Tuesday, February 15, 2011

Microsoft shows off WP7's future with multitasking, Twitter integration, and IE9, all coming this year

Microsoft shows off Windows Phone 7's future with multitasking, Twitter integration, and IE9, all coming this year We've just barely begun to get ready with Steve Ballmer's keynote at MWC 2011, yet the company's Twitter and press feeds just scooped its main man. It's confirmed that Windows Phone 7 is getting multitasking for third-party apps and a suite of other updates, including Twitter integration and IE9 Mobile. We're still waiting on details on the multitasking, but the company has confirmed a "new wave of multitasking applications" in this next release, though hopefully that means open to all.

Twitter will be integrated into the People Hub, so you can get your real-time "what's for dinner" updates right there. And, of course, Microsoft confirmed IE9 is coming. It'll deliver a "dramatically enhanced web browser experience" thanks to graphics and hardware acceleration that'll make the most of what your handset has to offer. Sounds tasty to us. We're told to expect the update in "early March," which isn't that far away at all.


Show full PR text
Microsoft Shows New Features and Future Direction as Momentum Builds for Windows Phone 7

BARCELONA, Spain – Feb. 14, 2011 – Microsoft today kicked off Mobile World Congress by giving people a glimpse of what the rest of the year will bring for Windows Phone 7. Among the updates are several new features, a booming app marketplace, and the integration of even more Microsoft products with the phone.

A concrete example of the company's vision is the new strategic partnership with Nokia. "This partnership will combine the strengths of our two companies, and fuel our growth as we build the global Windows Phone ecosystem. This is a great win for us, for Nokia, and for our existing and new customers around the world," said Andy Lees, president of Microsoft's Mobile Communications Business.

New Windows Phone Features & Apps


"...A year ago, we introduced Windows Phone 7 at Mobile World Congress in Barcelona. We described how we are putting the entire muscle of our company behind our mobile strategy including Windows, Windows Live, Bing, Zune, Xbox LIVE, Office, SharePoint, Exchange, and our developer tools," Lees said. "Our alliance with Nokia creates opportunities for both companies far beyond what we could achieve separately, and offers a compelling alternative to the existing choices for consumers, mobile operators and developers."

The first goal with Windows Phone 7, Lees said, was to deliver a uniquely delightful customer experience. And the results, as provided by Windows Phone 7 users, show that the overall experience is great. "So far we've had a fantastic reaction from customers, with a 93 percent customer satisfaction rate and nine out of 10 customers saying they are likely to recommend [the phone] to someone else," Lees said. "All of this contributed to Nokia choosing us. And with this partnership, we are taking another big step toward driving global scale, reach and impact."

Microsoft announced several new Windows Phone 7 features coming in 2011, including a "dramatically enhanced" browser experience based on Internet Explorer 9; additional multitasking capabilities; support for Microsoft Office documents in the cloud; and the addition of Twitter to the People Hub. The expanded capabilities announced today include:


Copy and paste functionality via first major update, coming in the next month

Twitter integration directly into the People Hub in 2011

Support for Office documents in the cloud in 2011

Dramatically enhanced Web browser experience based on IE9 in 2011

A new wave of multitasking applications in 2011

Targeting significant volume of Nokia Windows Phones in 2012
Microsoft sold 2 million phone licenses in Windows Phone 7's first two months, and the phone is now available from 60 mobile operators in 30 countries around the world, Lees said. As phone availability and sales grow, so too does the app marketplace – there are now more than 8,000 apps in the marketplace and 28,000 registered developers.

In addition, the phone will be available soon on U.S. networks such as Verizon and Sprint, he said. Also, with an expanded feature set, more capabilities, and new partnerships like the one just announced with Nokia, the Windows Phone 7 platform is positioned to scale up rapidly.

First Mile Point in the Marathon

With the bang of a starting gun firing last fall, Windows Phone 7 launched itself into the mobile race. It's a race that Microsoft leaders are quick to point out is not a sprint, but a marathon – and one that's just begun.

"We're in the race – it's not a sprint but we are certainly gaining momentum and we're in it for the long run," said Achim Berg, a corporate vice president in Microsoft's Mobile Communications Business and Marketing Group. "We know we have tough competition, and this is a completely new product. Our design is different, our platform is different, our customer experience is different, and our long-term strategy for earning widespread adoption is different."

