Microsoft Previews Next Major Release of Windows Phone
Microsoft Previews Next Major Release of Windows Phone
"Mango" to deliver smarter and easier
communications, apps and web.
Microsoft today previewed the next major release of Windows Phone, code name "Mango," at a demo event in Auckland. Designed to give people an alternative to the smartphone status quo, "Mango" will deliver a wave of new features to push the boundaries of the smartphone experience around communications, apps and the web. The new release will be available to all existing Windows Phone handsets as a free upgrade, and will come as standard on all new phones later in the year.
"Seven months ago we started our mission to make smartphones smarter and easier for people to do more," says Mark Bishop, Windows Phone Manager for Microsoft New Zealand.
"With Mango, Windows Phone takes a major step forward in redefining how people communicate and use apps and the Internet, giving you better results with less effort."
Easier to connect and share
The smartphone
experience has been complicated by a sea of disconnected
apps and accounts in an attempt to keep pace with all the
different ways people communicate - from calls, texts, email
and instant messenger, to status updates, Tweets, check-ins,
photo posting and tagging. To help people stay on top of
that growing complexity, the Mango release organises
information around the person or group you want to interact
with, not the app you have to use.
* Threads:
Switch between text, Facebook chat and Windows Live
Messenger within the same conversation
* Groups: Group contacts into personalised Live Tiles to see the latest status updates and quickly send a text, email or instant message to the whole group, right from the start screen
* Deeper social network integration: Twitter and Linked In feeds are now integrated into contact cards, built in Facebook check-ins and new face detection software that makes it easy to quickly tag photos and post to the web
* Linked Inbox: See multiple email accounts in one linked inbox. Conversations are organised to make it easy to stay on top of the latest mail
* Hands-free messaging: Built-in speech-to-text and text-to-speech support enables hands-free texting or chatting
A smarter
approach to apps
Windows Phone will challenge the way
people think about apps. Today their usefulness is measured
by what can be done within the app, but the promise of apps
lies in how they can be integrated directly into the core
experiences of the phone. In addition to making it easier to
get timely notifications and updates from apps right from
the Start Screen, the Mango release will also surface apps
as part of search results and within Windows Phone Hubs. As
a result, a useful app is more likely to be right there when
you need it.
* App Connect: By connecting apps
to search results and deepening their integration with
Windows Phone Hubs, including Music and Video, and Pictures,
apps are surfaced when and where they make sense. App
Connect works with Marketplace so results include both apps
already on the phone and suggestions for new apps to
download
* Improved Live Tiles: Get real-time information from apps without having to open them. Live Tiles can now be bigger, more dynamic and hold more information
* Multi-tasking: Quickly switch between apps in use and allow apps to run in the background while preserving battery life and performance
Taking the web
beyond the browser
In addition to having Internet
Explorer, the world's most popular browser, built in, the
Mango release will connect the power of the web to the
unique capabilities of your phone, such as location
awareness, camera and access to apps, to present a new way
of viewing the web that is more localised, actionable and
relevant.
* Internet Explorer 9: The power of a
PC-browser plus support for HTLM5 and hardware accelerated
graphics
* Local Scout: Provides hyper-local search results and recommends nearby restaurants, shopping and activities in an easy to use guide
* Bing on Windows Phone: More ways to search the web, including Bing Vision, Bing Audio and voice so it's easier to discover and decide
* Cards: When searching for a product, movie, event or place see a quick summary of relevant information, including related apps
Some of the new features will not be available in New Zealand.
Strengthening the
ecosystem
The Windows Phone ecosystem has grown steadily
since Windows Phone 7 first launched in October 2010, with
more than 17,000 apps currently available on Marketplace and
Windows Phone handsets available from a range of partners
worldwide, and Microsoft's recently announced partnership
with Nokia. Mango will further expand and strengthen the
Windows Phone ecosystem through new partnerships with Acer,
Fujistu-Toshiba and ZTE who are committed to delivering new
Windows Phone devices in markets around the world later this
year Furthermore, Windows Phone will add support for
additional languages, expand access to apps by launching
Marketplace in new countries, and partner with new hardware
manufacturers to enable expansion to new markets.
A Beta release of the free Windows Phone Developer tools that will be used to create the next generation of Mango apps and games will be posted for public download to Microsoft's website within 24 hours of today's announcement.
"The
Mango update gives developers more options and the ability
to extend applications further. Features such as the
enhanced multi-tasking, the Live Tiles as well as improved
access to functions such as the camera, will make for more
innovative apps and a richer mobile experience," says Keith
Patton, app developer and Marker's
More information about what Mango means for developers, the tools and a link to the public download page is available at http://windowsteamblog.com/windows_phone/b/wpdev/archive/2011/05/24/developer-news-beta-mango-tools-available-today.aspx.
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About
Microsoft
Founded in 1975, Microsoft (Nasdaq "MSFT") is
the worldwide leader in software, services and solutions
that help people and businesses realise their full
potential.
Visit www.microsoft.com/windowsmobile/en-nz
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