Windows Phone 7

Microsoft provided the first in-depth look into Windows Phone 7 Series application development at MIX10 in Las Vegas. The platform combines Silverlight features for rich application development and the XNA Framework for games. Windows Phone 7 Series will allow developers and designers to build visually stunning and immersive application and games, according to Microsoft…..

Microsoft took the wraps off of Windows Phone 7 Series (the official name for Windows Mobile 7) here Monday at Mobile World Congress. Slated to launch on handsets by holiday season 2010, Windows 7 is a complete overhaul from previous versions of the OS.

If you’re familiar with the Zune HD’s user interface, you’ll feel right at home with Windows 7. Microsoft hinted that the Zune and Windows Mobile teams were working closely and you can definitely see this relationship in Series 7. The menus and interface have the same fluid animations and clean typeface as the Zune HD’s.

It’s been a long road, hasn’t it? Well, in some respects, it hasn’t — in fact, it’s only been about two years since development of Windows Phone 7 as we know it today kicked off but when you consider that this product will be replacing Windows Mobile 6.5, that puts things in proper perspective. In fact, even the very latest maintenance releases of good ol’ WinMo are based on the same rickety underpinnings as version 5.0 was way back in 2005, at a time when WVGA smartphone displays were science fiction, 4G networks were a good two Gs beyond the average American’s comprehension, and Engadget looked like this. Nowadays, it’s a very different game; eight year-olds have access to mobile email, your phone understands German, and “Yelp” is a verb (okay, actually Yelp is a verb). Indeed, mobile devices are the new PCs and companies like Apple and Google are dominating an industry that had once been practically handed to Microsoft on a silver platter. No one either inside or outside of Redmond is arguing that change isn’t desperately (and quickly) needed, because it simply isn’t enough to dominate the desktop anymore.

In light of all that, you could call Windows Phone 7 a desperation move to become relevant in the pocket again. Call it whatever you like, but regardless, brand loyalty isn’t going to save this product — it simply has to be good to sell. Scratch that; it actually has to be nearly flawless in a world where iOS 4 and Gingerbread play. Microsoft still has a few months before it intends to get the first volley of Windows Phone 7-based products to the marketplace, but we’ve recently been provided with reference hardware — a not-for-retail Samsung called “Taylor” that’s closely modeled on the Symbian-based i8910HD — to get a feel for where they’re at as the clock ticks down. Is this shaping up to be a killer platform for the next generation of high-end smartphones? And more importantly, can it win customers? Read on for our first take.

The Quick Launch screen is a far-cry from the old Windows Mobile start screen. Large, colorful tiles serve as shortcuts to your most-used or favorite apps or Web sites. You can also place live tiles on the screen with links to your Facebook profile or friends.These tiles are live, meaning if the content of the app or site is updated, the tile will update on your screen. So if you have a link to a friend’s Facebook profile on your Quick Launch screen, that tile will update when they change their picture. It is a bit creepy if you don’t know them very well, but cool nonetheless.
As before the “Metro” UI is in full effect here, meaning lots of very 2D, stark blocks of color and text. Actually, 2D isn’t quite right — the interface utilizes a lot of layers within a single page, so when you’re swiping through menus you get a kind of parallax scrolling effect reminiscent of 16 bit side-scrollers (think Castlevania for the SNES). It actually works really well here, giving a sense of depth and detail but not detracting from the content Microsoft is putting up front. Of course, the controversial cut-off text is still present, and while we happen to like the way it looks, it’s definitely an acquired taste, and there are times when it just doesn’t work, like in the Office hub where PowerPoint looks like it reads “PowerPoir.”

We were extremely surprised and impressed by the software’s touch responsiveness and speed. In fact, this is probably the most accurate and nuanced touch response this side of iOS4. It’s kind of stunning how much work Microsoft has done on the user experience since we first saw this interface — everything now comes off as a tight, cohesive whole. It really put one of our major fears about Windows Phone 7 to rest. We haven’t seen any substantial lag while using the device, and the short transitions between applications or pages are well suited to the overall experience.