Over the next year, the company will continue to work with third parties on phone innovation and will add new features and apps that customers want and that make using Windows Phone 7 a "delightful experience." Microsoft also will work to engage more of the nearly 80 percent of worldwide phone users who are not using a smart phone, said JP Wollersheim, a Windows Phone 7 product manager.

A Different Kind of Phone

It was just two and a half years ago that Microsoft's Windows Phone 7 team came together with a single mission: to go back to the drawing board to create a completely new Windows Phone, to rethink and smarten up the smart phone, and to create a device that successfully integrated many favorite Microsoft products into one device – Bing, Windows LIVE, Xbox and Office, among others.

"For the first time, Microsoft has actually collected all of those great products and put them on a device with a screen that's 480x800," said Wollersheim. "It's always been about being different. Because we were starting fresh, from the ground up, we were able to look at what our competitors were doing, look at their issues and work through their experiences, and design something better."

Wollersheim said Microsoft built a smarter smart phone that focuses on user experience, integrates experiences rather than launching separate apps for tasks, gives information at a glance, and "allows you to have things happen on your behalf."

One example of how deep thinking about the mobile phone experience translated into a feature is the Windows Phone 7 camera. Each device has a camera button on the side and can instantly take a photo, even if the phone is locked, rather than the user having to miss the moment while scrambling to unlock the phone and open a camera app.

It's just one of many thoughtful details that make the phone different, and Wollersheim said that is largely why people are so "jazzed" with their new phones.

"You don't sell phones if people aren't happy. That's the leading indicator of where we're at, and it's predictive as to how many we're going to eventually sell," Wollersheim said. "We want it to sell, and we want customers to be super happy, and we want them to tell their friends and family. That's the best recommendation you could have."

24 comments:

  1. Well if I had seen this coming so soon I wouldn't have gotten the Verizon iPhone

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  2. I don't remember exactly where I picked up this comment, but I think it rings true. Exciting things happen when Microsoft is the underdog.

    I, for one, love this platform, and see it going places.

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  3. Well it would be nice if MS would put out a SYNC program to sync with their OWN Outlook via usb on the desktop. It only syncs with the enterprise version. WTF is up with that.....you cant sync with your outlook at home. Nor can Android very well. They should all come with a sync out of the box. And not with the Cloud...not interested in the least in the cloud.

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  4. It was obvious Microsoft had to delay some features in order to rush the phone to market before it was really to late. WP& was already falling behind and another year could have cost Microsoft a bunch of money, and it could have cost them the chance to compete. So they rush the half/baked OS on us which works and the rest would some in a formware update.

    Basically I call this the 1st SP for a smartphone. While everyone was criticizing them, Apple released iPhoen into a market with no multi-tasking, no copy/paste, and still no software integration of any kind. Yet they were wave forward with all happiness. Why can't Microsoft receive the same love?

    I am waiting for a VZW WP7 device that supports LTE and I will be selling my iPhone...Yet again as I sold my ATT iPhone to get back on VZW. After that I won't even look at iPhone ever again. I have always loved Windows Mobile, accept for the OS being so slow and no new features for years. Hopefully this time Micosoft won't fall so far behind and keep the phone/OS updated with fresh features.

    With the alliance with Nokia an a chance for more consumer interest, Microsoft will have to stay on top of the OS this time, or they may as well kill the mobile OS group.

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  5. It's good to see MS making these changes, but does anyone think their multitasking feature look a lot like WebOs? I wonder if HP is going to say anything about this feature. ;-) Either way, I'm glad all these features are coming to this WP7. Maybe they'll be able to compete now with other smartphones.

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  6. wp7 is saved !!! with ie9....

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  7. IE9 is looking to be one of the best if not the best browser in the new wave.... it also is looking liek it might be ahead of firefox to release. that combined with it being default will mean there won't be a reason to download a new browser when it comes default with such a good one.

    already there are so many who are content with crappy IE anyway, that even more will not bother DLing firefox or chrome when IE9 is so competitive.

