the WSJ why they won't pre-install the apps. We've reached out to Microsoft for comment, but the company didn't illuminate why in its comment to the Journal, saying it's "working with its partners" to "bring the best of its productivity services to everyone."
However, we do know that smartphone users are not especially keen on having a bunch of pre-installed apps on their phones, just like PC users are not thrilled with a lot of unasked-for apps on their computers. That kind of thing is often called "bloatware."
Samsung had promised users it was going to let people delete unwanted apps from its Android devices. And according to a developer who claimed to have an early version of the S6 Edge, Samsung seemed to be serious about that promise.
The developer's phone was letting him delete just about all of the pre-installed apps, including Gmail, Drive, even Google search, pictures posted by the developer showed.
Google doesn't sell the Android operating system. It gives it away to device makers and makes its money on search, shopping and other apps baked into Android. So if users delete its apps from Samsung phones that would not make Google happy.
- A couple accidentally shipped their cat in an Amazon return package. It arrived safely 6 days later, hundreds of miles away.
- A centenarian who starts her day with gentle exercise and loves walks shares 5 longevity tips, including staying single
- 2 states where home prices are falling because there are too many houses and not enough buyers
- "To sit and talk in the box...!" Kohli's message to critics as RCB wrecks GT in IPL Match 45
- 7 Nutritious and flavourful tiffin ideas to pack for school
- India's e-commerce market set to skyrocket as the country's digital economy surges to USD 1 Trillion by 2030
- Top 5 places to visit near Rishikesh
- Indian economy remains in bright spot: Ministry of Finance