Employee: Nokia-Windows Phone 7 Rumor Is ‘Loony’

Don’t believe the recent gossip that Nokia and Microsoft are hooking up to make a Windows phone. A soon-to-be-former employee of Nokia claims it isn’t happening.

On his personal blog, Watts Martin explained that a partnership between Microsoft and Nokia isn’t even close to happening, because it’s unlikely Nokia would cede control of an OS to a third party.

“There is no guarantee of that at all, because it is stark raving loony,” Martin wrote. “A lot of the reporting on Nokia Ive seen seems to miss a fundamental fact: they are, in their fashion, just as insistent on control over their ecosystem as Apple is.”

Nokia has bee a diehard supporter of Symbian, an open-source operating system that’s a decade old. For years, Symbian has been the worldwide leader in smartphone OS marketshare, but some analysts say it could soon be dethroned by Google’s Android OS, which has a more modern user interface and several manufacturing partners.

“Market share is an existential threat to Symbian, it imperils the very existence of the platform,” said Gartner analyst Nick Jones. “And the main reason Symbian is losing share is the user experience which isnt competitive with Apple or Android.”

Eldar Murtazin, editor in chief of Mobile-Review editor, claimed last week that Microsoft had begun talks to make Nokia-branded smartphones running the Windows Phone 7 OS. The bleak outlook for Symbian got the tech press wondering if such a partnership would be likely.

Martin’s answer to that question would be a firm “No.”

“Nokia really does have their OS strategy figured out, and its a good one,” he said. “What they dont have figured out is user experience design…. The good news for them is that over the last year theyve started to take all those problem seriously. The bad news is that they needed to have been taking them seriously in 2007.”

Photo of a Samsung phone running Microsoft’s Windows Phone 7: Mike Kane/Wired.com

Brian is a Wired.com technology reporter focusing on Apple and Microsoft. He’s also writing a book about the always-connected mobile future called Always On (publishing April 2011 by Da Capo).
Follow @bxchen and @gadgetlab on Twitter.

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Microsoft: 1.5 Million Windows Phone 7 Handsets ‘Sold’


The early numbers are in for Microsoft’s brand new phone operating system Windows Phone 7: 1.5 million handsets sold to date. However, that number requires some explaining.

Microsoft on Tuesday morning published a faux interview with Achim Berg, vice president of business and marketing for Windows phones, who says Windows Phone 7 is growing fast.

The “sales” number is a bit tricky:

“Another is phone manufacturer sales phones being bought and stocked by mobile operators and retailers on their way to customers,” Berg said. “We are pleased that phone manufacturers sold over 1.5 million phones in the first six weeks, which helps build customer momentum and retail presence.”

To be clear, that means Microsoft has sold 1.5 million phones to mobile operators and retailers to put on their shelves, not 1.5 million phones activated by customers.

Then again, I’d be surprised if 1.5 million Windows Phone 7 handsets were activated already: Microsoft is entering a market already dominated by Google and Apple.

Google claims it’s activating 300,000 Android phones a day, and Apple claims 270,000 iPhones are activated each day. Microsoft has a lot of catching up to do before it can start boasting similar numbers.

However, Berg’s statements generally give a modest overview on a fresh, new start. Berg adds thatafter just six weeks, Microsoft has recruited 18,000 developers, and there are 4,000 Windows Phone 7 apps available in its app store. 1.5 million “sales” isn’t the sort of sales we’d usually care about, but it shows that the software giant has a solid foundation of partners to help Windows Phone 7 potentially gain a foothold in the smartphone market in the coming years.

Next year will provide a better glimpse into Windows Phone 7’s performance on the market. A software update introducing copy-and-paste and other new features is due sometime early 2011, and we’ll probably see Verizon getting on board to carry Windows Phone 7 devices as well.

Photo: Mike Kane/Wired.com

Brian is a Wired.com technology reporter focusing on Apple and Microsoft. He’s also writing a book about the always-connected mobile future called Always On (publishing April 2011 by Da Capo).
Follow @bxchen and @gadgetlab on Twitter.

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Rumor: Nokia Might Make a Windows Phone

Nokia, known for its religious-like devotion to the Symbian operating system, may be working with Microsoft to develop new phones running the Windows phone OS instead.

Nokia and Microsoft have begun talks to make Nokia-branded smartphones running the Windows Phone 7 OS, according to Eldar Murtazin, editor in chief of Mobile-Review editor. (Murtazin is known for gaining early access to the Nokia N8 phone long before its release, which led Nokia to file a report with the Russian police).

If true, adopting Windows Phone 7 could work well for Nokia, whose Symbian OS is outdated compared to more user-friendly Android-powered phones and Apple’s iPhone. Critics have called the Symbian OS “broken.”

The Windows Phone 7 strategy, as I’ve reported before, is more thought out than Google’s. Rather than simply license the OS to any manufacturer, Microsoft is requiring OEMs to adhere to a standard set of hardware features for any phone running Windows Phone 7. (Each phone must have three buttons, for example, and include a Snapdragon processor.)

What would Nokia get in return for playing by Microsoft’s rules? As part of the negotiation, manufacturers get a few default tiles on the Windows Phone 7 home screen devoted to the OEM’s proprietary applications; the rest of the space goes to Microsoft’s default apps (phone, calendar, etc).

So hypothetically, Nokia could put its own fancy GPS app on the home screen that charges a monthly rate to customers, for example. (Most of us would call this “bloatware,” but proprietary OEM apps are removable on Windows Phone 7, unlike bloatware on Android.)

From Unwired View

Image courtesy of Microsoft

Brian is a Wired.com technology reporter focusing on Apple and Microsoft. He’s also writing a book about the always-connected mobile future called Always On (publishing April 2011 by Da Capo).
Follow @bxchen and @gadgetlab on Twitter.

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Windows Phone to Catch Up With iPhone in January? Unlikely

Rumors are buzzing about an impending Windows Phone 7 software update that will bring Microsoft’s new mobile OS up to speed with the iPhone.

While we like Windows Phone 7, it seems highly unlikely that it will catch up to the iPhone quite that fast.

Tech blog WP Central quotes Chris Walsh, who worked on an early jailbreak-like hack for Windows Phone 7 called Chevron WP7, claiming that in January 2011, Windows Phone 7 will get a “massive” software update that’s worthy of being called Windows Phone 8.

“MS took 3 months to do what Apple did in 3 years,” Walsh tweeted.

Walsh claims the update will introduce Bing turn-to-turn GPS navigation, custom ringtone support, copy-and-paste and some form of multitasking.

While I believe Windows Phone 7 will soon gain these features, that hardly sounds like a massive update to me. The only major new feature would be multitasking; custom ringtones I’d file under “meh,” turn-by-turn navigation is a thumbs-up but hardly mindblowing, and copy-and-paste is yes, an important tool, but not that big: Android has only partial support for copy-and-paste, and that hasn’t stopped it from becoming the most popular smartphone operating system.

Furthermore, to say such an upgrade would “do what Apple did in 3 years” is an incredible overstatement. To catch up with the iPhone, Windows Phone 7 devices would also need front-facing cameras, something comparable to AirPlay to stream video onto a TV box, and more — not to mention 300,000 third-party apps. Windows Phone 7 is just a month old; it’s got a lot of catching up to do, and it would take a few miracles for the platform to be up to speed with the iPhone by January.

Microsoft declined to comment.

Rather than rush out new features, I think Microsoft is probably prioritizing getting Verizon to hop on board with Windows Phone 7 a move that would boost its growth to compete with its more direct rival: Google Android. I’d place a bet on CDMA Windows Phone 7 handsets arriving before we see devices up to par with the iPhone.

Photo of Windows Phone 7 devices running software tests in a server rack: Mike Kane/Wired.com

Brian is a Wired.com technology reporter focusing on Apple and Microsoft. He’s also writing a book about the always-connected mobile future called Always On (publishing April 2011 by Da Capo).
Follow @bxchen and @gadgetlab on Twitter.

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Gadget Lab Podcast: Galaxy Tab, Windows Phone 7, Boxee

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This week’s episode of the Gadget Lab podcast is packed with neat gear, including the Samsung Galaxy Tab, Windows Phone 7 phones and the Boxee set-top box. Also joining us is a special guest: the infamous Walt Mosspuppet!

Before we dive into the serious news of the week, Dylan Tweney pokes around a weird In-Sound hoodie with drawstrings that contain earbuds for your music player. Try not getting mugged when you’re jogging with this thing on.

Moving on to less ugly gadgets, the 7-inch Galaxy Tab got a bunch of favorable reviews from critics. It runs the Android OS, and it’s the first real competition for the iPad.

Who needs a 7-inch tablet though? Mosspuppet can tell you.

In smartphone news, the first Windows Phone 7 devices launched this week. I’ve got the scoop on how Microsoft made the new Windows Phone OS, which involved completely scrapping the old Windows Mobile project. It wasn’t easy.

Coming out soon is the Boxee set-top box to play downloaded videos and internet content on your TV. We’ll let you know what we think as soon as we get one here.

We conclude the podcast with a brand new bag from Chrome called the Boris. It’s a backpack designed for motorcycle trips with enough space to pack four days’ worth of clothing and a laptop.

Like the show? You can also get theGadget Lab video podcast via iTunes, or if you dont want to be distracted by our unholy on-camera talent, check out theGadget Lab audio podcast. Prefer RSS? You can subscribe to the Gadget Labvideo oraudio podcast feeds

Or listen to the audio here:

Gadget Lab audio podcast #95

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This post was written by Journalist on November 12, 2010

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Windows Phone 7 Doomed? Actually, It’s Just Getting Started

Despite entering a crowded market, Microsoft’s brand new Windows Phone operating system seems off to a healthy start. Nonetheless, the estimates aren’t impressing cynical tech journalists.

More Windows Phone 7 coverage on Gadget Lab:

  • How Microsoft Hit CTRL+ALT+DEL on Windows Phone
  • Microsoft Announces First Windows Phone 7 Handsets
  • A Humbled Microsoft Prepares to Boot Up Windows Phone 7
  • Microsoft Blends Zune Media, Xbox Live Into New Phone OS
  • Microsoft’s Mobile Strategy Takes Aim at Apple, Google
  • Microsoft Tells Windows Phone 7’s App Story
  • The Street’s Scott Moritz cites a market research source who claims Microsoft shipped a “mere 40,000 Windows Phone 7 phones Monday.”