Getting around the OS really comes down to three main sections: the homepage “tiles,” (a list of glanceable information, updates, and favorite apps or people), the application list (an alphabetical list of all your applications), and the “hub” pages (really a kind of in between point that’s sandwiched between a full on app and a menu). We found the overall navigation of the UI to be really quite intuitive, despite the fact that a good number of options and in-app menus are accessible only through a long press.

Something you’re not really made aware of in most cases. The long press becomes a bit like the skeleton key of the OS — you just have to try it and see what kind of functionality it unlocks. Once you get into the habit of holding down on items instead of wildly searching for the next screen or tile, it makes a lot of sense, but it does take some getting used to.

Windows Phone 7 relies on a drop down, Android-like window shade to show when you’ve got a new SMS message, so Microsoft is already besting Apple there, and if you’re playing music in the background, you’re able to bring up your controls by tapping one of the volume buttons. Weirdly, that same area up top is used to show your signal, battery, and WiFi status, but it only drops down if you touch or swipe the upper part of the screen. And in some apps (like pictures) it doesn’t appear at all. We’re not sure why Microsoft doesn’t want to make that info consistent, but it seems like wasted effort to have to call it up manually. Oh, and guys, please add a percentage meter to that battery icon.

Other flourishes in the UI come in the form of subtle animations when something is loading or syncing — a series of tiny dots that appear and coalesce in the upper portion of the screen. A small touch, but it’s nice to know the phone is thinking or working. Otherwise, the UI mostly gets out of your way — is most apps there aren’t a plethora of controls or options immediately visible.

There are two big omissions here, in our opinion. The device won’t support copy and paste, and won’t support third-party multitasking of apps. We knew this would be the case given what we heard at MIX10, but it doesn’t stink any less now. The former really doesn’t make any sense to us, especially since Microsoft did a good job of nailing text editing and selection (at least in Word, and really… you guys make Word), and it looks like it would only be a short walk to a contextual pop-over for copy and paste functions. The latter is practically inexcusable in this day and age — even Apple (which has been a complete laggard in this area) now supports basic multitasking. When we heard in our meeting with Microsoft that the phone wouldn’t even support something as simple as Pandora background streaming, our minds were a little blown. It’s doubly irritating given the fact that just like in iPhone 1.0, the first-party apps are free to background all they want (mail loads, the browser pulls down pages, music plays in the background, etc.)

Still, those issues aside, Windows Phone 7 is easily the most unique UI in the smartphone race right now, and the real perk here is that it doesn’t just seem like an arbitrary decision to make things look different than other OSs — there is real purpose and utility to a lot of what Microsoft has come up with.

The WP7 keyboard is as simple and clean as the rest of the OS, showcasing little more than rows of monochromatic keys (white on black or black on white depending on your app), which pop-up a letter above them when depressed. Hold on a key and you get additional options for accents, just as you’d expect. The general layout offers a familiar placement of the shift, return, and number / punctuation keys, but adds an emoticon button as well. Frankly, we could have done with a little more room down there in its place. Still, Microsoft has made some smart decisions here, such as always having the comma and period keys present, double taps for periods, and our personal favorite, mimicking the iPhone’s behavior of pressing on the punctuation key and being able to slide your finger to your desired character instead of requiring three presses.

We were surprised at how refined the keyboard is — when we saw it at MWC and MIX10, things were still quite stuttery and uneven. Those days are certainly gone, and we think Microsoft got this aspect of the phone’s UI pitch perfect.

Windows Phone 7 doesn’t have “contacts,” per se — it has a People app, and there’s quite a difference. This is a thoroughly social platform, and it doesn’t really seek to make any sort of differentiation between people you talk to / text / email, those you just casually observe, and those with whom you’re “friends” in name only. If that kind of philosophy reeks of Motorola Blur or Palm Synergy, you’re on the right track; as soon as you add a Windows Live, Exchange, or Facebook account, it pulls in every contact associated with that account and disperses associated content throughout your entire phone — there’s nothing you can do about it. That means, for example, that your Pictures app could have a bunch of shots of your ex’s aunt’s new boyfriend’s dog in it (more on that in a bit), and there’s not a whole lot you can do to stop that behavior without completely removing your Facebook account from the phone.

