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Microsoft says to bring full power of web to phones  Send to a friend
Saturday, 19 February 2011 07:38

Barcelona. Microsoft announced early this week an Internet-friendly revamp of its Windows Phone operating system to help capture new territory in the smartphone wars.

Microsoft chief Steve Ballmer unveiled a series of improvements this year to Windows Phone, which got a major boost last week when it was adopted by leading handphone maker Nokia.

The software titan is struggling far behind Google’s hugely popular Android system and desperate to replicate some of its success in the Microsoft-dominated personal computer market.

“We need to give people the full web, the full Internet on their phone, like they’ve come to expect with the PC,” Mr Ballmer said at the mobile industry’s annual get-together in Barcelona.

“Later this year we are going to release a version of Internet Explorer 9 (web browser) complete with hardware and graphics and other hardware acceleration for the Windows Phone,” he added.

“The web in some senses was designed for the PC first -- we need to make it a first class citizen on the phone,” he added.
Together with a free update for Windows Phone 7, which was released just four months ago, the company aims to provide a smoother web experience on smartphones that rivals surfing on a PC.

A prototype demonstration showed similar performance of moving graphics on a website between a smarthphone and PC.It had markedly superior performance to other smartphone operating systems due to hardware acceleration, with graphics flowing fast and smoothly instead in shuddering slow motion movement.

The updated version of Windows Phone also aims to make a simpler user experience, eliminating the need to launch different applications to complete different tasks.

It will also allow for fuller multitasking, including for the first time with third-party applications -- a key demand from many users of the Windows Phone system.

“Smart tiles” on users main screen will provide useful information, such as a calendar tile showing the time of the next appointment.

“I get at-a-glance needed information without going into the application,” said Windows Phone designer Joe Belfiore. “That is smart design for making things simple.”

Various “hubs” will automatically group users’ items together, such as photos whether they are stored in the phone, on their PC, or posted on their social websites. Mr Ballmer said the partnership with Nokia, which will see the world’s largest mobile phone manufacturer shifting to Windows Phone as its operating system, will help accelerate its adoption.

“Nokia’s involvement with Windows Phone will drive volume, innovation of new products, and will accelerate adoption of the Windows Phone platform,” said the Microsoft chief.

More than 1.5 million smartphones running on the latest version of Windows Phone, WP7, were shipped in the six weeks after the launch in October but Microsoft’s share of the market was only about three percent at the end of the year.

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Comments  

 
-1 #5 TL 2011-02-21 20:11
I have the WP7 HD7 and I love it... The only problem I have is that the marketplace app freezes from time to time... Its only been around for 4 months and its already the best phone Ive ever used. The iphone is basically just an app launcher, its design is boring and starting to feel old, it freezes and locks up and you can barely talk a hour without dropping calls. And its not ATT its the phone. Android is a mess of this and that, battery life is horrible, some apps kill the phone and you basically have to charge it 2-3 times a day. Not all the apps are compatible with every phone.. Its just a mess..
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+1 #4 Jim 2011-02-21 05:08
Quoting James:
I have no problems with my windows 7 phone. As for the app store, I prefer quality to quantity. I have better things to do than check out the latest non-sense games. As for Android, in our country we think Androids are evil human like robots!

Fair enough, my phone could be a dud. Although personally I still like Android alot more, evil human-like robot or not lol
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0 #3 James 2011-02-21 05:03
I have no problems with my windows 7 phone. As for the app store, I prefer quality to quantity. I have better things to do than check out the latest non-sense games. As for Android, in our country we think Androids are evil human like robots!
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0 #2 Jim 2011-02-20 07:02
It is not nearly enough to fix the problems that plague windows phones. I have a Windows Phone 7, and have had nothing but problems with it. The phone crashed 10 times in the first 2 days, the updates to apps don't often work, the AppStore is tiny and has poor selection, the search button often refuses to work, the WiFi crashes some apps, I need Zune to sync anything to my phone, there are tiny glitches everywhere, etc. I have tried my friends Android, and it is so so much better than the phone I have. My advice to whoever may read this.... DO NOT BUY A WINDOWS PHONE!!!!!
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0 #1 ricegf 2011-02-19 17:55
“Nokia’s involvement with Windows Phone will drive volume, innovation of new products, and will accelerate adoption of the Windows Phone platform,” said the Microsoft chief.

But not this year. Nokia will have its hands full getting a single WinP7 phone to market by the end of the year. One wonders where their cash flow will originate, since they publicly dissed Symbian, their only shipping platform for some time to come.
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