    “The anemic sales number does not include the 89,000 Microsoft employees that will be given free Windows 7 phones,” Moritz quips.

    CNET reporters added their bleak perspective based on the performance of a single AT&T store in San Francisco (where every hipster in sight is already fondling an iPhone), which sold fewer than 20 devices by midday.

    “If Microsoft hopes to get back in the smartphone game, it had better hope that Windows Phone 7 makes a bigger impact than it appeared to be having at one AT&T store here,” they wrote.

    But let’s put this into perspective. Google claims it’s shipping at least 200,000 Android phones every day, and Apple says 270,000 are sold each day. However, comparing these numbers to a Windows Phone 7 launch estimate would be foolish: Android has been on the market for two years, and the iPhone for three; both platforms have reached critical mass.

    Windows Phone 7 is two days old.

    A fairer comparison would be launch numbers. The first iPhone shipped 250,000 units during its launch weekend, according to an analyst’s estimates. That number seems more substantial, but this was when nothing like the iPhone was already on the market.

    I couldn’t find firm launch sales for the first Android phone (the T-Mobile G1), but the more popular Droid smartphone was estimated to ship100,000 units during its launch weekend. That’s a full weekend, not one day and if 40,000 more Windows phones shipped on day two, then Windows Phone 7’s launch would have performed nearly as well as the Droid.

    If you consider that Windows Phone is entering a market where everyone and their mother already seems to be cradling an iPhone or an Android phone, a 40,000 day-one estimate isn’t bad. (It’s certainly better than Google’s failed launch of the Nexus One, which sold 135,000 units over 74 days, according to an estimate.)Sure enough, AT&T and T-Mobile spokespeople contacted by Wired.com said their companies were pleased with early demand of Windows Phone 7 handsets, though they declined to disclose figures.

    This all makes the pile “doom and gloom” stories about Windows Phone 7 look silly (as was the case with the“iPhone is doomed” stories.)

    I personally think Windows Phone 7 is going to be huge in two years largely because Microsoft’s mobile strategy is superior to Android’s, as I argued in a previous piece. But no one should have realistically expected Windows Phone to blow anyone out of the water on day one, this late in the game.

    Don’t get me wrong: I’m not cheering for Microsoft. But my point is we shouldn’t be projecting failure for anyone trying to push something new into the highly competitive mobile space. I don’t want just two giants with complete domination again, do you?

    Photo: Mike Kane/Wired.com

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    This post was written by Journalist on November 10, 2010

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    Google Comes to WinPhone 7 As an App, Not an Option

    Windows Phone 7 lets you make Google searches, but only through a back door.

    Google’s free Search app for WP7 is available today, according to the Google Mobile team. “Just search the Marketplace for ‘Google Search,’ download, pin to Start, and the power of Google Search is only a click away.”

    “Search, download, pin to Start” — doesn’t that seem a little complicated just to load a search engine on your phone?

    A distinguishing feature of Windows Phone 7 handsets is their three dedicated hardware buttons. The Windows logo goes home; the left-arrow button goes back; and the magnifying-glass “search” button opens up Microsoft’s search engine, Bing.

    That button is permanently tied to Bing. There appears to be no way to change it.

    On the iPhone or Blackberry, or nearly every web browser on the desktop (with Google’s Chrome a notable exception), you can pick your default search engine. You can’t do that with Windows Phone 7. On the Microsoft smartphone, you get Microsoft search.

    Now, Bing has a lot going for it; it works very well on WP7, and I think Microsoft is onto something by putting search front-and-center on smartphones. The hardware button is usefully contextual, too: if you’re in the Marketplace, it searches the Marketplace; if you’re in Outlook, it searches your inbox, etc. That’s handy, and exactly the kind of behavior you’d hope for.

    But that doesn’t change the fact that hardwiring Bing makes Windows Phone 7 much more closed than most other smartphone platforms.

    Considering the close ties between internet search, ad revenue and content-sharing with partners like Facebook, the fact that Microsoft is driving nearly all of its mobile search through Bing is no accident.

    It’s a feature, but it’s also a problem.

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    Will WinPhone 7 Change How We Shop for Smartphones?

    AT&T’s Windows Phone 7 handsets drop today, but if you navigate past the company’s big splash page, you’d never know it.

    That’s because like most other phone retailers, AT&T’s online store drills down by manufacturer and device type (e.g., smartphone, feature phone, tablet/computer), but not operating system. The only smartphone OS it currently separates out is Android, grouped with categories like “free,” “slider” and “refurbished.”

    MoreWindowsPhone7 coverage on Gadget Lab:

    • Samsung’s Windows Phone 7 Packs Intuitive, Visual Punch
    • Microsoft Announces First Windows Phone 7 Handsets
    • A Humbled Microsoft Prepares to Boot UpWindowsPhone7
    • Microsoft Blends Zune Media, Xbox Live Into NewPhoneOS
    • Microsoft’s Mobile Strategy Takes Aim at Apple, Google
    • Microsoft TellsWindowsPhone7’s App Story

    While tech-savvy consumers increasingly think of smartphones in terms of competing operating systems, wireless companies still think of their own relationship with their subscribers first, manufacturers second and platforms a distant third.

    It’s even starker if you’re an existing customer looking to upgrade a mobile phone; an AT&T customer trying to find an Android phone has to navigate a long list of smartphones, while Apple and Blackberry’s models jump to the top.

    Verizon Wireless’s online store does break phones down by operating system if you mouse over the “Phones & Devices” menu. The choices are Android, Apple iOS, Blackberry, Palm WebOS and “Windows phone” — the last something of a misnomer, since Verizon only offers older Windows Mobile devices, not the new Windows Phone 7.

    This arguably benefits companies like Apple and Blackberry, who enjoy high name recognition and whose platforms are only available on their own branded devices. It also benefits particular smartphones, like Motorola’s Droid on Verizon, who are featured prominently on store websites and network advertisements.

    But the balance is tipping in favor of the operating systems. With Windows Phone 7 now offering devices from multiple manufacturers on AT&T and T-Mobile, Verizon selling iOS devices like the iPad (and perhaps soon the iPhone) and Android’s share of the market growing an extraordinary rate, wireless companies will be hard-pressed not to put a device’s operating system front and center — not buried at the bottom of a tech sheet next to its Bluetooth spec and its camera’s megapixel count.

    AT&T has made a big bet on its support of Windows Phone 7 — I wouldn’t be surprised if we see those menus get an upgrade soon.

    Images: screenshots from AT&T Wireless Store by Tim Carmody.

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    Updated Xbox and WinPhone7 Get Updated Netflix, ESPN, and More

    Xbox 360’s long-awaited dashboard update is here, bringing a slew of new features, including a nice bonus from Netflix: an improved search UI and support for Netflix streaming on Windows Phone 7.

    Let’s take the Xbox first. Xbox Live’s Major Nelson writes that the 360 dashboard update is available today and rolling out to everyone (regardless of your geography!) over Xbox Live.

    That was penned this morning; if you’re reading this now, you’ve probably gotten the update. If not, signing in again might work, but bear in mind this warning: “If you keep signing out and then back in again, this will NOT force the updateit will only anger people on your friends list who will keep getting a notification. every. time. you sign. in…Be patient, everyone will eventually receive the update.” Well said.

    The headlining features of the Xbox update are the new ESPN hub and Zune music. You’ve got to be an Xbox Gold subscriber to take advantage of most of them. Zune Music or ZunePass is exactly what it sounds like: subscription-based streaming music, with baked-in search.

    The ESPN hub promises 3,500 live, on-demand and DVRed global sporting events from ESPN3.com annually. The selection is arguably stronger than any other digital set-top box: college basketball and football to US pro baseball and basketball and international soccer, golf and tennis, whether they’re in or out of your local market. No NFL or NHL, but sports junkies are one step closer cutting the cable cord. If only it could have rolled out in the summertime: we’d all be watching baseball, tennis and soccer and it would have taken everyone three months to notice.

    ESPN also gets to leverage some of the Xbox Live social networking features, including group chat while you’re watching a game. (The chat software itself is also reportedly improved.) English Premier League fans won’t even have to leave home to heckle their friends. That is, assuming you’ve all got Xboxes.

    And then there’s Netflix. Xbox Live Gold users have had discless Netflix streaming for a long time now, and it’s only been in the last few months that other consoles have caught up. Now the original Xbox gets an update too, with an improved search UI.

    Plus, Netflix put a cherry on top: just like the iPhone, Windows Phone 7 is getting Netflix Watch Instantly too via a free application, which will be available at the phone’s launch.

    One last Xbox 360 detail that I think is important: the new dashboard overhauls the parental controls and family programming settings. Netflix, Sports, Chat, Kinect, the casual Xbox games on WP7: all of these together suggest that Microsoft is strongly re-positioning the Xbox as a living room hub for the entire family, not just where college kids and devoted gamers blast away on Halo while their friends and families leave to do something else.

    Some of those gamers are already reacting, saying that the new games for WP7 and Kinect are too watered-down, don’t offer enough of what they’re used to. I think it’s a really good thing, based on the premise that the value of any box attached to your television set increases proportionally with the number of valuable things you can do with it.

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    Kindle App For Windows Phone 7 Is On The Way

    Amazon keeps rolling out software applications for nearly every device it doesn’t make itself. Next up is the new player in the smartphone market, Windows Phone 7. The forthcoming WP7 Kindle app has virtually the same function as other mobile Kindle apps, but will have Microsoft’s look and feel.

    I may have been the only e-reading-focused reporter at the Windows Phone 7 debut event. I asked everyone I could find about e-reading applications for the device. “Just stay tuned,” I was told.

    I still couldn’t believe there wasn’t one or more e-reading apps announced at the launch. It’s become an assumed part of app-capable smartphones and tablets in what has to be record time. Having an app for Kindle is like having an app for Facebook or the New York Times.

    Think about it: just a year ago, there were only a few e-book apps, some by companies that are dwindling if not long gone. Now nearly every e-bookstore has a reading app on every screen you can carry.