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  8. ie9 is looking pretty good you. Perhaps you could actually take the time to investigate. Oh that's right, it's not cool to like IE...

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  9. A step in the right direction. Still not even close to the functionality of Android. I just don't understand why they're moving so slow in the face of the competition. These updates should have been out a month ago. Still rooting for them (even though I'm an Android Fan/user)

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  10. I did not realize Android had a web browser with graphics and hardware acceleration. In fact, Google Chrome itself cant even keep up with the competition in that regards. Both IE9 and FF4 both smoke Chrome in that department.

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  11. @Freek While I understand why many think it's too late for Microsoft, the smartphone genre is so young in it's maturity there is still plenty of room for additional players.

    Look at the video game races. Many thought Sony was crazy in when it tried to launch against Nintendo and Sega, then 10 years later many thought Microsoft was crazy to challenge Nintendo and Sony...and now look...

    ...the Windows 7 platform is extremely well thought out and (to many) has an extremely appealing UI. Their Zune pass integration and Xbox Live give it unique edges that others can't match, and if they get enough dev support there is a lot of money to be made even at the number three position...

    ...and now with Nokia, whose hardware design and build quality rivals Apple, I think 2011 could shape up to be a turning point for the platform.

    Whatever happens, I see only benefits for us consumers :-)

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  12. This update is giving ME an update....in my pants.

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  13. Still, I personally think windows is too late. Android is now growing so fast, they can never beat android nor ios. The power of an os is nowadays in it's apps. WP doesn't have that much apps, so it's going to fail.

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  14. Can't beat iOS..really? With the Nokia alliance, Microsoft stands to beat iOS rather quickly. if Android can do it, why can't anyone else?

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  15. Android is given away for free, and so it hasn't been monetized. So all Microsoft has to do is sell one copy of WP7 and they've out-sold Android.

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  16. saying its going to fail is like saying xbox was going to fail. This is MICROSOFT. They ruled Mobile with windows mobile 1 thru 6 in over a decade. Shit's not happening homie.

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  17. You don't understand how this works.
    Google is one of the most profitable companies on earth. Still, they shut down Wave.
    Why? Because it wasn't profitable. You think Microsoft will hesitate in pulling the plug if it starts becoming clear that Nokia's going to die and bring MS down with them?
    Companies get big by investing when it's right and killing projects that aren't going well. Remember Kin? No? Maybe that's because Kin one and two were introduced in April 12, 2010 and killed on June 30, 2010.
    Don't fool yourself. Nothing here is set in stone.

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  18. MS was the most profitable tech company last quarter. The reason the Kins were pulled was due to WP7.

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  19. So your theory is that they released the Kins, then realized they had been developing a better software for the last two years, waited two months and pulled them? That's a bold, bold theory. So it had nothing to do with the phones being universally reviled and massive commercial failures, selling well under the most pessimistic of estimates?

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  20. The Kin deal was set up by Robbie Bach and due to contractual reasons, they HAD to release it...he is no longer with the company and other than the hipster ads, MS has done nothing to promote them, which is ONE of the reasons why they did so poorly. Another reason and biggest in my opinion was the smartphone-like data plan that VERIZON added to these dumbphones is what did these in. MS knew it would only cause confusion between it and WP7 and so they did what they had to do to move on from the Kins as quickly as possible. MS is going to take the best of what Kin brought to the table (Kin Studio) and bring it to WP7 though. Anything else?

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  21. They knew they were going to kill it off before they even released it, as did Verizon.

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  22. Rafael Gaiarsa 14 minutes ago in reply to jimbonics
    I see, it was a calculated move and not a misstep as reported on Engadget, Gizmodo, TechCrunch and TwiT.
    It wasn't a failed product, even though it cost them a bunch of money. Even though the phones were horrible, buggy, unmarketable messes.
    See, this is what I don't understand. Does everything have to become a religion? Does microsoft have to be infallible? They fuck up like everyone else does, except that sometimes they do it spectacularly (Vista, past IEs, Kin, etc).
    This is why so many people fight in this site. I love Android, but I can easily say that the prices on the new tablets are ridiculous and a mistake. It's fine. They're huge corporations, they don't need High Priests.

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