With Exchange, this strategy is probably fine in most cases — contact sync is one of the main reasons you use Exchange ActiveSync, really — but seriously, Facebook is another matter altogether. If you’ve got a lot of Facebook friends, this renders your People app all but useless as a traditional phone contact list. So, say you’re looking for someone’s phone number: if you’re a normal human being with maybe a couple hundred or fewer actual contacts, you’re used to just flicking through your contact list to get to whomever you need. With Windows Phone 7, though, Facebook has puked all over that list, so Microsoft instead recommends you search for what you’re looking for (matching names filter as you type), pin extremely frequent contacts as tiles on your home screen, or make use of People’s Recent list, which auto-populates with contacts that you’ve recently used.

We think the solution is pretty simple: Facebook just needs to be sandboxed a little bit more. Optimally, Microsoft would go with the Android philosophy, which allows the user to choose whether to import all their Facebook contacts to their contact list, sync the information for contacts that are already in the local list, or not to sync at all; meanwhile, you’ve got an actual Facebook app you can go check out if you want to see your full list of friends. Currently, Windows Phone 7 has no dedicated Facebook app, so that’s part of the problem — your Facebook friends simply have no place to live other than your primary contact list. Alternatively, they could do what Blur does and import everything but at least still give you the option of filtering by contact type so you don’t need to see the Facebook noise.

What’s strangest about all of this, though, is that as socially-aware as Windows Phone 7 seeks to be, there’s not a lick of Twitter integration to be found. For some, Twitter is every bit as important as Facebook — if not more so — and it seems like a glaring omission (MySpace isn’t there either, but we’re far more willing to forgive them for that). All of the UI infrastructure is there to make Twitter an easy addition, because the People app lets you see a stream of status updates from your social networks and tapping on an individual contact gives you access to a stream of their updates alone; plus, the phone comes equipped with a “Me” tile on the home screen that you can tap to update the networks of your choosing (just Windows Live and Facebook for now). Twitter is the perfect fit, they’ve just got to make it happen.

As with most smartphones these days, email setup in Windows Phone 7 is relatively automated and painless, and there are plenty of options to go with most people’s leanings. When you initially boot the phone, you’re asked to provide a Windows Live ID, though it’s not necessary to use one. On the email setup screen, you’re provided with self-configuring options for the aforementioned Live, Outlook, Yahoo! Mail, and Gmail. You also get options for manual setup of POP or IMAP accounts. As heavy Gmail users, the option was obvious for us, and you’ll be happy to know that Microsoft provides full (well, almost full) EAS support for Google accounts.

After a little bump in the road caused by our hosted account not having its mobile sync options switched on (a problem on our side), we were off and running. Contacts and calendars came along for the ride, though we noted a problem right off the bat with calendar sync — only our primary Google calendar was syncing, apparently a limitation which Microsoft says they’re working on. The plan is for full EAS calendar syncing, but the company doesn’t know if they’ll have it in time for launch.

The email app on the phone is pretty terrific on the whole, providing a clean, clear layout and upfront options for your most-used functions. In the standard inbox view you get your emails with one line of a message preview, and you can swipe right or left for sorting options by unread, flagged, or urgent (on top of the standard folder view). We found the inclusion of the unread view especially helpful when triaging our inbox. What wasn’t helpful, however was the lack of threaded messaging. We pretty much expect everyone to have this figured out by now, but somehow Apple slept on it, Palm hasn’t stepped up to the plate, and now Microsoft is leaving us high and dry. We pressed the company on whether or not it would be included, and the word was that it was planned for, but there was no telling if it would be happening by launch (our takeaway was pretty much that it wouldn’t make the cut). On the bright side, multiple message management is executed here better than most mobile email apps we’ve used, requiring only that you tap to the far left of a message to engage your checkboxes. It definitely sped up the process of killing or moving mail. Also nice was the fact that in a standard message view, when you delete an email you’re kicked back to your inbox — not to the next message. If you’re like us, you don’t want to read an email before you’re good and ready.

Tapping the search button while in mail gets you to a pretty powerful search which parses subjects, message content, senders, and receivers all at once. It made it astoundingly easy to find what we were looking for with almost no hesitation. Unfortunately, it only searches messages downloaded onto the device, so if you’re looking for that long lost password, you’re out of luck here. Additionally, you can tell the app to sync individual folders, but it doesn’t seem to peer into those during searches anyhow.