    Kindle joins just one other e-reading application that will be in the application Marketplace: Wattpad. Sometimes called “the YouTube of eBooks,” Wattpad is a service where users share their own original writing; half e-book commons, half social network.

    Wattpad looks great — but it’s neither an e-bookstore nor an e-book reading application as we’ve come to recognize it from the Kindle, Nook, Kobo, iBooks, Stanza or MobiPocket smartphone apps (this list goes on and on).

    The Kindle app for WP7 may not be ready when the phones are officially ready for sale. If history is any guide, this won’t be the last e-reader app announcement you’ll hear between now and then.

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    Gadget Lab Podcast: MacBook Air, Windows Phone, Symbian

    This week’s Gadget Lab podcast is packed with brand new, shiny goodies. Apple released new notebooks, and Microsoft launched its first phones running Windows Phone 7.

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    Released Wednesday, Apple’s new MacBook Air now comes in two different flavors with 11- or 13-inch screens. We have an 11-inch Aur here in the lab, and we wonder how to justify paying $1,000 for one of these when you can pay $300 for a netbook or $500 for an iPad.

    As for Microsoft, Samsung was one of the first manufacturers to create a phone powered by Windows Phone 7. I reviewed the Samsung Focus, and I’m a big fan of the OS, despite some flaws and features it’s still missing.

    Wrapping up the podcast on a sadder note, Wired.com’s Priya Ganapati discusses the future of the Symbian foundation, responsible for the OS behind most Nokia phones, whose president recently resigned.

    Like the show? You can also get the Gadget Lab video podcast on iTunes, or if you dont want to be distracted by our unholy on-camera talent, check out the Gadget Lab audio podcast. Prefer RSS? You can subscribe to the Gadget Lab video or audio podcast feeds

    Or listen to the audio here:

    Gadget Lab audio podcast #92

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    This post was written by Journalist on October 22, 2010

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    Windows Phone 7 Is the Real Facebook Phone

    When Microsoft and Facebook announced that they were partnering to integrate Facebook and Bing for social-network-powered search, it confirmed something I thought Monday: Windows Phone 7 is the real Facebook phone.

    I don’t know whether Facebook has a secret team working on a phone where they control the OS. But they don’t need one. They’re already deeply integrated into Android and iOS. Now with the Microsoft partnership, they’re tied to the most socially-optimized smartphone ever brought to the market.

    “This is, I think, one of the most exciting partnerships we’ve done on the platform so far,” Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg said at the Bing announcement Wednesday. “Our view is that over the next five years we expect that almost every industry is going to be disrupted by someone building a great product that’s deep in whatever area that industry is, plus is extremely socially integrated.”

    The first Windows Phone 7 handsets are due in stores November. The OS is Microsoft’s complete do-over on mobile after its predecessor Windows Mobile tanked in popularity and market share in the wake of more consumer-savvy handsets such as Apple’s iPhone and Google’s Android-powered smartphones.

    Every aspect of Windows Phone 7 is geared around social networks: phone, contacts, gaming, photos, even Office. Focusing the phone around Hubs doesn’t just mean that local client apps and cloud apps are grouped next to each other; it means that the local client and cloud work together.

    Microsoft tried to explicitly build a social-networking phone featuring Facebook, Twitter, Flickr and MySpace with the Kin. The Kin failed and was killed by Microsoft mostly because it wasn’t a full-featured smartphone (it was a fork of Windows Phone 7), but required a smartphone’s data plan.

    The Kin’s cloud-backed social and sharing components lived on in Windows Phone 7. They were always there. Only now, Flickr and MySpace are nowhere to be found.

    Even before the Bing announcement, Facebook was a conspicuous part of the WP7 presentation. Microsoft’s Joe Belfiore outlined a scenario where users could take a photo on their phone that’s then uploaded to Facebook automatically, without even opening the Facebook app.

    In the press release for WP7, Microsoft notes that “the customizable Start screen with Live Tiles provides real-time updates so you can keep tabs on the latest weather forecast, your favorite band, a friends Facebook page and more, all with just one glimpse” (emphasis added).

    That wasn’t an accident. The Facebook-Bing partnership was already happening.

    It’s the exact strategy that Zuckerberg outlined in his interview with Michael Arrington, where he explained why Facebook wasn’t building its own phone.

    Zuckerberg only makes an offhand reference to WP7 in that interview: “If Windows Phone 7 takes off, then Im sure well put resources on that.” But he added, with reference to their efforts with the iPhone and Android, “the question is what could we do if we also started hacking at a deeper level, and that is a lot of the stuff that were thinking about.”

    In order to do that, Zuckerberg explained, you need to find a company that was willing to incorporate social networking from the operating system up — not adding a layer on top of what they were doing, but making that the focus of the device and its services.

    At least one of those companies is Microsoft.

    We started thinking what would social search look like, and we started looking around for partners, Zuckerberg said. Microsoft really is the underdog here and they really are incentivized to try new things.

    He was talking about search, but he may as well have been talking about phones.

    Microsoft may be the underdog in search and phones, but they’ve actually been ahead of the curve in terms of incorporating social layers into their products. The Zune had song and photo sharing between devices over Wi-Fi before the iPhone was even announced.

    But that was a closed network, limited to just Zune-to-Zune, and later Zune-to-Xbox. In order to get outside of itself, Microsoft partnered with Facebook early on — it still owns part of the company — and Facebook helped shape Microsoft’s social strategy.

    Microsoft has been quietly building a social network without anyone actually noticing. Windows Live, Office Live, Xbox Live are all social networks where users work, share files and talk about media together. You use the same identity across all of those services on every Microsoft device.

    Facebook is already embedded in all of them: it’s built into Messenger, Hotmail and Outlook; it’s what powers part of the social dimension of Xbox Live. And Bing is already embedded in Facebook, in the form of maps and search results.

    Now Facebook’s information is embedded in Bing search. And search is one of just three buttons on every WP7 phone.

    Consequently, Facebook’s partnership with Bing isn’t just about Google; it isn’t just about “like” results showing up when you search in a web browser on your PC.

    It’s about incorporating a social layer into media on every device in your household, from your phone to your set-top box. It’s about making those devices smarter in how they communicate with each other and from one platform to another.

    That’s what stood out to me most at the Windows Phone 7 launch event. The Office people demonstrated how to use Windows Live to stream a PowerPoint presentation from a Windows PC to a Mac. The Xbox people were showing how to chat about a Netflix movie with your Facebook friends on Xbox live. The hardware people were showing off a wide-angle HD webcam to let families chat with families from their living rooms. Deep integration of devices, media and services, using the cloud to power person-to-person interaction, through voice, images and text.

    If we think about Apple’s attempt with Ping to bring a social layer to iTunes (which has been criticized, in part, because Apple didn’t partner up with Facebook), Sony’s idea of a multitasking television set or Twitter’s plays to get on the television screen with Google TV, it’s clear that that’s where we’re heading.

    The only places where Microsoft and Facebook are “underdogs” are search and smartphones. When it comes to social networking and smart partnering with other companies — including each other — the two giants are way ahead of the field.

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    How and Why You’d Use Windows Phone 7 With A Mac

    One of the major advantages of Windows Phone 7 is its tight integration with Microsoft’s other devices and software. In a terse statement, Microsoft let Mac users know they can eventually expect a light version: “Later in 2010 Microsoft will make a public beta available of a tool that allows Windows Phone 7 to sync select content with Mac computers.”

    The “tool” will probably be a version of the Zune desktop software, if a Microsoft UK marketing head early tweet is any indication: “ANNOUNCEMENT: I’m glad to confirm that Mac users would be able to use Zune on their Macs to sync with #WP7… More details soon.”

    This makes sense for Microsoft: not only have they always made software for Macs (notably Office), you’d never want to put too many limitations on what PCs you can use with a post-PC handheld. Imagine if Apple had kept the iPod and iTunes Mac-only. Or if the Zune had never included support for Macs. (Wait, that second one actually happened.)

    But why would a Mac user want to use a WP7 phone — particularly when the iPhone works so well with a Mac? Basically, it’s the same reason a Mac user might pick an Android phone over an iPhone. Either you like the physical phone better, or (more often) you’re more tied into Google’s or Microsoft’s software than you are to Apple’s.

    Here are some scenarios where that might be true.

    1. You’re a heavy user of Microsoft Office. Windows Phone 7 has the full Office suite built-in. iPhone’s Office offerings aren’t as strong; it’s a little better for iPad, but not that much.

      Windows Office 2011 for Mac is coming at the end of the month, and it’s the best, most-interoperable Office suite available for the Mac. It’s also finally bringing a real Outlook application, not the baby Outlook they called Entourage. (Entourage the application provided the exact opposite experience of the TV show Entourage.) By default, iPhone on the Mac syncs with iCal, Address Book, and Mail; a phone that synced with Outlook could be a huge upgrade.

      This is where the lack of OneNote on Office 2011 for Mac really bothers me; it’s WP7’s Office showpiece, very smartly implemented on the handset and nearly completely useless to Office users on Macs.

    2. You’re also a heavy user of Windows Live. Android users love their experience with Gmail, Google Docs, etc. Some of my friends who don’t love Windows love Windows Live, preferring it over Google’s cloud apps and Apple’s MobileMe. Office 2011 and WP7 are both extremely well-integrated with Windows Live. iPhone and Android aren’t.
    3. You’re a gamer who loves Xbox 360 and Xbox Live. Apple may have a set-top box, but it doesn’t play games. The iPhone offers a lot of good casual games for handheld, but WP7 will too. If you have a Google TV, it’ll be better with your Android phone; if you have an Xbox 360, it’ll be better with a WP7 phone.

      The whole industry is moving towards greater interoperability between computers, handhelds and set-top boxes. The Xbox – WP7 combo will be one of the most versatile handheld-to-boxtop media combinations available. Add a Mac to the mix, rig it to stream content to your Xbox and that’s a pretty powerful power trio. Particularly if you don’t care about buying movies and renting TV shows through iTunes, which is the only advantage an Apple TV would offer.

    In the tech world, Mac users are stereotyped as Apple evangelists and/or fanboys, people who’ve bought into the ecosystem from top to bottom. But think about your average student with a MacBook, or your parents you convinced to buy an iMac. They are usually agnostic about this stuff.

