Microsofties: Writing Windows Phone 7 Apps for Personal Profit
    
		According to an article in the New York Times over the  weekend, Microsoft is encouraging employees to write apps  for Windows Phone 7 on their own time, and will share any revenue on those  apps in a 70/30 employee/Microsoft split. From the article:
  "It has relaxed a strict rule and will let employees  moonlight in their spare time and keep the resulting intellectual property and  most of the revenue, as long as that second job is writing apps for Windows  Phone 7-based devices.
  "And they don't have to do that work quietly. The  company is having weekly pizza parties for workers who pitch in to write code  for the platform and is planning ways to publicize their work, including  posters and awards of recognition, said Brandon Watson, director of developer  experience for Windows Phone 7."
This is encouraging news for anyone who would like to see Microsoft  harness its considerable engineering talent to the vibrant smartphone apps  market that's been taking place mostly away from Microsoft's platforms. A lot  of Microsoft partners are rooting for Microsoft to do much better, and giving  Microsoft's brightest and most motivated engineers incentives to populate  Microsoft's app store is a good way to build some momentum. (It's not like  stock options are much motivation over there anymore, anyway.)
Once it was enough for Microsoft to sell its mobile OS by saying  that Windows phones offer the tightest integration with the Windows platform.  As Apple's and Google's vibrant app markets show, few developers and phone users  seem to care about the plumbing. Microsoft is going to have to compete on the  fun or usefulness of the apps themselves.
This human resources rule change is the most concrete sign yet  that Microsoft has awoken to its underdog status in the mobile fight. If you  can get an HR department of a Fortune 500 company to change a policy, you must  be pretty serious.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on February 28, 2011