SEATTLE — Microsoft and Samsung have struck a deal to put a slate of Microsoft-built applications on the South Korean giant’s smartphones and tablets.
Samsung’s new Galaxy S6 phones will come with note-taking application OneNote, One Drive data storage, and chat utility Skype, Microsoft said Monday. Absent from that collection are Microsoft productivity mainstays Word, Excel and PowerPoint.
All six apps will be loaded onto some Samsung tablets beginning in the first half of this year, Microsoft said, without specifying which devices. As part of the agreement, businesses that buy Samsung devices directly from the company will be able to buy versions of Microsoft’s Web-based Office 365 suite.
The deal is Microsoft’s latest effort to gain ground in mobile software even as its own mobile operating system badly lags those built by Google and Apple. Microsoft has spent much of the last year broadening the availability of its software beyond Windows Phone, releasing the Office suite for Apple’s iPad and making limited versions of the software free for users of Google’s Android and Apple’s iOS.