    Most Mac users probably don’t think long and hard about Apple’s long-term peripheral strategy, or whether Android’s lack of hardware standards will cause them problems down the line. They use Office on their Macs, use PCs at work, play Xbox in their living room and want to buy the phone they like on the carrier they use for a price they can afford. They bought their Macs for the same reason.

    The last piece of this puzzle is really how well Windows Phone 7 and the Mac will be able to talk to each other. History bears this out: for a long time, Blackberry desktop software on PC was fantastic, but the version for the Mac wasn’t anywhere close. In my case, it eventually drove me away from the Blackberry and towards the iPhone.

    If Microsoft decides that it doesn’t really need to give Mac users anything more than the bare minimum, or that they can capture more value by trying to pull WP7 buyers to the PC platform, then it won’t work. They’ll keep their current customers and add value within their existing ecosystem.

    But if Microsoft begins to see their world as one that doesn’t have to be centered around the PC, where they can make great software and compelling experiences for all platforms, and shift more of their institutional weight towards the cloud and the living room, then even Mac users might have to take a long hard look at those new phones.

    jQuery(‘#inf_widget’).load(‘http://www.wired.com/ajax/widgets/related/content/blogPost/gadgetlab_52069′);

    Source:wired.com

    Posted under Gadget Reviews

    Curious Ask: “Will Windows Phone 7 Have Apps For That?”

    As we’ve seen with the success of iOS and Android (and the disappointments of Palm’s WebOS), applications are essential to the success of smartphone platforms. Customers and developers both want to know what the new Windows Phone 7 will bring to the table.

    At the WP7 announcement, Microsoft’s spokespeople were coy about the total number of third-party applications that would be available for the new OS at launch. Instead they touted their own admittedly-impressive integrated applications, including MS Office, Zune for media management, XBox Live for gaming and Bing for search and maps.

    Microsoft also spotlighted a few key partners, including AT&T’s U-Verse TV & Video, and cloud service applications from eBay, iMDB, Fandango and Slacker Radio. Major social networking services like Facebook and Twitter, too, are well-integrated into the OS and its applications. It also announced that Electronic Arts would bring The Sims 3 and other games to WP7. Other applications including Netflix and Flixster have already been presented in demos.

    When asked directly about the number of apps on the store at launch, an unnamed Microsoft spokesman told Gizmodo, “It’ll be more than iPad at launch. More than the iPhone. “What matters isn’t how many apps we have, it’s that you can find the apps you need.” Of course, the iPhone had zero third-party apps at launch; the iPad about 350. Most rumors have put the total number of apps somewhere in the thousands.

    The marketplace for third-party applications is already in place on the new phones. Our Charlie Sorrel reported last week that life-altering music streaming service Spotify will be in the marketplace, at least in parts of Europe where the service is legally available. TeleRead’s Paul Biba reports that e-reading app Wattpad will be ready to go at launch too.

    Still, whatever the number, it won’t approach Apple’s 250,000 applications for iOS or Google’s 90,000 for Android. Nor will they have close to as many handsets (or tablets) in the market. Just how quickly can Microsoft rally third-party developers to catch up with Apple or Google?

    While Microsoft can’t offer the same number of users right away, developing for WP7 could offer some advantages. Unlike Android, the hardware specs for WP7 phones are more-or-less standard. And while Apple has been criticized for their opaque approval process, Microsoft has promised explicit standards, quick processing and specific feedback to developers whose apps are rejected.

    The development tools for WP7 are also well-established. The primary environment for apps will be Silverlight. In March, Windows offered a package of development tools for WP7, including an add-in and express version of Microsoft Visual Studio 2010, XNA Game Studio 4.0, Expression Blend (a tool for user interface development in Silverlight) and a phone emulator for application testing.

    It’s not only new developers and those coming from other mobile platforms who will be picking these up. Part of the struggle current Windows Mobile 6 and 6.5 developers will face is that they will have to port or rewrite their existing applications to work on the new OS. Even though developers may grumble, and it may take longer for their apps to be ready, it’s still a substantial base to draw upon.

    There’s an opportunity, too, for developers (particularly for media and gaming applications) to gain access not just to Windows Phone 7 users, but to XBox Live and other platforms in the Microsoft ecosystem. With Windows Phone, Microsoft is aiming for integration of its product line; if it’s successful, integrated cross-platform applications will be an essential part of that.

    jQuery(‘#inf_widget’).load(‘http://www.wired.com/ajax/widgets/related/content/blogPost/gadgetlab_51961′);

    Source:wired.com

    Posted under Gadget Reviews

    Unlocked Windows Phone 7 Pricing Begins

    aw the confusion of Windows Phone 7 handsets announced yesterday, and now – whilst still reeling at the overload – you’re wondering how much they will cost. Don’t worry, we won’t dump all the prices on you at once. In fact, the details, by way of Amazon’s European sites, are still rather skimpy.
    More Windows Phone 7coverage on Gadget Lab:

    A Humbled Microsoft Prepares to Boot Up Windows Phone 7

    Microsoft Blends Zune Media, Xbox Live Into New Phone OS

    Microsoft’s Mobile Strategy Takes Aim at Apple, Google

    Microsoft Tells Windows Phone 7’s App Story

    First is the HTC 7 Trophy (above, left), which will cost 430, or $680 in the UK for the unlocked, 8GB incarnation. This compares to 500 for the cheapest unlocked iPhone over there, although that has double the storage – 16GB. The phone has a 3.8-inch screen, the standard 1GHz Snapdragon processor and a 5MP camera.

    Over in Germany, the unlocked HTC HD7 will cost 600, or $830. The HD7 is pretty much identical in specs to the Trophy, although it does have “Dolby Mobile” to help justify the higher price.

    If nothing else, these prices show you just how much the carriers subsidize the handsets. For instance, the HD7 will be coming to T-Mobile in the U.S where it will cost just $200 with a two-year contract.

    The Trophy will ship in the UK on November 8th, whilst the date for the HD7 is still unknown.

    HTC 7 Trophy Sim-Free Mobile Phone [Amazon via i4U]

    HTC HD7 [Amazon.de]

    Follow us for real-time tech news: Charlie Sorrel and Gadget Lab on Twitter.

    Source:wired.com

    Posted under Gadget Reviews

    This post was written by Journalist on October 12, 2010

    Tags: , ,

    Windows Phone 7 Makes Android Look Weak Sauce



    Microsoft may be late to the game with a consumer-savvy phone OS, but Windows Phone 7 is aiming to do right a lot of what Google is doing wrong. And based on what I saw during a visit to Microsoft’s headquarters two weeks ago, the Windows Phone 7 team may be on the right track to pose a serious threat to Google.
    MoreWindowsPhone7coverage on Gadget Lab:
    Microsoft Announces First Windows Phone 7 Handsets
    A Humbled Microsoft Prepares to Boot UpWindowsPhone7
    Microsoft Blends Zune Media, Xbox Live Into NewPhoneOS
    Microsoft’s Mobile Strategy Takes Aim at Apple, Google
    Microsoft TellsWindowsPhone7’s App Story

    The crucial part of Microsoft’s new phone strategy is the quality control it imposes onto its hardware partners. Rather than code an operating system and allow manufacturers to do whatever they want with it–like Google is doing with Android–Microsoft is requiring hardware partners to meet a rigid criteria in order to run Windows Phone 7.

    As I mentioned in a feature story about Windows Phone 7, Microsoft has created new lab facilities containing robots and automated programs to test each handset to ensure that features work properly and consistently.

    The effort to control quality across multiple devices may be just what Microsoft needs to regain some ground in the phone battle. In the wake of the iPhone revolution,Windows Mobile saw a serious decline in market share; the computer-ey, feature-loaded interface just didn’t cut it anymore. Windows Phone 7 is Microsoft’s complete do-over on a mobile operating system, with a slick new tile-based UI. The first Windows Phone 7 handsets are due in stores November.

    With brand new test facilities, Microsoft is taking on the duty of ensuring that touchscreens and sensors are calibrated properly, for example. Also, handsets undergo software stress tests to catch bugs and system errors (see picture above). The end result should be a consistent experience across devices made by different manufacturers. That in turn could mitigate the issue of fragmentation for third-party developers: They can effectively code the same app for a large party of devices without much tweaking.

    By contrast, Google doesn’t subject manufacturers to the same testing criteria. And we’re seeing the consequences: Some touchscreens work better than others, some apps don’t work on one version of Android while they do on another, and some manufacturers are even sneaking bloatware onto Android devices.

    Most importantly, a consistent user experience will help customers to know what they’re getting when they’re shopping for a Windows phone.

    The OS is going to be the same with the same features on every handset so, as a consumer, your decision-making will boil down to the hardware’s look, weight and size. Compare that to the experience of buying an Android phone, which could be running a different version depending on the handset you buy: Donut, Eclair, Froyo or whatever. You won’t have to ask yourself, “Am I going to get X on this phone or do I have to get another one?”

    The inevitable question that arises is what Windows Phone 7 means as a competitor to iOS. It’s tough to say.

    I haven’t spent quite enough time with a final version of a Windows Phone 7 device yet. Still, I think the Phone 7 user interface is refreshingly different compared to the siloed-app experience of iOS. But Apple is far ahead in terms of cultivating a rich mobile ecosystem that I don’t think Steve Jobs needs to be sweating just yet.

    Google, though, needs to get Android’s story together, because the fickle platform gets more confusing and convoluted every day, and it could have the same destiny as Windows Mobile.

    Photo: Mike Kane/Wired.com

    Source:wired.com

    Posted under Gadget Reviews

    This post was written by Journalist on October 11, 2010

    Tags: , , ,

    A Quick Guide to Windows Phone 7 Handsets

    If you want to hop on the Windows Phone 7 bandwagon, you won’t lack for handset choices, promises Microsoft. As part of its launch of the Windows Phone 7 operating system, Microsoft has partnered with most of the major telecom carriers and handset makers to create new phones for the OS.