The Pictures Hub lets you see all of the pictures on your hub, your most recent pictures and what’s new with all of your friends. The phone will pick the latest pictures you uploaded or have taken with your phone. And, like the People Hub, What’s New in pictures shows your friend’s most recent picture uploads. The Pictures Hub allows you to easily share your own photos with your social networks.

Another thing to note — there’s no combined inbox here. In fact, when you create a new mail account, it places what amounts to a separate app for that inbox into your application list. Likewise, to access it from the homescreen you need to pin that separate app to the front page. We would like to see an option to have multiple items inside of one tile (not dissimilar from the iPhone’s new folders) where you could bundle things like your mail accounts into one place. Of course, it would be preferable just to have a combined inbox.
Creating and sending messages is fairly straightforward, and MMS (at least photos) display inline, but can be saved to your phone as well. Long pressing on individual messages gives you the option to delete or forward them, while in the list view of all your conversations, a long press gets you the option to delete the whole thread. There’s not much to it, but it works as advertised. We did run into a few problems, however. One of our test units had a persistent display issues which caused lots of text to overlap, while our other unit started taking ages to go back from a conversation view to the list of conversations. We know this is still unfinished software, but this feels like something that should be already squared away.

For as much crap as Internet Explorer gets (less, admittedly, now that the debacle of IE6 is finally starting to fade), we’ve got to say that web browsing on Windows Phone 7 is actually a really pleasant experience. Our understanding is that it’s essentially using desktop-class code, bits and pieces of Internet Explorer 7 and 8 tossed together and massaged into something that’ll look (and work) better on a smaller display with less horsepower.

Loading the desktop version of Engadget was just a hair slower than an iPhone 4, and just as importantly, rendering new parts of the page as you scroll is plenty fast — not instantaneous, but fast enough so that you never find yourself consciously waiting for it to catch up. Zooming — which is accomplished with a pinch gesture, of course — is buttery smooth. The phone accomplishes this in the same way you’re probably used to from other devices: when you first zoom in, it uses the same render resolution so that it can at least show you something without going blank, then it renders the appropriate level of detail as it catches up (Google Maps works the same way on almost every platform). It works well. Zooming out to see as much of the page as possible isn’t quite as pretty; in its current incarnation, the browser seems to be using a pretty awful scaling algorithm, and small text looks like a jumble of jaggy, meaningless blocks without a hint of anti-aliasing. We’ll admit, it makes browsing just a little less fun, even though you can’t really read anything at those zoom levels regardless.

There isn’t a lot of bonus functionality, but we appreciated the “pin to start” option that lets you turn a page into a home screen tile, complete with a miniaturized view of the site (of course, there are standard bookmarks available as well). Tabs are also supported; on our test device, they were limited to a maximum of six, which we would assume will be true of all Windows Phone 7 devices — but let’s be honest, you probably don’t need more than six open tabs at a time on your phone, and if you do, you should be in front of a laptop anyway.

Neither Flash nor Silverlight are currently supported on pages, and as anyone with an iPhone can attest, that’s generally not a problem (though we’d be curious to see what kind of performance they could achieve). Of course, the real kicker is that you don’t get HTML5 support either, which makes the browser situation somewhat painful. There’s not even a YouTube app on the phone! Microsoft — you’ve got to step it up on the video front if you want to play this game.

One other thing that did concern us was that a number of sites that detect our iPhone and Android devices to show mobile sites don’t detect Windows Phone 7 properly — a key example being Gmail, which shows you a nasty WAP-compatible site designed as the least common denominator for data-capable dumbphones — but we imagine this will be a quick fix for most publishers if the platform gets enough traction to justify making mobile IE-compatible versions.

Despite the rumors leading up to the conference, there was no “Zune Phone” announcement, but all Windows 7 phones will ship with the same music and video features as the Zune HD. Users will also be able to manage their music with the Zune PC software. Does this mean the death of the standalone Zune HD player.

