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To date, the focus of Microsoft's mobile phone business has been providing its Windows Mobile software to handset manufacturers, but the company said an integrated business model of making both device and software could make sense.
"It wouldn't be unreasonable to think at some point there might some integrated thing," Mindy Mount, chief financial officer of Microsoft's entertainment and devices division, told investors at Citigroup's global technology conference in New York.
Microsoft has sent mixed signals about the Zune phone. At the time it introduced the Zune last year, the company said a Zune phone was definitely part of its future plans.
Earlier this year, Chief Executive
Windows Mobile is one of Microsoft's fastest growing businesses with license sales expected to nearly double this fiscal year to more than 20 million copies.
It remains a product largely targeted at office workers, but Mount expects that to change as consumers push to combine work and personal needs onto one handset. She said she was not making any specific announcements about its future products.
Mount declined to comment on rumors that Microsoft may buy BlackBerry-maker Research in Motion, but said the company is happy with its future in mobile right now.
"What I would ask people is what (RIM) really gets you. A lot of their money is coming from the hardware business and they are going after a very particular segment," said Mount, whose division also oversees the Xbox game console and Zune music player business.
Mount also said the mobile strategy of the two companies is quite different.
Microsoft has been focused on building scale by rolling out Windows Mobile to as many different devices and operators as possible while RIM, according to Mount, has been focused on being profitable with its limited number of handsets.
Shares of Microsoft rose 33 cents to $29.06 in afternoon trading, before closing at $28.81, up 8 cents. RIM shares touched a new high of $85.88 before dropping back to close at $85.34, down 7 cents.







