Microsoft;s “Windows Live” branding has been a textbook case of how not to name your products. But does Microsoft really need to go to the opposite extreme and rebrand everything from its operating systems to its mapping software with cuter, shorter names?Microsoft;s decision to rebrand Live Search as “Kumo,” “Bing,” “Hook” or some other more pronounceable name is well-known at this point. But Microsoft is trademarking other new names,
Microsoft Office Professional 2007, too, including “Sift” and “Swivel.”Like its recent trademark application for Bing,
Office 2007 Download, the one for Sift is broad and inconclusive. As Paid Content notes, the application says that Sift could be the name for an “operating system software for mobile phones; computer search engine software; computer programs for searching email, text messages,
Office 2007 Professional, address and contact information.”(Would Microsoft be crazy enough to trademark its general Web search engine and its search engine for mobile with two different names, say Bing and Sift? As Windows Live has shown,
Microsoft Office Professional 2010, truth can be stranger than fiction….)The trademark application for Swivel sounds as if it is more closely tied to mobile phones — and possibly be the new name for Windows Mobile,
Office 2010 Key, according to Paid Content. If I were a betting woman, I;d guess that Swivel might be a possible final name for Pink (the device and/or the services).Anyone out there have a guess on why Microsoft is cornering the market for monosyllabic search/software/services names? Is it just to keep everyone guessing? Or is there some method to this Kumo-Bing-Hook-Sift-Swivel madness? Plus — what;s going to happen to all these search and services brands when and if Microsoft consummates some kind of a search/ad deal with Yahoo?Update: Kip Kniskern of LiveSide notes that the trademark application for “Sift” has been “initially refused.” It;s unclear when and whether Microsoft may resubmit it to the Patent and Trademark Office.