Nokia Makes the Case for Instagram on Windows Phone 8

Nokia puts its weight behind the push to get a popular photo-sharing app on Windows Phone 8

Nokia this week publicly prodded Instagram to release a version of its blockbuster photography app for Windows Phone 8. And its offering a preview version of an Instagram-like app that it hopes will show Instagram the Windows Phone community’s love of good photography.

“We’ve been listening, and we know you all love Instagram,” Nokia’s Paul Coombes writes in a post to the Conversations by Nokia blog. “The only way for us to show how much the Nokia community really care about bringing this world class app to Windows Phone, is by having a little fun and showing Instagram just how passionate you all are.”

Earlier in the week, Nokia released a preview version of #2InstaWithLove, its Instagram-like app for Windows Phone 7.5 and 8. #2InstaWithLove provides a single photo filter, the classic polaroid filter, and lets you share your creations on Facebook and Twitter (and, on the latter, using the #2InstaWithLove hashtag).

You can download #2InstaWithLove from the Windows Phone Store.

Additionally, Nokia has linked to a Change.org petition to getting Instagram on Windows Phone 8. If you’re interested in making this happen, please do sign the petition.

Nokia’s heart is in the right place of course, and Instagram should be available to Windows Phone users. The problem is that releasing such a thing going forward could ultimately do as much harm as good: As with the recent release of “Angry Birds Seasons,” an Instagram release on Windows Phone, while desirable, would also serve to highlight the huge time delta between these releases on iPhone and Android, and on Windows Phone. That is, Instagram was first released in late 2010, over two years ago. So was Angry Birds Seasons, in fact.

I’m no fan of Instagram. But overall, it’s pretty obvious that we need such apps on Windows Phone, if only to remove one more item from the list of supposed reasons customers continue to look elsewhere.

Discuss this Article 14

neonspark
on Mar 6, 2013

I bet the day after instagram makes it to windows phone, will re-write their windows phone reviews to say it now lacks XYZ app to justify their negative stance on it.

nokia and MSFT are chasing ghosts. they need to go after the up and coming startups, so that once everybody has moved off instagram to the next big thing, they won't be left behind again.

finalewiz
on Mar 6, 2013

Paul, do you find yourself missing any particular apps in the Windows Phone ecosystem? I would love to hear your analysis between iOS, Android, and Windows Phone.

pthurrott
on Mar 6, 2013

Honestly, not really. I think the app thing is a temporary condition and a red herring.

Manu
on Mar 6, 2013

Paul, I think history (the past 2 years of WP) show that it isn't a temporary condition. I am very happy with my WP 7, 7.5 and now WP8 experience, but I do think the app situation is an issue and more than a red herring. As a very basic example, if I want to deposit a check for my bank I either need to mail it in or borrow my girlfriend's iPhone to use the app.

In my day to day usage I don't find the app situation to be terrible, but the occasions when I'd like an airline app, bank app, or new game, it is disappointing that these are not available. To someone who is not invested in the Microsoft ecosystem, I think these are issues that are a deal breaker.

GoodThings2Life
on Mar 7, 2013

Apps on portable devices serve one purpose and one purpose only... to prove that their web sites are NOT mobile friendly. As websites become more and more HTML5-driven and drop Flash and other non-standard and non-touch-friendly designs, we won't need apps at all... developers should just design usable web sites for mobile platforms and be done with it.

Moreover, on Windows 8, it's actually the better experience since we can still run Flash (and Java on Pro), so no compromises. Who needs apps when I can just visit the site natively?

Trappist
on Mar 6, 2013

Not to sound cynical, but no-one outside the US has ever even heard of Instagram, so in the larger scheme of things, it is hardly too relevant. Locally it may matter.

Speaking of which, in Europe I see many local (and hence properly localized) apps (such as public services, banks, magazines, etc.) now becoming available for WP and some even being advertised specifically as WP-supported -- which never happened for WP in 2012, and which will never happen for, say, Blackberry. But then, in countries like Italy and Poland WP market share is already above 10%, so why not.

Nevertheless, this is a good deal more important development than the raw number of apps available.

Instagram may be welcome, but the platform will only succeed with local developers creating local apps for local needs globally.

bottekott
on Mar 6, 2013

I have no idea where you live. But Instagram is huuuuge here in Norway.

Plazma10
on Mar 6, 2013

The app won't download on my Dell Venue Pro running 7.8

Plazma10
on Mar 6, 2013

Does this only run on Nokia phones? The marketplace won't let me install it on my Dell Venue Pro running 7.8 . Hope the prodding at Instagram works - or at least I hope the browser based client soon allows uploading.

ian.aldrighetti
on Mar 6, 2013

You know what else Nokia should attempt to make the case for? An official Facebook app. The one Microsoft makes (or pays someone to make), quite bluntly, sucks. It's slow and freezes a lot... It's so bad I've resorted to just pinning the Facebook mobile site to my Start screen (I use the app WebApps, which has nicer tiles for web apps).

Waethorn
on Mar 6, 2013

"its offering a preview version of an Instagram-like app that it hopes will show Instagram the Windows Phone community’s love of good photography."

Instagram and "good photography" don't belong in the same context. The Lomo is dead. Leave that type of photo to rot in faded magazines from the 70's.

Hoomgar
on Mar 7, 2013

I know I may be an exception but I have yet to need to do something that I could not do on my WF7.8 Nokia 710. That includes all my banking, payments, paypal transactions when needed, directions, mapping, games, the list goes on. The weakest link in my WF ecosystem for me is the really lame and sifunctional Facebook app. And since I am not a super big FB user it really hasn't been that much of an issue.

ingenuity1
on Mar 7, 2013

This "app thing" is hugely important. In fact, it is the single most important "thing". Operating systems run apps. Ecosystems host apps. Developers create apps. Development platforms exist for apps. Apps matter. And to quote my favorite blogger, "People don't want the thing that looks like the thing but isn't the thing."

I want Pandora on my Windows Phone 7.5. I want Flipboard too. And I do not want some web-app developed for Safari and Chrome that works horribly. I want a real app. And I'm not alone. Last.fm is not Pandora. Pulse makes me want to cry. I don't Instagram, but I totally feel for the poor sap with a Windows Phone that wants to.

We Windows users laughed at the poor Mac users for years and flaunted our DirectX video games and supperior "Applications". Now that "Applications" are "Apps" you're going to try to tell me it doesn't matter - that it's somehow different.

It's not a supposed reason. It's THE reason. If it weren't for Adobe "Applications" Apple and it's Mac may not have survived. Lack of applications and ecosystem nearly killed them off. And it'll be THE reason WP dies too.

17thMustang
on Mar 8, 2013

I've been using fhotoroom, which is very similar to Instagram on the windows phone. You so see some interesting takes on life around the world, but likewise there is a current obession of taking a perfectly good photograph and ruining it with effects that back in film days meant a either film damage or dyes going off over time. Its like taking a freshly washed car and then throwing a bucket of muck over it.

Its in a way like a front facing camera, nice to have, ticks a box, but do we really need it?

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