Wtf is this shit?Ulairi said:W7 update looks nice. It's nice that Microsoft have been using webOS devices. I'm awaiting Apple to rip off the OS at WWDC next week.
Wtf is this shit?Ulairi said:W7 update looks nice. It's nice that Microsoft have been using webOS devices. I'm awaiting Apple to rip off the OS at WWDC next week.
I used it all the time on my pixi and (when it was eventually available) on my pre2. Others don't use tethering that often but consider it a lifesaver when traveling to a place without cheap wifi or when their home internet connection is broken and it takes a couple of days to fix. At that unexpected moment when you need tethering, it might be too late to switch to a platform that supports it; better to be safe and sure imo.jagowar said:Just out of curiosity but the tethering you are talking about is what I am assuming is the "free" stuff that has been hacked on various phones? Going off my experiences from my pre.... I had the capability to use it but realistically only ever used it 2 or 3 times and even then I didn't need to use it.
Personally I don't see that type of tethering lasting very long on any current platform..... android oem's are already trying to block it due to pressure from the carriers. The carriers want their insane extra fee for doing it legally.
I personally don't see the use of tethering from my phone.... The only place I need it is while on the road and my phone's browser is good enough for that time. Otherwise I am on wifi.
Meus Renaissance said:Sold.
T-Mobile are doing an unbelievable offer for the Omnia 7 starting from £15.54 for a 24 month contract with the text and optional booster (e.g. Internet). 600mins for £20. Why the massive drop? It was retailing for around £35 a month last time I checked
Wilester said:Snap it up. I'm paying £30 a month after paying £150 upfront. The joys of being an early adopter.
Charred Greyface said:I used it all the time on my pixi and (when it was eventually available) on my pre2. Others don't use tethering that often but consider it a lifesaver when traveling to a place without cheap wifi or when their home internet connection is broken and it takes a couple of days to fix. At that unexpected moment when you need tethering, it might be too late to switch to a platform that supports it; better to be safe and sure imo.
Meus Renaissance said:Sold.
T-Mobile are doing an unbelievable offer for the Omnia 7 starting from £15.54 for a 24 month contract with the text and optional booster (e.g. Internet). 600mins for £20. Why the massive drop? It was retailing for around £35 a month last time I checked
Meus Renaissance said:Does the Omnia 7 have a feature enabled where you can find it if it's on Silent Mode, like you see with HTC phones?
Charred Greyface said:I used it all the time on my pixi and (when it was eventually available) on my pre2. Others don't use tethering that often but consider it a lifesaver when traveling to a place without cheap wifi or when their home internet connection is broken and it takes a couple of days to fix. At that unexpected moment when you need tethering, it might be too late to switch to a platform that supports it; better to be safe and sure imo.
D4Danger said:is that a good phone?
that is a really good offer. I'd seriously consider getting this myself knowing Mango is coming to all Windows phones.
jagowar said:Not denying that but can you really not go a day or two browsing only on your phone? That was I eventually realized was the few times I actually made use of it I really didn't need to.... I just thought I needed to do something on my laptop when I would have been just as functional on my phone. I understand it from a feature check off point of view but in practice I really don't think it matters.... esp when the carriers will charge you more for it.
numble said:You seem to be more offended than I am. I'm just saying that the basis of reference should be with current-gen hardware. I don't see how that is an unfair point. If someone is in an iPhone thread and says, "I've used Android for 18 months, iPhone 4 is SO MUCH BETTER," but I find out that he was using a MyTouch 3G (released around the same time as the 3GS), there is cause to question if that comparison is a valid comparison of the capabilities between Android and iOS.
http://www.winrumors.com/microsoft-unveils-web-version-of-the-windows-phone-marketplaceThe Web version of the Marketplace will launch alongside Windows Phone Mango later this year. We continue to invest in Windows Phone Marketplace to make it more accessible and engaging, said Microsofts Todd Brix. We remain equally committed to ensuring a great developer experience based on fair and transparent policies, as well as steadily improving the shopping experience for customers.