If you’re an Xbox owner and want to keep tabs on your friends’ achievements, Windows 7 phones will come with a mobile version of Xbox Xbox LIVE games, Spotlight feed and the ability to see a gamer’s avatar, Achievements and gamer profile. Users will also be able to purchase games and apps easily from the Windows Marketplace as well.

Windows 7 phones will also ship with Bing Maps, which has some unique features that are on par with Google Maps. Bing Maps dynamically update with street-view photos, 3D graphics and directions. It also shows you real-time traffic updates and reviews of local businesses via Yelp.

That said, we love having almost limitless access to new music on a phone, and the Zune Pass subscription certainly adds that capability, though you’re adding another $14.95 on top of your existing phone bill if you decide to go that route. Ultimately it’s a question of how voracious of a music buyer you are — but something tells us we’re going to see a marked increase in Pass users when these phones hit the market.

One other important aspect to note about Zune and Windows Phone 7 is that the desktop software and these devices are now extremely interconnected. Not only do you use the Zune software to sync your music and videos, but you’ll be able to buy apps from the marketplace on your computer, you can sync photos in the Zune application, and your general account and device management is handled through the app now. It’s pretty much a similar arrangement to that of the iPhone and iTunes, and we can’t really complain about Microsoft taking that page out of Apple’s playbook. Microsoft has always been good about syncing, but this makes the process slightly less obtuse than its ActiveSync options from the Windows Mobile heyday.

We’d heard before that one of Microsoft’s big goals for Windows Phone 7 devices was stellar camera performance — not just in terms of picture size and quality, but speed, too. After all, if your camera app takes too long to load or you’re waiting for five seconds between shots, the phone’s utility as an easy way to capture impromptu moments the same way a point-and-shoot can is significantly diminished. Fortunately, it seems like they’re making good on the promise so far — on the Taylor, we were regularly clocking about four seconds from camera button press to the first shot, and around two seconds between shots. We didn’t evaluate the pictures or video for quality since we’re dealing with hardware that’ll never be released, but needless to say, Windows Phone 7’s minimum specs should ensure that you’re getting at least moderately decent shots no matter what device you choose.

Once you take a shot, something pretty cool happens: it advances to the left, almost as though you’re looking at an actual roll of film, and you can see a dimmed sliver of the shot you just took on the left side of your viewfinder. You can then swipe to the right to see shots you’ve taken in the past, starting with the most recent, and returning to viewfinder (camera mode, as it were) is as simple as swiping all the way to the left again. It’s a neat user experience that we suspect novice users will pick up on very quickly. The available camera options and modes can be extended by phone manufacturers, but the default list is pretty impressive and includes configurable white balance, image effects (grayscale, sepia, and the like), saturation, ISO, exposure, and even metering mode — and most of these options are still available even when capturing video. Naturally, you can also set the flash to fire automatically, always, or never.

Speaking of the Pictures app, this is your one-stop shop for imagery on the phone — both your shots (locally and from supported online services) and those of your friends show up here. You’ll come here to view and send pictures, change your lock screen wallpaper, and — because this hub is extensible — use any third-party services that developers have plugged into it. In a way, it’s kind of the prototypical Windows Phone 7 app “hub” in that it cycles through your own pictures for its background and has some cool time-dependent features; for instance, it adds a “moments” page that summarizes pictures on the phone that were taken in the current month. It’s all very pretty, though we wish there was a way to configure the background image [turns out you can change it by long-pressing on the hub’s title! -Ed.] — and as we mentioned before with the People app, the “what’s new” page tends to get cluttered with countless updates from Facebook friends you barely know. Instead, we’d love a way to be able to select an inner circle of contacts from whom we wanted to see a photo stream here.

Microsoft has already started handing out prototype Windows Phone 7 devices (the same ones we’re reviewing here, actually) to developers, and it’s going to continue to do so in liberal quantities as it gets closer to launch — oh, and the side of the box says “developers. Developers! DEVELOPERS!!” on it. So yeah, you might say that Redmond understands full well how important third-party apps are going to be to the success (or failure) of this platform. Those will end up being exposed through the Marketplace hub, which as you might expect, is a thoroughly different experience than the one you might be used to on Windows Mobile 6.5. Instead, you get something more akin to what Apple and Google are offering — with a few twists.