    So far, nine phones running Windows Phone 7 OS have been announced. These include the HTC Surround, Samsung Focus, LG Quantum, HTC HD7, Dell Venue Pro, LG Optimus 7, HTC Mozard, Samsung Omnia 7 and HTC Trophy.
    More Windows Phone 7coverage on Gadget Lab:
    A Humbled Microsoft Prepares to Boot Up Windows Phone 7
    Microsoft Blends Zune Media, Xbox Live Into New Phone OS
    Microsoft’s Mobile Strategy Takes Aim at Apple, Google
    Microsoft Tells Windows Phone 7’s App Story

    One thing remains common across all these devices. They all include a 1-GHz processor, 256 MB of RAM with a minimum of 4 GB flash memory, a capacitive touchscreen and five sensors: assisted GPS, accelerometer, compass, proximity and light sensors.

    That’s by design, says Microsoft, because it wanted to give users an OS experience that would be similar, no matter which phone they bought.

    Gadget Lab writer Tim Carmody got a quick hands-on with some of these devices, and he says Windows Phone 7 devices are “probably somewhere in between the iPhone and Android in terms of customization possibility.”

    In the U.S., AT&T and T-Mobile have said they will offer Windows Phone 7 devices in time for the holiday season. Verizon Wireless, probably burned by its experiment with the Microsoft Kin phones, is missing from the list for now but Microsoft says Verizon will introduce Phone 7 devices soon.

    So far, only AT&T has announced pricing for its Phone 7 handsets–they will cost $200 with a two-year contract on AT&T.

    Here’s the list of phones that will be offered by each carrier worldwide. Check out the table to see the key features of each phone.

    In North America:

    • AT&T: HTC Surround, Samsung Focus and LG Quantum.
    • T-Mobile USA: HTC HD7 and Dell Venue Pro.
    • Telus: HTC Surround and LG Optimus 7.
    • Amrica Mvil: LG Optimus 7.

    In Europe:

    • O2: HTC HD7.
    • Orange: HTC Mozart and Samsung Omnia 7.
    • SFR: HTC Trophy and Samsung Omnia 7.
    • Movistar: LG Optimus 7, Samsung Omnia 7 and HTC HD7.
    • Deutsche Telekom: HTC Mozart and Samsung Omnia 7.
    • Vodafone: HTC Trophy and LG Optimus 7.

    In Asia Pacific:

    • SingTel: HTC HD 7 and LG Optimus 7.
    • Telstra: HTC Mozart and LG Optimus 7.
    • Vodafone: HTC Trophy.

    Windows Phone 7 Handsets:

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    • AT&T
    • HTC Surround
    • 3.8-inch touchscreen display, 1-GHz Qualcomm QSD 8250 processor, 5-megapixel camera, 512 MB ROM, 448 MB RAM, 16 GB user memory. FM radio. Yamaha speakers with Dolby Surround Sound. Weight: 5.8 ounces.
    • Samsung Focus
    • 4-inch Super AMOLED touchscreen display, 1-GHz Qualcomm QSD 8250 processor, 5-megapixel camera, 512 MB ROM, 265 MB RAM, 8 GB additional storage. FM radio. Weight: 4.07 ounces.
    • LG Quantum
    • 3.5-inch touchscreen display, 1-GHz Qualcomm QSD 8250 processor, 5-megapixel camera, 512 MB ROM, 256 MB RAM, 16 GB internal storage. FM radio. Weight: 6.21 ounces.
    • T-Mobile USA
    • HTC HD7
    • 4.3-inch touchscreen display, 1-GHz Qualcomm Snapdragon processor, 5-megapixel camera, 512 MB ROM, 256 MB RAM, 8 GB or 16 GB internal storage. Weight: 5.7 ounces.
    • Dell Venue Pro
    • 4.1-inch touchscreen display, 1-GHz Qualcomm Snapdragon processor, 5-megapixel camera, Storage and weight: N/A
    • Telus/America Movil
    • LG Optimus 7
    • 3.8-inch touchscreen display, 1-GHz processor, 5-megapixel camera, 16 GB storage Weight: 3.5 ounces.
    • Orange
    • HTC Mozart
    • 3.7-inch touchscreen display, 1-GHz processor, 8-megapixel camera, 8 GB storage, Weight: 4.5 ounces.
    • Samsung Omnia 7
    • 4-inch touchscreen display, 1-GHz Snapdragon processor, 5-megapixel camera, 8 GB storage, Weight: 4.86 ounces.


    Photo by Mike Kane/Wired.com

    Source:wired.com

    Posted under Gadget Reviews

    This post was written by Journalist on October 11, 2010

    Tags: , , , , , ,

    Windows Phone 7 Hands-On: LG Quantum, Samsung Focus, and HTC Surround

    At the Windows Phone 7 event, Microsoft and AT&T have demo units of the three WP7 phones that will be available stateside next month. I had a few minutes to play with each of them; here are my first impressions.
    More Windows Phone 7coverage on Gadget Lab:
    A Humbled Microsoft Prepares to Boot Up Windows Phone 7
    Microsoft Blends Zune Media, Xbox Live Into New Phone OS
    Microsoft's Mobile Strategy Takes Aim at Apple, Google
    Microsoft Tells Windows Phone 7’s App Story

    LG Quantum: This is the slide-out phone with the QWERTY keyboard. It’s similar to a Blackberry phone’s layout, with two buttons on the left for “shift” and “function” (which for the most part you use to type in numbers). The hardware keyboard works very well, but I found using it in that mode a little confusing. Some apps move from portrait to landscape without a hitch. But the WP7 home screen, Marketplace and a few others don’t. In time, you could get over this guessing game; maybe users with more experience with slide-out landscapes know how to do this without a snap. The keyboard also made the phone quite thick, particularly compared to the touchscreen-only models on display.

    Samsung Focus: This was by far my favorite of the three phones. It has a 4″ touchscreen with beautiful color fidelity. The three hardware buttons don’t depress, but each provide a little buzz of tactile feedback. I even found using the software keyboard and switching from portrait to landscape much easier on the Focus than on the other two phones. That extra half-inch really does make a difference — and the image quality shows off just how graceful the WP7 OS is.

    HTC Surround: This was the most difficult phone to put through a full trial, simply because there weren’t games or movies available to play readily. I wasn’t able to listen to its much-touted Dolby Digital Surround speakers either. But otherwise, its interface was very similar to Samsung’s, although again with a much smaller and dimmer screen. Its three hardware buttons also had a similar tacticle feedback buzz, which the LG Quantum didn’t have.

    Overall: It’s a very beautiful OS, and I think some people will find its working clean and intuitive right away. It may seem like an odd thing to get fixated on, but the landscape/portrait thing really stands out. There were plenty of times where text information trailed off the screen without wrapping in portrait mode, but you couldn’t turn it into landscape in order to see it; you had to swipe over to the next screen. Some of the applications, like QWERTY typing and gaming, seem built for landscape, but the primary navigation mode of WP7 is definitely portrait.

    It’s probably somewhere in between the iPhone and Android in terms of customization possibility. There are more options than iPhone (including plenty of easy accessibility and mulitlingual options), and they’re a little easier to find. But I thought, for instance, I might be able to change the font, which is everywhere. No dice — at least on these floor models.

    I loved the Focus (iPhone/iPad users will probably find it the closest to their experience and preferences), thought the keyboard on the Quantum was very well-made (and existing slide-out users again might find it even more appealing), and was and remain intrigued by the micro-sized media experience the Surround offers. It’s an extremely solid lineup of phones; at $199.99 each, users dead-set on WP7 will just have to decide which hardware and use experience they like the best.

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    Source:wired.com

    Posted under Gadget Reviews

    This post was written by Journalist on October 11, 2010

    Tags: , , , , , , , ,

    Microsoft Announces First Windows Phone 7 Handsets


    NEW YORK Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer on Monday unveiled details on the first phones running the brand new Windows Phone 7 operating system , the software giant’s answer to Googles Android and Apples iOS mobile platforms.

    The phone will be available on AT&T (who co-hosted the event) and T-Mobile networks stateside beginning Nov. 8, with handsets from HTC, LG, Dell, and Samsung.
    More Windows Phone 7 coverage on Gadget Lab:
    A Humbled Microsoft Prepares to Boot Up Windows Phone 7
    Microsoft Blends Zune Media, Xbox Live Into New Phone OS
    Microsoft’s Mobile Strategy Takes Aim at Apple, Google
    Microsoft Tells Windows Phone 7’s App Story

    We have a beautiful lineup in this first wave of Windows Phone 7 handsets, said Steve Ballmer, chief executive officer at Microsoft. Microsoft and its partners are delivering a different kind of mobile phone and experience one that makes everyday tasks faster by getting more done in fewer steps and providing timely information in a glance and go format.

    Windows Phone 7 is a complete overhaul of Windows Mobile, which with Nokia, Blackberry and Palm had dominated smartphones before Apple and Google entered the market beginning just three years ago. Windows Mobile currently has just 5 percent of the global smartphone market, down from 9 percent only a year ago, according to Gartner Research. Worldwide, Android has already shot up to 17 percent, Apple to 14 percent, with Nokia/Symbian and RIM/Blackberry leading with 41 and 18 percent respectively.

    From the users point of view, the most significant innovation of Windows Phone 7 will probably be the UI design, organized around what Microsoft calls Hubs. Instead of a flat screen offering a grid of applications, services will be grouped in tiles according to the tasks they perform. For example, Music might include an onboard Zune-like media player, but also streaming services like Slacker Radio. Each hub prioritizes recent or favorite files or apps and will be able to integrate with social, sharing and streaming services in the cloud.

    The primary hubs for Phone 7 will be People (with integrated contacts, phone and text messaging, and social networking), Pictures (including photos on phone, but also on Windows Live, Office (OneNote, Word and Excel Documents, SharePoint), Music/Video (Microsofts Zune and subscription service ZunePass, iHeartRadio, and Slacker Radio), Games (multiplayer gaming with Xbox Live).

    Many of these services will be built in to the OS or pre-packaged by the hardware manufacturers, but third-party applications will be also be available for distribution through Microsofts app store. These applications will be able to use WP7s built-in location and communication services.

    Thousands of applications are being developed right now, said Microsoft developer Joe Belfiore. Our goal is to work with our partners so their apps have elegant coexistence with whats already on the device. Belfiore demonstrated apps from eBay, IMDb. AT&Ts UVerse Mobile, but did not announce the number of apps available at launch or details about an app marketplace.