A jailbroken iPhone, or an Android Nexus phone... I could make do with only that device for a few days or even a week or two. A webOS phone, or a WP7 device, just doesn't do enough.jagowar said:Not denying that but can you really not go a day or two browsing only on your phone? That was I eventually realized was the few times I actually made use of it I really didn't need to.... I just thought I needed to do something on my laptop when I would have been just as functional on my phone. I understand it from a feature check off point of view but in practice I really don't think it matters.... esp when the carriers will charge you more for it.
As mentioned:jagowar said:Not denying that but can you really not go a day or two browsing only on your phone? That was I eventually realized was the few times I actually made use of it I really didn't need to.... I just thought I needed to do something on my laptop when I would have been just as functional on my phone. I understand it from a feature check off point of view but in practice I really don't think it matters.... esp when the carriers will charge you more for it.
The issue is that more and more devices are online devices, and many people opt for WiFi only versions because it's simply unrealistic to pay for 3/4G on 3 or 4 different devices at the same time.jagowar said:Not denying that but can you really not go a day or two browsing only on your phone? That was I eventually realized was the few times I actually made use of it I really didn't need to.... I just thought I needed to do something on my laptop when I would have been just as functional on my phone. I understand it from a feature check off point of view but in practice I really don't think it matters.... esp when the carriers will charge you more for it.
Windows Phone prizes dropped drastically in Europe, I bought a Optimus 7 last week and it costs me less then my friend's Galaxy Ace.Meus Renaissance said:Sold.
T-Mobile are doing an unbelievable offer for the Omnia 7 starting from £15.54 for a 24 month contract with the text and optional booster (e.g. Internet). 600mins for £20. Why the massive drop? It was retailing for around £35 a month last time I checked
I read that Achim Berg, VP of the WP business (I think) admitted that WiFi hotspot should've been in Mango, but didn't make the cut. Makes me think that Mango is feature complete, but not code complete (probably the reason why we didn't see every new feature yet). I doubt that Microsoft will allow such apps in the marketplace, because it would piss off the carriers. Homebrew is another story.Raistlin said:So any chance MS would actually approve a WiFi hotspot app if someone made it? It should be possible with the newly available API's.
Captain N said:can you have mp3s as ringtones?
http://windowsteamblog.com/windows_...er-news-beta-mango-tools-available-today.aspx@Advocate - I appreciate your pain around tethering (using your device as a modem) as this has been something that I've used in the past. Tethering, in the past was something that we managed independently of the Mobile Operators (e.g. AT&T, Orange, Verizon). In recent years, the Mobile Operators have now taken ownership of this functionality x-all platforms (e.g. our competitors as well as us). We are continually working with them and our OEM partners to enable this functionality for our devices, but at this time there isn't an announcement that we've made in regards to rolling out this feature. Stay Tuned!
brotkasten said:Update on tethering:
http://windowsteamblog.com/windows_...er-news-beta-mango-tools-available-today.aspx
It's crazy how carriers are holding back everyone. They can detect if you're tethering via phone, so just charge extra when someone does it. Geez.
The battery meter is by design and I don't think if they'll change that.SeanR1221 said:I wonder if Mango will allow the battery life to always show, pulling it down is stupid.
I also wonder if it will have compass support and show you which way you're facing in maps (unless this has to be built into the hardware).
Anyone know?
brotkasten said:The battery meter is by design and I don't think if they'll change that.
Every WP7 already has a compass, but there was no support for it in the SDK. The Mango update and the new SDK changes that.
SeanR1221 said:I wonder if Mango will allow the battery life to always show, pulling it down is stupid.
.
Anyone know?
snap0212 said:As soon as you get the mail.![]()
"We should be launching new devices in a rhythm that might be every couple of months, every three months, something like that .Were going to keep coming with new devices in order to have something to talk about."
She also confirmed that Nokia Windows phone 7 handsets were still on track for 2011, saying "Our target is absolutely still this year and the target looks good.", saying the company is aiming to deliver a small batch this year.
I know what you mean, I felt like that, too. But after a while, I saw the light in Belfiore's and Ballmer's eyes and ... err ... Seriously now, WP7 taught me to stop caring about the battery. I can see when the battery is full, I know when I have only 10% left (first low battery warning) and that's all I need to know. The battery still lasts an hour or two after the first warning and it gives me enough time to react.Commodore said:One thing I do hope they'd change is giving the battery a percentage, or at least an option. For some reason I like seeing exactly how much juice I have left, rather than a minuscule change in a small icon.