The first thing you notice when you open the Marketplace is that you’ve got music as an available category, whereas iOS breaks it out into a separate iTunes app and Android leaves that to third-party providers like Amazon. It’s not quite as integrated as you think, though — tapping on music just bounces you out to the Zune Marketplace, which is fine since you wouldn’t want two disjoint places to purchase tracks anyway. Likewise, hitting the games category sends you over to the Xbox Marketplace, which sadly isn’t live yet and wasn’t available to test. Swiping to the left takes you to the Featured page of the Marketplace, which interestingly mixes up both music and applications into a single view — kind of a neat way to keep people interested in everything Microsoft has to sell without trying to send users’ attentions to two (or more) completely unrelated places.

If you’re just browsing, you can delve into the whole list or narrow it down by category; presently they’ve got Tools, Lifestyle, News & Weather, and Business Center, though we wouldn’t be surprised to see this list grow by launch day. Once you’ve selected a category, the list view is interesting — it shows you the typical icon, app name, and rating on a five-star scale, but it also shows you a short description of the app directly below the name. Goodness knows not every app has the most descriptive title, so we imagine this feature’s going to come in handy fairly frequently. Tapping on an app takes you to its information page, which is pretty much what you’d expect: you’ve got the price up top (everything appears to be free so far), a full description, screen shots, reviews, version number, supported languages, and a list of phone services that the app needs access to, similar to what you find on Android.

Tight Office integration, complete with an awesome on-phone document and viewing experience, stands to be one of the biggest differentiators for Windows Phone 7 — a feature that could almost singlehandedly make these devices impossible to ignore for serious business users regardless of their seemingly consumer-centric slant.

Instead, we came away feeling that Microsoft may have spent too much effort focusing on the collaborative side of Office and not enough time on the actual document editors themselves. Though Word seems to do a decent job rendering pages onto the small display, the editing capabilities are weak at best — you can’t change fonts, for example, and you can only choose from four font colors: orange, green, red, and black. Though there’s a spell-checker (you’ll recognize the familiar red squiggly lines), there’s no copy / paste capability — and in an app like this, it’s hard to imagine being too productive without any sort of clipboard whatsoever. Excel seems similarly gimped, though it’s got a pretty solid set of built-in functions; we don’t know what percentage of the full app’s functions are supported, but it’s a long list.

Instead, we came away feeling that Microsoft may have spent too much effort focusing on the collaborative side of Office and not enough time on the actual document editors themselves. Though Word seems to do a decent job rendering pages onto the small display, the editing capabilities are weak at best — you can’t change fonts, for example, and you can only choose from four font colors: orange, green, red, and black. Though there’s a spell-checker (you’ll recognize the familiar red squiggly lines), there’s no copy / paste capability — and in an app like this, it’s hard to imagine being too productive without any sort of clipboard whatsoever. Excel seems similarly gimped, though it’s got a pretty solid set of built-in functions; we don’t know what percentage of the full app’s functions are supported, but it’s a long list.

Though it’s not quite as full-featured as the latest renditions of Google Maps on Android have been, Microsoft’s Bing Maps implementation on Windows Phone 7 is pretty great — they’ve done a fantastic job of blending the experience of using a mapping app into their so-called Metro design language. You’ve got access to satellite imagery and real-time traffic information; location fixes happen quickly, though we found that they tended to be a little less accurate than Google’s when indoors and out of GPS reception. Pinch-to-zoom is smooth and fast, and we liked the almost ethereal appearance of the map tiles as they loaded after panning or zooming in — it’s hard to describe, but it’s a pretty neat (though admittedly unnecessary) effect. Likewise, we liked the zoom-out, zoom-back-in effect when locating your position on the map while a different area is being displayed, which gives you a better idea of your relative position than the iPhone’s rapid scroll.

Since this is straight-up Bing Maps on the back end, you can expect the same database of locations here that you get when you search for stuff from your computer. On the phone, you can search either by text or voice (more on this later), which will call up pushpins for matches near your map view. As you’d expect, tapping a pin brings up the name of the result; a second tap calls up a page of information where you can find a phone number, URL, average rating, and even hours if they’re available — this isextremely handy for restaurants since it can save you an awkward trip to the business’ inevitably non-mobile-friendly website. Swiping around calls up a screen with nearby points of interest, and another screen with individual reviews; Microsoft is aggregating several sites for these, and we regularly found entries from both Citysearch and JudysBook.