    Microsoft is also trying a new approach to smartphone hardware. While Apple and Blackberry have designed devices tightly built around their own software, and Android has generally allowed hardware OEMs to put the OS on whatever device they wish, Microsoft has taken a hybrid approach, specifying standards for their hardware partners to meet in order to carry Windows Phone 7. These include three specific buttons a menu/home button with a Windows logo, a back button, and search, plus other processor and screen resolution requirements.

    The initial group of WP7 phones on AT&T are the HTC Surround, the LG Quantum, and the Samsung Focus. All three feature a 1GHz processor, wi-fi, a 5MP camera w/720 MP video, and each will cost $199.99 with a new contract. The HTC Surround is game- and media-focused, with a 3.5 screen, 16GB storage, two Dolby Surround speakers and a kickstand to prop the device up on a flat surface. Samsungs Focus offers the most screen real estate, with a 4 800×480 Super AMOLED WVGA touchscreen, but only 8GB of storage. The LG Quantum is optimized for text entry, with a 3.5 screen, 16GB of storage and a slide-out landscape QWERTY keyboard.

    Like Apple and Android (and Microsofts desktop software long before that), Microsoft has also designed Windows Phone 7 to complement other devices and services in the Windows ecosystem. It offers cloud syncing from the phone to the desktop through WindowsPhone.com, tight integration with Windows Lives cloud-based office, storage, contacts/calendar, email/instant messaging, file-sharing and media-management services, and gaming downloads and social networking through Xbox Live.

    The most thorough integration, though, may be with Bing, Microsofts search engine. Every WP7 phone will have a search button that will connect with Bing to search web results, maps, directions, media, or shopping. Bings search results will in turn be closely tied to the sharing and communication services on the devices. The mobile frontend client for Bing was smooth and versatile, but some may note that Microsoft did not show or announce the possibility of using another search backend as the default.

    The other major worry about WP7 was the lack of copy and paste at launch, which Belfiore confirmed. However, he promised that a free update adding copy and paste would be pushed to all WP7 devices in early 2011.

    The two major emphases I see in Windows Phone 7 are the integrated social networking and cloud services and the push towards casual gaming. EAs The Sims 3 for Windows Mobile is a terrific example of the confluence of those two. Just as with the Xbox and Kinect, the development of Xbox Live for mobile has taken strong cues in look and feel from both Nintendos Wii and the success of iOS in casual gaming for all ages. Theres very little here thats directed for the Xbox 360s hardcore gamers, but theres plenty here for people who love to play games and share media with their friends.

    Microsofts hope is that these features will differentiate Windows Phone 7 devices from the rest of the market. Users already engaged with Microsoft devices and software, from the Windows 7 desktop OS and MS Office to the Xbox or Zune, will benefit the most from their integration on the smartphone. Others may find Phone 7s interface and its reorganization of applications and services more intuitive or appealing.

    Its a beautiful interface, competitively priced and extremely well-integrated with Microsofts other core products. The irony is that two of these core products Office and the Xbox have been largely separate until now. Users may just have a difficult time deciding whether its a phone for business or pleasure or whether Microsoft can succeed in trying to do both at the same time on one device.

    Photo: Mike Kane/Wired.com

    Source:wired.com

    Posted under Gadget Reviews

    This post was written by Journalist on October 11, 2010

    Tags: , ,

    A Humbled Microsoft Prepares to Boot Up Windows Phone 7


    Joe Belfiore, Microsoft’s man in charge of mobile, has a favorite word when he talks about Windows Phone 7: “holistic.” The company’s mobile infrastructure underwent a sea change, rethinking its entire phone manufacturing and design strategy for customers to enjoy, Belfiore told Wired.com.

    It even involved building robots, like the one pictured above, to make sure handsets work like you expect them to.

    “We’re taking responsibility holistically for the product,” Belfiore said. “It’s a very human-centric way of thinking about it. A real person is going to pick up a phone in their hand, choose one, buy it, leave the store, configure it and live with it for two years. That’s determined by the hardware, software, application and services. We’re trying to think about all those parts such that the human experience is great.”

    Windows Phone 7 is Microsoft’s complete do-over of a mobile operating system after the earlier Windows Mobile plummeted in market share and popularity in the wake of Apple’s consumer-savvy iPhone and Google’s prolific Android devices.

    Referred to as “7″ by the engineers developing the OS, the project has been in the works since December 2008, when Microsoft decided to scrap all of its efforts on Windows Mobile 7, which would have been an iteration of the older operating system largely focused on business customers.

    At a New York press conference on Monday, Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer will announce hardware and carrier partners who will be supporting the operating system when the first Windows Phone 7 smartphones finally ship November. AT&T will be speaking at the event as well, suggesting that the telecom company will be among the initial carriers offering the OS.

    In exclusive interviews with Wired.com, Microsoft staff spoke about the radical transformation in mobile strategy that was necessary to make Windows Phone 7 possible. The company had to purchase brand new lab facilities, hire and shuffle around top managers and reorganize its entire design department to rethink mobile.

    Belfiore explained that years ago with Windows Mobile, the process was such that a mobile carrier and manufacturer would determine the features they wanted on a phone, and then they’d issue a list of specific instructions to OS makers such as Microsoft. This M.O. led to the creation of Windows Mobile, which has been knocked by critics (and even some of Microsoft’s own designers) for being overloaded with features and unfriendly to users.

    “It was trying to put too much functionality in front of the user at one time as it could, and it resulted in an experience that was a little cluttered and overwhelming for taste for a lot of people today.” said Bill Flora, a design director at Microsoft. “It felt computerey.”

    However, after Apple introduced the iPhone in 2007, Steve Jobs rewrote the rules of the wireless game. He slyly negotiated an arrangement with AT&T to carry the iPhone without even showing the carrier the phone. As a result, Apple was able to tightly control the design of the iPhone’s OS and hardware to deliver a mobile experience tailored for the customer to enjoy rather than the carrier.

    In the aftermath of the iPhone, manufacturers have been racing to deliver competitive smartphones tailored to quality consumer experiences. And Microsoft acknowledges that Windows Phone 7 is benefiting from this paradigm shift.

    “The success of the iPhone certainly had an impact on the industry and an impact on us,” Belfiore said. “And we said there were a lot of things we could do to deliver a solution that’s different from the iPhone but have some of its benefits.”

    Source:wired.com

    Posted under Gadget Reviews

    This post was written by Journalist on October 8, 2010

    Tags: , , ,

    Gadget Lab Podcast: Windows Phone 7 and the Madness of Sony and Cisco

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    First things first: In this episode, Brian X. Chen and I show off the Star Trek Enterprise pizza cutter from ThinkGeek. If you know a Trek fan who enjoys eating pizza (and what Trek fan doesn’t?) this could be a fine gift. It’s weighty, shiny silver, and looks just like the starship piloted by Captain James T. Kirk. It’s not the most solidly-built cutter, though, Brian points out — as he holds it dangerously close to my neck.

    In more substantive tech news, we discuss the upcoming launch of Windows Phone 7, planned for Monday October 11. Microsoft will be taking the stage with AT&T at this press conference, which pretty much confirms that AT&T will be one of the carriers offering Microsoft’s next mobile operating system.

    In other news, Cisco unveiled its Umi video phone, a $600 piece of kit that turns your HDTV into a videoconferencing system. You’ve also got to pay a monthly fee to support the Umi service. Are these guys crazy? Have they never heard of Google Chat?

    Brian reviews Instagram, a hot new photo-editing and photo-sharing app for iPhones.

    And we talk briefly about Sony’s risibly ugly Google TV remote, images of which popped up online earlier this week. If this is what the future of television looks like, I want to change the channel.

    Like the show? You can also get the Gadget Lab video podcast via iTunes, or if you dont want to be distracted by our unholy on-camera talent, check out the Gadget Lab audio podcast. Prefer RSS? You can subscribe to the Gadget Lab video or audio podcast feeds

    Or listen to the audio here:

    Gadget Lab audio podcast #91

    Source:wired.com

    Posted under Gadget Reviews

    Spotify Coming to Windows 7 Phone

    Spotify, the frankly awesome music-streaming service, will be on Windows Phone 7 at launch. It is available now for Windows Mobile 6.x (now confusingly named Windows Phone), and will be in the Windows Marketplace ready to go when the new Windows 7 handsets ship. Spotify is an ad-supported, all-you-can-eat music player which offers instant access to millions of tracks and, on the Mac at least, manages to be faster and more responsive than the awful iTunes.

    The announcement, from the Spotify blog, shows that Microsoft continues to get things right with its new mobile OS. The Windows Phone 7 app will support the same functions as the iPhone and Android versions, with offline playlists and streaming over 3G as well as Wi-Fi. To use the WinMo and Windows Phone 7 versions you’ll need to subscribe to the paid version of Spotify, which also removes ads and lets you store files locally on your computer.

    As Windows Phone 7 won’t have an App store, we’re assuming that the handsets will come with the app pre-installed.. It’s possible that Spotify will be in the Windows Phone Marketplace for the WP7 launch. There’s one big question, though. Spotify is currently only available in select European countries, and not at all in the U.S. The phones will be likely be shipping in Europe on October 21st, and the U.S on November 8th. Could this mean that Spotify is finally hopping across the pond?

    Spotify debuts on Windows Phone [Spotify]

    Follow us for real-time tech news: Charlie Sorrel and Gadget Lab on Twitter.

    Source:wired.com

    Posted under Gadget Reviews

    Microsoft to Launch Windows Phone 7 Next Week

    Microsoft is scheduled to announce its first line of Windows Phone 7 products in a New York press conference next week.

    Reporters this morning received an invitation to an Oct. 11 event, where Microsoft will announce which carriers and manufacturers will be making and selling handsets based on Microsoft’s next mobile operating system. The company will also preview the first line of Windows Phone 7 hardware.

    It’s evident that AT&T is on board as one of the carriers. Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer and AT&T CEO Ralph de la Vega will be jointly hosting the conference to discuss the latest developments of Windows Phone 7, according to the press invite.

    Despite Engadget’s report that T-Mobile will be a highlight of the Microsoft press conference, a Microsoft spokeswoman said T-Mobile is holding a separate press conference on Oct. 11 that is not part of the Microsoft conference. She declined to comment on whether T-Mobile would be among initial carrier partners offering Windows Phone 7.

