Windows Mobile 7 Details Emerge

After months of silence and endless speculation, it looks like we're finally starting to get a peek at what Microsoft is doing with Windows Mobile. As always, the best coverage can be had over at WMExperts, where we learn the following:

First, it's not Windows Mobile 7 but just "Seven," so that's how we're going to refer to the OS from now on. Also the phrase "Microsoft Zune Phone Experience" may be tossed around.

Second, we are hearing there will be two versions: Business edition and Media edition — those aren't necessarily the names we'll see them launch with, just different branches of development. We believe this partially explains some of the seemingly contradictory rumors about release dates, as they are not on the same release track.

Windows Phone Seven Business edition (BE) is the version that is nearest in completion, but one we might not see bare naked. It's a more stripped down version of Seven and while it can still do media, it has less thrill than the Media edition (see below).

Windows Phone Seven Media edition (ME) is the big kahuna. The one that Microsoft is really banking on. The one that is not yet nearly as complete, and, yes, if there was one we probably won't have in our hands till 2011, it's this version.

Windows Sensor and Location Platform 'Orion' is a cloud-based assisted GPS system that is supposed to dramatically increase initial location-lock performance. This will guarantee rapid GPS performance across all future Seven devices, regardless of carrier support.

Hardware: The first Seven device that is expected to launch is the LG "Apollo." To us, it sounds like something in the same class as the just announced LG GW990. Make no mistake about LG — it is a big player with Microsoft, having a team in Redmond working with it directly, releasing the first Snapdragon/pico projector/finger print scanner device in the U.S (eXpo) — LG is playing for keeps ... The HTC 'Obsession' is the device we have a better chance at seeing at Mobile World Congress, as the LG device is still going through some development pains. Think of the Obsession as a slightly smaller HD2.

There is a lot more in the original blog post. Be sure to read it all.

I'm getting even more excited about Windows Mobile 7 now. This could be very good, indeed.