Better battery life would be great. One of the reasons I got an Optimus 7 instead of a Mozart was the 1500 mAh battery. I hope HTC will learn from that. 1230 mAh wasn't enough for the HD2 and it's unsurprisingly not enough for the HD7.SeanR1221 said:I just hope the next phones have better batteries. It be nice to match the iPhone 4 in that department.
brotkasten said:I know what you mean, I felt like that, too. But after a while, I saw the light in Belfiore's and Ballmer's eyes and ... err ... Seriously now, WP7 taught me to stop caring about the battery. I can see when the battery is full, I know when I have only 10% left (first low battery warning) and that's all I need to know. The battery still lasts an hour or two after the first warning and it gives me enough time to react.
Wow, I really sound like an apologist. It's kinda gross.
But his insistence that he wishes it was in Mango makes me think they don't give a shit about carriers? So their only incentive for not allowing it would only be if they plan on adding it into the base OS later?brotkasten said:If you need tethering in a "life saving situation", then you can always switch to tethered mode in the phone's diagnostic menu.
I read that Achim Berg, VP of the WP business (I think) admitted that WiFi hotspot should've been in Mango, but didn't make the cut. Makes me think that Mango is feature complete, but not code complete (probably the reason why we didn't see every new feature yet). I doubt that Microsoft will allow such apps in the marketplace, because it would piss off the carriers. Homebrew is another story.
Did you forget? Windows Phone 7 is the most carrier friendly OS! :lol I think they'll try to implement it.Raistlin said:But his insistence that he wishes it was in Mango makes me think they don't give a shit about carriers? So their only incentive for not allowing it would only be if they plan on adding it into the base OS later?
Achim Berg, the corporate vice president of Windows Phone marketing has told Pocket-lint in an informal chat that he has regretted not getting the Windows Phone 7 team to include tethering in the new Mango update detailed on Tuesday.
The revelation shows that Microsoft still has plenty to do ahead of the scheduled launch later this year.
Its been clear today that people want thethering support, Berg told Pocket-lint after many journalists complained about a lack of Wi-Fi at the London VIP event at Millbank Tower near Westminster.
We reported back in January that Windows Phones will support Japanese Language in second half of this year. At MIX11 Microsoft announced 16 additional languages support in Windows Phones including Japanese. Whats interesting to know is that Microsoft is not just slapping additional languages into its existing Metro Design as noted by Long Zheng. Long Zheng posted some screenshots of the Japanese Language support in Windows Phones. Here are some of those,
As you can see below, Microsoft have revamped the soft keyboard for this language.
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Even the Japanese emoticons are supported ! !
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Atlast, the important thing is the vertical text layout to be followed throughout the OS in places like panoramas, lockscreens,etc, to reduce the amount of text clipping that would occur more frequently.
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Source: Long Zheng from istartedsomething.com
brotkasten said:Better battery life would be great. One of the reasons I got an Optimus 7 instead of a Mozart was the 1500 mAh battery. I hope HTC will learn from that. 1230 mAh wasn't enough for the HD2 and it's unsurprisingly not enough for the HD7.
antiquegamer said:http://www.wpcentral.com/mangos-are-orange-and-orange-now-mango
Not sure if this is just for the demo unit changing orange to mango (name only), I think they should just add more colors. The redish-orange theme they use for mango looks nice on the OS. (I try to imitate the color with accent changer app and replace that ugly brown with it).
Imagine the amount of focus testing Microsoft would have to do ... :loljagowar said:They really should add more colors.... 50 shades would be enough (one of those hexagonal color wheels would work). A number of good colors are missing that I have used on my unlocked focus and look really good. A good dark shade of maroon, gray (which looks surprisingly good on wp7), etc.
First impressions would be nice.plagiarize said:ordered my Trophy from Verizon, might get it tomorrow which would be nice. i've been waiting for one of these for a fair while.
will do my best. i haven't had a chance to go hands on with a Windows Phone yet so i won't be able to compare it to anything of the others. you're mainly looking for impressions of the handset and signal/call quality type stuff?brotkasten said:First impressions would be nice.