    Windows Phone 7 is Microsoft’s complete do-over of its mobile operating system previously dubbed Windows Mobile. Microsoft established an early lead on mobility with its older mobile operating system, but in recent years the company has suffered substantial losses in market share. Windows Mobile hasn’t been upgraded substantially in several years, and more user-friendly competitors such as Apple’s iPhone and Google’s Android OS have taken market share away from Microsoft. As a result, Microsoft scrapped the Windows Mobile project and redid the entire OS into a tile-based interface incorporating elements of the Zune media player and Xbox Live gaming.

    Microsoft is also tackling its competitors on the patent front. On Friday, the Redmond company sued Motorola over alleged patent infringement in its Android phones, covering features such as “synchronizing email, calendars and contacts, scheduling meetings, and notifying applications of changes in signal strength and battery power.” And in an interview in the Wall Street Journal Monday, Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer says that Android sales will generate licensing fees for Microsoft.

    Though the company will announce details about Windows Phone 7 at the Oct. 11 conference, multiple reports have claimed that the official shipping date of the first Windows Phone 7 devices is Nov. 8. Wired.com has heard the same date from sources familiar with the project.

    Source:wired.com

    Posted under Gadget Reviews

    In-Depth Look at Windows Phone 7 Reveals Promise, Polish

    by Matt Buchanan, Gizmodo

    “What’s this?” a girl at a party asked, as I handed her my phone. She touched a square, and everything flipped away. “It’s Microsoft’s brand new phone. Kind of like a fresh start,” I explained. “Oh. It’s… neat.”

    That’s the most apt way to describe Windows Phone 7, really. It’s a fresh start, and it’s neat. It’s a clean slate that Microsoft can use as a foundation to build something entirely new, and it’s not like any other phone you’ve used. It manages to do something that’s sadly rare for Microsoft, which is to leverage all of these different Microsoft products and servicesBing, Xbox Live, Zune to name a fewand seamlessly bring them together in a single, polished product. Which is exactly what Windows Phone 7 needs to be.

    Windows Phone 7 is coming out this year, in the next few monthsOctober, possiblyand the basic rundown of “What is Windows Phone 7?” can be found here and here. The version that I’ve been using for the last few days on prototype hardware (a Samsung phone which will never be sold) has been variously described to me by Microsoft as “beta 2,” a “close-to-release-candidate build” and a “technical preview.” Developers will be getting phones loaded with it shortly in order to have apps ready for launch. It’s representative of what the final Windows Phone 7 interface and experience will be like, though two critical parts were missing, because they’re still under heavy construction: Xbox Live and the Apps Marketplace.


    The Interface

    The phrase “authentically digital” makes me want to barf rainbow pixels, but Microsoft’s description of the Windows Phone 7 interface is truth: It doesn’t try to feel like anything but a flat, digital interface. There is no attempt to depict three dimensionality or any kind of real-world mimesis. No gradients, shadows, gloss or shading. Everything is crisp and flat. Everything pops, bright primary colors and white text on a black landscape. Touch a tile on the main screen, and the interface flies away like exploding puzzle pieces, revealing the app you wanted to see. Oversized text is the order of the day. (Yes, it still runs off the screen in lots of place.) It feels gloriously modern. I love it. I wonder how gracefully it’ll age.

    Microsoft doesn’t treat the main components of the phonelike Music+Video, People, Pictures, Xbox Liveas apps. They’re “hubs.” Which means they’re panoramas with two or three or even four screens that you swipe left or right to move from one screen to another. For instance! In the People hub, one screen is all of my contacts. Flick to the right, and it’s recent contacts. Flick again, and it’s “what’s new,” which is a newsfeed of my friends’ updates from Facebook and Windows Live. (Well, it would have Windows Live friend updates, if I had any friends that used Windows Live, or the Twitter service was turned on yetbut more on that later.) You can get a sense of how developers will be able to expand on hubs in a way that’s more integrated than separate apps you install. Overall, the concept works really well, once you get it.

    Live Tiles are what make the start screen good, and mostly eliminate the need for widgets. They’re the giant squares of, um, stuff that make up the home page. The tile for every application is dynamic, so one for my account mail will show me how many messages I have, while the tile for a person I have pinned to the start screen will show me their latest photo. Unfortunately, weather isn’t a built in app, so you can’t see what’s up at a glanceat least not with the early app that Microsoft made available in the Marketplace. But there’s a lot of potential in this concept, ridding the need to go through the motions of opening an app when all that’s needed is a shot of info.

    There are three buttons that’ll be on the front of every Windows Phone 7 phone: Start, Back and Search. Start works just like the home button the iPhoneit takes you back to the start page. Back is much like Androidit shoots you back a screen. Search is contextual, which means sometimes you don’t know what it’ll bring up. In Maps, it looks up where you want to go; in People, it looks through contacts; from the start screen, it’s Bing search, which is comprised of a general web search, local listings, and news.

    I didn’t think to use the search button as often as I should have. Like the Zune HD, WP7 is a very list-oriented interface when it comes to displaying a lot of information or options (versus, say, a grid). The main contacts page in the people is a very long list, since it brings in all of your Facebook contacts, without a way to filter them by network. The right side of the start screen is a long list of installed appsyou get the idea. Microsoft wants you to search for things or use voice commands to quickly get to them, but the most natural reaction would be to scroll for a long time.

    Notifications, like for text messages, unobtrusively show up at the top of the screen, where you can ignore them or act on them. It’s how notifications should be. Pressing the volume key neatly brings up Zune player controls too at the top of the screen too. There’s a few other quirks to Windows Phone 7’s deliberately window-less interface. The cell signal typically isn’t visible; you have to tap the top of the screen to make it pop up. The indication that it’s syncing or updating is subtle, a series of dots running across the top of the screen.

    The app bar, seen here, is exemplary of Windows Phone 7’s most aggressively iconographic tendencies. It’s a small menubar that runs alongside the bottom of many, if not most apps; it’s where the buttons to do things are often located, like composing a new message in Outlook. The buttons have no labels, just hieroglyphs. There’s an ellipsis in the top right hand corner of the barit’s supposed to indicate “press here, or drag up,” which will reveal the app bar in its full glory, with text labels for the buttons, along with a list of other things you can do, like access settings. While app bar’s behavior will be consistent across every appkind of like a more obvious, onscreen version of Android’s menu buttonit’s something people will definitely have to learn to use. The major issue is that it doesn’t eliminate the need for long pressespressing and holding down, like on a picture in the gallery app, is still the only way to trigger certain things, and you can never quite tell when to use it.

    The touch keyboard looks stark, almost advertising that it’s a crappy experience. Tiny little letters set against unforgivingly pointy little rectangles. It’s deceptive, since in terms of typability, it’s second to the iPhone. It’s a wonderful keyboard: fast, smooth, intuitive and totally natural, even this phone’s narrowish screen. Text selection is weird, but workablepressing and holding over editable text brings up a fat green text cursor that you can slide between the letters, sticking it wherever you need it.

    Given that it’s a beta OS running on prototype hardware, the interface’s speed was impressive. It’s exactly like a Zune HD. No stuttering or slowdown, just zoomy flips and swoops, back and forth between apps and the start screen. Of course, it needs this kind of speed, since it like’s a return to iPhone pre-iOS4there’s no multitasking for third-party apps. (No, not even Pandora will run in the background.) It seems appropriate to mention now that there’s no copy and paste. A throwback to the halcyon days of 2009, Windows Phone 7 is the only modern smartphone that’ll be left in this position. It’s clearly going to be painful. Maybe agonizing.

    The price of Windows Phone 7’s modernity, its difference, is something of a learning curveor at least, that impression was more solidified after I handed the phone to a half dozen or so people over the weekend. All of them were lost, at least for a few minutes. Then I explained things. Then most of them said some variation of, “It’s cool, I guess.”

    But, day to day, Windows Phone 7’s interface does work. Well. It’s quick, fluid, clean, modern. It’s not perfect. It’ll take a day to get used to. But I think most people will like it, if not love it. I do. The question is what it’ll be like in a year, or two years, when it’s more complete and filled out, less of a clean slate.

    People and Accounts

    People and accounts on Windows Phone 7 is a cross between Android and WebOS. A Microsoft Live ID is the core account that ties everything together. Which theoretically, can be a lot of stuff. It’ll pull in your contacts, Hotmail/Windows Live mail, Office Live, Zune, Xbox Live avatar, Pictures, SkyDrivepretty much all of Microsoft’s online services are tied in, one way or another, through the Live ID. The iPhone feels archaic in this regard.

    Like a lot of people, I don’t use Live except for Xbox and Zune. Fortunately, Microsoft’s support for other services, like Google and Facebook is solid. Particularly Facebook, which is the privileged secondary account here. I signed in to Google and Facebook, and magically, the People hub was populated with all of my contacts from both services, neatly linked with profile pictures from Facebook. The result it’s a epic list of people, which you can jump between using letters, like in the Zune HD interface, but if you’ve got a ton of Facebook contacts, you’re either going to be tapping search a lot, pinning people to the start menu, or you’re screwed. Most recent contacts get another screen.

    There’s no separate Facebook appinstead, all updates, the newsfeed, if you will, are part of the “what’s new” screen in People. If you click on a contact’s card (which you can pin to the front page for instant access), you get the same kind of experience”what’s new” will show you everything they’re up to, from all of the services you’re linked to. Some of the Facebook experience is lost in translation, but overall, the People hub concept works. It feels natural and seamless in the way it aggregates info from multiple services. The major missing piece is Twitter, but supposedly, support is on the way via Windows Live, which’ll aggregate Twitter updates and then pipe them down to the phone. It sounds like Google Buzz, but it should be much faster. Twitter support is mission critical for this app-less concept to workso it has to happen.

    Entertain Me: Music, Photos, Video

    Music and video on the phone is exactly what’d you hope: It’s Zune HD, the app, just like the Kin. And, if you have a Zune Pass, you can stream the entirety of the Zune catalogthe part that’s available for streaming, anywayover 3G, also the Kin. A new version of the Zune app syncs music, videos and photosit’s the only thing that actually has to sync to the phone from a computer, and mercifully, it can be done over Wi-Fi too. Pressing the phone’s volume button drops Zune player at the top of the phone, which is slick.