Though it’s a great search app at its core, the details of the implementation fail on two levels. First, accessing it is somewhat arbitrary — you can get to it by pressing the phone’s hardware search button, but not always. Apps can override that key’s functionality (People, Maps, and Marketplace all do this, just to name a few), but if they don’t, you fall through to Bing — so there are times when you really have no idea what’s going to happen when you press it that button. Secondly, the Bing app isn’t a universal search, and that’s a huge misstep in an age when smartphone users can easily have fifty or more apps and thousands contacts and tracks of music installed.

What we’ve been presented with here doesn’t exactly feel like a complete mobile operating system in many ways. Some parts of Windows Phone 7 are more like a wireframe — an interesting design study, an example of what a next-gen phone platform could be. That’s both good and bad. On one side, we’re still really excited by the prospect of Metro as a viable, clean-slate approach to the mobile user experience, and there are lots of smart moves being made that could lead to greatness. On the other side, Microsoft has to turn this into a viable retail product that can hang with the fiercest competition in the history of the cellphone in just a few months’ time, and there are some serious issues that need to be addressed.

Microsoft’s got its back against the wall in the mobile game, and becoming competitive quickly is vital to the company’s success — and in that regard, we understand why they’ve been so adamant about getting Windows Phone 7 on shelves in time for Holiday 2010. The thing is, putting out a product that’s half-baked risks alienating early adopters at the worst possible time, especially considering that we see a clear-cut (and pretty painless) path to fixing the most egregious shortcomings. Seriously, if the WP7 team put their heads down and added a clipboard and some rudimentary multitasking, Microsoft could have an exceptionally solid version-one product in Windows Phone 7 — especially when coupled with the company’s fierce outreach to developers.

Of course, that’s a big “if” — the clock is ticking on Windows Phone 7, and the industry has already proven that it won’t wait around for companies to play catch-up. It’s not about lapping the competition at this point, it’s about just being in the race — and if Microsoft doesn’t know that by now, it may already be too late.

Resources :engadget.com,worldphoto360.com

This Post Has 7 Comments

  1. Sancheez19

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  2. increase

    Next generation mobile OS’s must look out for the user by requiring a minimum battery capacity in proportion to the screen, screen type, and motherboard+CPU+GPU architecture of the phone. Why in the hell does the HTC EVO 4G have a battery that also powers the less powerful+capable HTC Touch Pro2 1500 mAh? Basic logic, not even high school algebra, BASIC LOGIC mandates a higher capacity battery with accomodating housing within the device be used as you go up in spec unless the software and use of the hardware by it is optimized to sip instead of gulp battery life. Get harder on the mobile industry on battery life. I’m sick of having a charger everywhere I go during the day. Basic clamshell phones hold charges for days because their battery capacities and the devices use of power are well balanced. Smartphones have dumbed down balance, but no one is taking a stand against that. Where is the middle-ground? Having to constantly re-charge is not middle-ground when you already paid a premium for the damn phone, so don’t give me shit about a trade-off of “well, you get this really cool phone.”

  3. Thib

    Why is Microsoft constantly lured by the cutoff text? They seem to be designing a UI that is several times the screen size of the mobile device. That’s silly!

  4. Anonymous

    Been with Windows on my telephony device for a while now. Jumped in late, my first love was the LG Incite, moved to the LG eXpo back in May. My next upgrade (I have 5 lines) is just after the New Year and at this point it looks like Windows Phone 7 is in my future. http://www.wp7forum.com looks like a good place to discuss about windows phone 7, hopefully you will find it useful.

  5. Anonymous

    I like how Microsoft has set high minimum specs for Windows Phone 7 makers, when comparing the specs: http://www.winphonescene.com/content.php/124-Windows-Phone-7-device-hardware-comparisson it doesn’t look like there are any low end phones. Hopefully it’ll mean no fragmentation issues like android is having. It’s kind of the best of both apple and android worlds, tight control on hardware, but not so tight that multiple models and form factors are available.

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