Microsoft Quietly Explains Windows Phone "Tango"

While I published everything you need to know about the upcoming Windows Phone update, codenamed "Tango," about a month ago in Windows Phone in 2012, there are those who won't believe anything about a Microsoft product until they confirm the information themselves. So with regards to Tango, they have now verified virtually everything I wrote.

In a post to the Windows Phone Developer blog, Microsoft's Mike Battista confirms that this next Windows Phone update, which will marketed as part of the Windows Phone 7.5 line as I first wrote last month, will open up the platform to new markets and lower-end devices. But you knew that.

"Apps that follow performance best practices today will run well across all devices without much effort," he writes in the post. "Apps that perform adequately today may perform noticeably slower on lower-cost devices."

Key takeaways from this post, which is of course aimed at developers, include the fact that Windows Phone apps should not exceed 90MB of memory usage on 256MB devices. A new version of the Windows Phone SDK, version 7.1.1, provides a low-end device emulator to help developers target these new types of Windows Phones.

Likewise, as I first reported in February, Windows Phone "Tango" doesn't just reduce the available RAM, it reduces the availability of other on-device resources too, including background agents.

In a previous post to the Windows Phone blog on February 27, Microsoft's Joe B. noted that this push to low-end phones would open up the platform to 23 new markets. He also confirmed my report that some existing apps would not run on Tango devices. 

"A small number (around 5%) of current applications will not run properly on the new lower cost devices," he wrote. Microsoft is working with the developers of these apps to see if they can be fixed. One of the "bad" apps, I'm told, is Plants vs. Zombies.


Discuss this Article 6

luis3007
on Mar 8, 2012
Nooo!!!! I like Plants vs Zombies!! Fix it!!!
MorganRW
on Mar 8, 2012
I am starting to not even bother reading about OS updates to WP. Apple cranks out yet another OS update while we are left wondering if AT&T will ever get around to sending out another update for our WP devices. If Apple can do it then why not MS? What started out as promising seems to have gone back to the Win Mo days where the provider rarely if ever sent out an update for the Windows devices. I honestly think I will have purchased a WP8 device before we ever see another update. The vanishing keyboard issue is really annoying on my Focus S. What is even more annoying is knowing the fix is out while AT&T won't release it.
jfreiman
on Mar 8, 2012
Morgan, I feel your pain, at least I did before upgrading to Windows 8 CP. After upgrading my PC and loading Zune my phone was updated to 8107 on it's first connect. No more disappearing keyboard, etc. That said, the delays in updates being released really makes me question the longevity of Windows Phone. I love it to death, but can I recommend it to ANYONE when I don't know if their will be device support/updates in the future? :-/ John Samsung Focus S
Waethorn
on Mar 8, 2012
@Morgan: Last time I checked, all of the pre-announced iPhone updates only happen on schedule with AT&T. Verizon iPhone customers are left waiting.
JayZeee74
on Mar 9, 2012
@Morgan Waethorn is wrong. As usual.
incubusjax
on Mar 9, 2012
It *is* frustrating when carriers refuse to release updates to phones in their line up. In our case (as WP users) it seems that MS has been pretty awesome about releasing updates for WP (post Mango, ie. keyboard fix) but the fault here lies with the carriers. I view it similarly with getting Windows Updates or new version in my enterprise - just because MS releases SP3 for Office doesn't mean I will be getting it anytime soon, as the technologists at my company have to download and test before pushing it out to the masses, in this case, we employees. I figure carriers must have to have this mindset. Lets update it in a test bed and see what happens. Otherwise, if we blindly push this to our users and it bricks their phone or crashes our network, we'll be in a bad way. I can't blame them for that, but that doesn't mean it's not frustrating. On the other hand, my wife's Android phone has probably only been updated once, and it's only a year old. At least with WP there's a *chance* of an update, and not some fragmented unmanageable matrix of updates and differences like on that platform (Android). Oh and Luis, if you're in North America I doubt you'll have to worry about Plants vs. Zombies. =)

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