    Every phone has to have a dedicated camera button, which launches the app and takes pictures. The interface is blissfully minimal. It’s a lot like the iPhone 4’s, actually, with a couple controls lining the side for switching between stills and video, and then a gear button for more in-depth settings, like ISO. The breadth and depth of this menu is up to the hardware maker, but they have the option to go fairly hardcore with the level of settings.

    Inside the camera, swiping to the left brings you into Pictures, which isn’t just the photos on the phone, but also everything your friends have uploaded to Facebook or other connected sites in a “what’s new” screen. Photos can be automatically uploaded to Live, if you wanta nice, Kin-like touch. Long pressing will give you the option to upload to Facebook, something that’s totally not obvious enough. And yes, there’s pinch-to-zoom, which is all over the phone.

    Bing, Office, Outlook and Internet Explorer

    Bing Search is thoroughly excellent here. Tapping the search button on the main page launches you into a search hub that includes general web results, local listingscomplete with a live mapand news. The problem, as I stated earlier, is that you never quite know where the Search button is going to take you.

    Bing Maps, naturally, is the navigation service. It’s nice. It’s not as straightforwardly easy to use as Google Mapsthe icons are confusing, as is the behavior of the back buttonand it doesn’t have public transit directions, but it is fully featured and has a few swanky details. When it goes to street view, the roads fade in as the fog clears away, like the fog of war fading in a real-time strategy game. Directions are ace, using a split-screen view that has a map up top and turn-by-turn directions listed below. Tapping on an item in the list shoots you to that part of the map, so you know exactly where to go at that spot. Pinch-zooming is zippy.

    The Outlook app might be the best mail app on any phone. Giant black text on a white background, it’s actually kind of gorgeous, and makes most mail apps feel dated. Swiping to the right left or right takes you through all mail, unread (handy!), flagged and urgent. Unfortunately, starred messages in Gmail do not translate into “flagged” messages at all, so there’s no way to dig those out. I haven’t tried Exchange, but it’s got full support, supposedly. The major problem with mail each email account creates a tile, almost like a separate app, and there’s no unified inbox, so you have to go back to the start screen every time you want to switch accounts. The semi-saving grace is that the tiles showing live info means you know how much mail you have before you pop into each account. But nonetheless, frustrating.

    Internet Explorer is surprisingly competent, and quick, given that it’s built mostly off of the desktop version of IE7. Most of the sites I went to, from Gizmodo to the Atlantic, loaded without any problems, just like you’d expect them to. A few sites rendered poorly, the browser’s IE7 DNA showing through, but for most things, it’s pretty goodjust behind iPhone and Android’s WebKit browsers. My major problem with the app is that the address bar never disappeared in portrait mode, so the view of the page always felt scrunched. (In landscape, it fades away, as you’d expect.) Pinch zooming is perfect, better than Android. Overall, I’m pretty happy, especially knowing this came out of Microsoft.

    Office on a phone is terribly exciting, if you wear a tie five days week. It’s also terribly basic, but slick, more focused on viewing and collaborationcomments and online services like SharePoint and Livethan on actual production and editing. Extant Office files from Word, Excel and PowerPoint render with fidelity to the original, with a table of contents so you can skip around easily. Editing is limited to the most basic of text-y functions. On the phone, you can create elementary Word docs and Excel spreadsheets, though what’s more interesting to me is OneNote, which lets you create and sync notes over-the-airthey’ll show up automatically in Windows Live, or if you’re running the OneNote desktop software, it’ll poof into there, too. It’s not like running around with Office on your laptop, but cramming that into a phone would be painful anyhow.

    Apps Marketplace and Xbox Live

    The Marketplace is one big hub for everything you’d buy on Windows Phone 7: Apps, games and music, which is the major distinction, that everything is unified in a single market, vs. separate stores for apps and music. It seems to make more sense this way. The music store was the only one that’s fully armed and operational, but everything seems to work pretty much like Marketplace on the Zune HD, which is just like stores on any other phonefeatured things, new things, categories, top sellersbut with a swoopy Windows Phone-style interface, tied to your Live account. Apps have screenshots and ratings, music has 30 second previews. Buy them, and they download over the air and install on your phone. Nothing shocking.

    The only aspect of Xbox Live that’s working at the moment is that it’s showing my avatar and Gamescorethough you can see where friend requests and the games collection is going to live. What’s interesting is that the Games marketplace is going to be more tightly controlled than the general app marketplace. Whereas apps will have an objective checklist to pass before being like into the marketplace, Xbox Live games will be subjectively approved by Microsoft, so the idea is that it’ll be more like a console experience. In a way, it’s one of my biggest unanswered questions about WP7, since it seems like one of the biggest leverage points for people under 30 who haven’t bought a smartphone yet. “Buy an Xbox phone!” I wish I knew more of what that meant.

    John covered the real questions about apps and Windows Phone 7 back in March, and most of them still remain:

    When Windows phone 7 launches later this year, it will face the same Catch-22 as any new app platform does: Without an audience to sell to, why would developers invest in creating complicated apps? And if a platform doesn’t have these great apps, why would people switch to it?

    The answers from Microsoft have been coming into slightly less-fuzzy focus, there’s no way to tell how it’s going to shake out. I mean, look at Palm. They had a great new platform too. Granted, we are talking about Microsoft, and the box containing this phone was adorned with Developers! Developers! DEVELOPERS! But it’s quite frankly unpossible to tell what a major part of the phone’s experience is going to be likemaybe the most critical aspect that’s out of Microsoft’s control. In the meantime, most of what we do know, you can read right here.

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    The Big Picture

    Windows Phone 7 is good. Really good. It has the raw components needed to build a great smartphone. Or at least, one from 2009. Is that enough? It’s starting a generation behind Android and iPhone, which now have tens of millions devices. On top of that, it’s behind them functionally, too, missing things that are now table stakes, like copy and paste and multitasking for third-party applications. People might not know what ‘multitasking’ is, they’ll just wonder why they can’t play Pandora in the background.

    And apps? iPhone and Android both have over 100,000. Developers go to where the users are; users go to where the content is. Microsoft has to break a vicious, virtuous cycle. If anybody can do this, rebuild an empire from less than nothing, it’s Microsoft. Patience is perhaps Microsoft’s greatest virtue, but sheer greed is what it needs right now. Making Windows Phone something that people want to buy is going to require the most herculean effort the company’s made in a long, long time. Windows Vista and 7 style onslaughts for mindshare. It has to snag developers and users, by the screaming bucketful. Microsoft has to want it bad enough. Fortunately, Windows Phone 7 might just be good enough.

    Send an email to matt buchanan, the author of this post, at matt@gizmodo.com.

    Originally published on Gizmodo.com.

    Source:wired.com

    Posted under Gadget Reviews

    Microsoft’s Mobile Strategy Takes Aim at Apple, Google


    Microsoft on Tuesday announced new features for its upcoming mobile platform Windows Phone 7, including over-the-air Wi-Fi syncing and a feature to track a missing phone. The real message: “Suck it, iTunes and Android.”

    When Windows Phone 7 becomes available later this year, customers will be able to download and sync content (such as music, video and photos) wirelessly, using a Wi-Fi connection to Zune software running on their PCs, according to Microsoft’s Aaron Woodman.

    Additionally, Microsoft will launch Windows Phone Live, a free website for Windows Phone 7 customers to automatically publish their photos and sync their contacts, OneNote notes and other data.

    “[Windows Phone 7] integrates experiences by consolidating common tasks and services around shared hubs that put the focus on what you want to do rather than putting the onus on you to move in and out of various apps,” Woodman wrote in a blog post. “All the stuff youd expect is right where you expect it — and that goes for content and services that live outside the phone.”

    The new Windows Phone Live site will also host a Find My Phone service, which will allow people to find and manage a missing phone with the ability to find the phone on a map, make it ring, lock it, and erase its contents, all from their PC. This is comparable to a feature Apple offers through its MobileMe service for an additional fee; Microsoft says it will offer it for no charge.

    With these moves, Microsoft is emphasizing Windows Phone 7’s over-the-air “cloud” strategy to compete with other mobile platforms. Many tech companies are offering online services to wirelessly manage content over the web. Google, for example, provides web services services for customers to automatically sync their e-mails, contacts and calendars over the internet to their phones.

    However, Microsoft will have to move fast to stay in the smartphone game. Its once dominant Windows Mobile OS currently holds just 13.2 percent of the smartphone market and has been been steadily losing market share to competitors — most notably Google’s Android. The longer Microsoft takes to get Windows Phone 7 out, the more difficult it will be for it to regain the ground it’s lost.

    When Microsoft introduced Windows Phone 7 in February, CEO Steve Ballmer said the platform would blend personal media with Xbox Live gaming and third-party apps served through the Zune marketplace.

    The company with a relatively weak cloud strategy is Apple. Critics have slammed the iPhone and iPad for still relying on a USB connection to sync content with iTunes. And Apple’s web service MobileMe has received criticism for being expensive ($100 per year) compared to Google’s free web services. Steve Jobs said his company was “working on it” during a recent All Things Digital Conference on-stage interview, suggesting that iTunes might soon receive a reboot with a focus on streaming media.

    “You can sum up the most frustrating thing about being an Apple customer in three little words: ‘Connect to iTunes,” said Matt Buchanan, a writer of Gizmodo.

    It’s clear the software giant is shooting at the cloud in order to target a major weakness of Apple and a major strength of Google. Microsoft is offering consumer-oriented cloud services that Apple lacks, while providing enterprise features, such as remote wiping or locating a missing phone, that are not built in to Android.

    “Microsoft’s activities in the cloud are really key in terms of its competition versus Apple and of course Google,” said Ross Rubin, a consumer technology analyst at NPD Group. “While there’s certainly a lot of overlap with Google in terms of the places where they’re competing head-on photo sharing, e-mail services, etc Microsoft has really integrated part of what Apple has sought to make a premium offering with MobileMe.”

    Gadget Lab will soon be receiving a Windows Phone 7 prototype for testing. We’ll keep you posted on our impressions this week. Follow @gadgetlab or @bxchen on Twitter to stay plugged in to the news.

    Image courtesy of Microsoft

    Source:wired.com

    Posted under Gadget Reviews