Discuss this Article 18

de Silentio
on Jan 19, 2010
Very clever on the Seven, it follows the same name as the successful Windows 7.
Ocean
on Jan 19, 2010
Which has greater mindshare...Windows 7, or the as yet unannounced Apple tablet?
Keleko
on Jan 19, 2010
Nothing said here shows it is compelling enough to be interesting. Multiple versions along with different handsets sporting the OS does not spell success for an app market, either. The only thing it has going for it is "not an iPhone" at this point. That's hardly a good market strategy.
anonymous
on Jan 19, 2010
This post was mentioned on Twitter by eoghann_feed: Windows Mobile 7 Details Emerge http://bit.ly/77KIzE
rr0de74@live.com
on Jan 19, 2010
Windows Mobile 7.........boring beyond belief. Where is the WinSupersite coverage of the recent attacks from China, against 30+ US companies, all made possible by Microsoft products. Which leads to stuff like this... http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/8465038.stm Huge story, but silence on a site that should be covering it???? Where the subzero hitman types spewing about how secure Windows 7 is and how OS X security sucks????
Waethorn
on Jan 19, 2010
"I HIGHLY doubt FairPlayer DRM will be allowed on a Windows phone. I'll wait and see but so far "meh"." So where is tayme to chime in on the benefits of platform-agnosticism on this one?
tayme
on Jan 19, 2010
@Waethorn - I am right here...and I, for one, am anxious to see WinMo 7. As for rrode74 and Ocean, I give them about as much thought as I do you. You are all simple minded. Not sure about SacredCow, but if he/she believes that they need FairPlay in a phone...so be it. --tayme
Interframe
on Jan 19, 2010
Windows Mobile 7 will be the biggest, most important thing thats going to happen with Microsoft this year. Just like Windows 7 was for Microsoft in 2009. I know theres Office 2010, which will be huge in a financial way, but WM 7 will be bigger and arguably more important in terms of perception and mind share. Can't wait for WM 7 next month. It's going to turn heads and blow people away. Mark my words.
Interframe
on Jan 19, 2010
@rrode74: "Windows Mobile 7.........boring beyond belief." Sir, you will feel incredibly stupid by the end of next month. Now, I know there hasn't been a lot of official reports about Windows Mobile 7, and MS is being dead silent about it. But believe me, its for a reason. An incredible reason you'll see next month at Mobile World Congress.
rr0de74@live.com
on Jan 19, 2010
@interframe I seriously doubt it. Even it MS took the Zune HD, put a phone in it and created a new app store, and allowed you to sync your free Live mail, calendar and contacts to it.....its too little to late. They have lost the mind share when it comes to mobile phones. To top that statement off, I dont think they will even hit all of those marks I just listed which is exactly what Apple/iPhone/MobileMe and Google/Android/Gmail have done with their offerings. MS will fall short some place, but give you Xbox integration or new twitter client as a consolation.
rr0de74@live.com
on Jan 19, 2010
Also if I read Paul's statement correctly the "best" version of Mobile 7 wont be available until 2011 so how will it be "the most important thing thats going to happen with Microsoft this year". I am sure both Apple and Google will just stop any and all forward development to give MS a fair shot.
GoodThings2Life
on Jan 19, 2010
@interframe, I can't tell if you know something we don't or if you're just an overexcited fanboy, but I do agree that odds are favorable that WM7 will be an impressive experience. I believe that because they have a lot to lose if they don't, and a lot to gain if they do. Especially if Windows Live Wave 4 brings some better sync and Hotmail/Calendar integration. The one thing hindering me the most with Windows Live is the lack of calendar syncing with my Touch Pro 2.
GoodThings2Life
on Jan 19, 2010
@rr0de74... Everyone, and I do quite literally mean EVERYONE wrote off Apple during the 90's and it took the return of Jobs and an Microsoft-paid infusion of cash to save them... since then they've released products that people can get excited about (not to say they're ACTUALLY better, just that they seem interesting to people), and it's paid off big for them. I remember everyone writing Microsoft off during all the anti-trust drama of the late 90's / early 00's because of WinME too, and again with Vista, and yet they continue to thrive, and every now and again they completely throw a curve ball out like Windows 7 and the Zune HD and the Xbox 360 that make people rethink. It's how GOOD business should be. Always mixing it up, always competing... even if it takes some time.
Ocean
on Jan 19, 2010
"EVERYONE wrote off Apple during the 90's and it took the return of Jobs and an Microsoft-paid infusion of cash to save them" I don't think the MS cash had much to do with it, but that's beside the point...are you calling for the return of Bill Gates???
Andreas J
on Jan 19, 2010
Wow. Windows Mobile is actually getting interesting. But you never know, let's not get our hopes up too high.
rr0de74@live.com
on Jan 19, 2010
I am not writing off MS at all. You can draw conclusions comparing Microsoft to Apple's comeback. I compare Microsoft to IBM's downfall, with an eventual recovery but never to its original state. Only time will tell which one of us is correct. I can only say in some key areas, Microsoft can only decline, desktop OS, Office suit, server OS because they have had such a dominating market share already. Its is very tough to keep that and even tougher to gain it back once lost. The difference today is MS if fighting not only a bad image, good competitors (Google, Apple) with lots of money and now the game is changing with free cloud applications like Google Apps eroding some of their core products like Exchange and Office. Its not that one competitor is taking them down, its the death of a thousand pin pricks. I am stunned on a weekly basis when I see or here of a regular joe computer user telling me they use something like Open Office???? Or that someone's company, usually small, has moved from Exchange to Google Apps/email. Its telling when joe user or some real estate office with 50 employees dumps their SBS setup and leaves MS. It would not surprise me if it were some technical or IT company or user.
robertsjoe
on Jan 19, 2010
A copy of iPhone. Plain and simple. Microsoft, innovating by shamelessly copying and stealing.
Dipsh t Admin
on Jan 20, 2010
RJ, how do you know? Have you seen it? rr0d, while you are correct in saying that the attack was able to be pulled off using Microsoft software, that thinking has two flaws. First, it's almost a given anyway, since the reach of Windows is above 90%. Most popular = most used = most attacked = most used in an attack. Secondly, if you cared to look at what the vulnerability was, Vista and 7 would easily mitigate against the attack. These are mostly pre SP3 XP computers running IE6. SP3 enables DEP, providing protection against this attack. So once again, the same people that crow about how XP is perfectly fine, we can see that it is not. I'd also be willing to take a wager that since the attacks originated in China, the percentage of pirated versions of Windows is extremely high.

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