Showing posts with label WP7. Show all posts
Showing posts with label WP7. Show all posts

Friday, July 29, 2011

Windows Phone 7 OS “Mango” Ready for Release

 by 

The newest version of the Windows Phone OS, codename “Mango,” has reached the release to manufacturing stage (RTM). By this fall, Microsoft’s mobile OS will available on handsets worldwide.
The RTM stage marks the end of Microsoft’s development of the mobile OS. Now Mango is in the hands of handset manufacturers and mobile operators, who will now have the chance to optimize the OS for their devices.
“Here on the Windows Phone team, we now turn to preparing for the update process,” Microsoft Windows Phone chief Terry Myerson said in a blog post. “The Mango update for current Windows Phone handsets will be ready this fall, and of course will come pre-installed on new Windows Phones.”
The technology giant unveiled Mango in May with a focus on improving communication, app multitasking, and Internet browsing. Mango includes new features like Threads (a fusion of text, IM and Facebook Chat), a web-based marketplace for apps and a mobile version of Internet Explorer 9 with advanced HTML5 support.
Despite the new release and a major partnership with Nokia Microsoft still faces an uphill battle in its quest to reclaim market share in mobile. Apple and Google’s mobile operating systems, iOS and Android, are still the dominant forces in the market, though some predict that WP7 will gain traction in the next few years.

Wednesday, February 9, 2011

Maybe Nokia will do a Windows Phone 7 deal, after all

By Mary Jo Foley

Last week, I was bearish on claims, prayers and predictions that Nokia would end up offering some kind of Windows Phone device as part of the company’s line-up. But now, I’m thinking it’s not just possible, but probable.
I was a skeptic for a number of reasons, and not because I am a Windows Phone hater. (In fact, I would be a Windows Phone 7 owner if Verizon would make one available. So far, all we still know is Verizon plans to add at least one WP7 model to its line-up some time this year… maybe after customers stop burning up the lines to buy iPhones.)
Windows Phone 7 is still a version 1 product. Microsoft and the carriers who do offer WP7 devices still have yet to roll out the first update to the platform. WP7s don’t offer much for business users so far. Microsoft has delivered 2 million copies of the OS to carriers since October 2010, which means fewer than 2 million devices have been sold to date. To restate the obvious, Microsoft’s smartphone platform has a long way to go to catch up to Android and iOS.
Microsoft’s decision to “lock down” WP7 handset makers, requiring them to choose among three different chassis specs, also made me leery that Nokia — the No. 1 smartphone provider, with its own OS and developer tools/ecosystem — would agree to abide by Microsoft’s new rules. So even though Microsoft and Nokia had forged a partnership, bringing Silverlight, Office Mobile and Office Communicator to some Symbian phones, I was definitely thinking that Nokia would go with Android over WP7.
What changed my mind? It wasn’t Nokia CEO Stephen Elop’s “Burning Platform” memo — which sounded to me like the kind of memo more than a few Softies have penned in an attempt to motivate the troops and/or signal a sea-change. The rumors were already swirling before the Burning Platform memo leaked that Nokia was ready to add a non-Symbian/non-MeeGo phone platform to its stable of offerings.
Instead, what’s got me thinking I was wrong is a tweet from Google’s Vice President of Engineering Vic Gundrota. Gundrota’s tweet:
February 11 is the date when Elop is expected to unveil publicly Nokia’s new platform directions. I’m thinking the “turkeys” here don’t include the golden goose Google, but more likely refer to Microsoft and Nokia. If your company had just cemented a deal with the established (even though slipping) smartphone leader, would you be talking turkey?
If Nokia still does end up choosing Android, I’d think Gundrota might have some explaining (and apologizing) to do. If Nokia, instead, has decided to go with WP7, I’d be really interested to hear more on any concessions the Softies made to get the deal done. And yes, if it’s WP7 that Nokia chooses over Android, I will be eating crow turkey….
Update: A couple of folks have noted that there’s another possible interpretation of the Gundrota quote. Anssi Vanjoki, Nokia’s former Executive Vice President for Markets, said the exact same thing in 2005 about BenQ buying Siemens’ mobile handset business handset business. Hmmm. Will Google have the last laugh?