Showing posts sorted by relevance for query Windows Phone 7. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query Windows Phone 7. Sort by date Show all posts

HTC Is Going To Release First Windows Phone 7 Handset (HTC Kaixuan) For China

HTC Is Going To Release  First Windows Phone 7 Handset (HTC Kaixuan) For China

Finally the Microsoft Mobile OS reached the key market of China. Taiwanese smart phone maker HTC has planed to release what could be the first Windows Phone 7 handset for mainland China. The HTC Kaixuan (triumphant return) will be launched later this month, the company said in a statement on Tuesday. HTC is already accepting pre-orders for the device on its online store in China for 4,399 yuan (US$698). Microsoft had said it expected its Windows Phone 7 mobile OS to launch in China during the first half of this year. Handset makers Nokia and ZTE also plan to release Windows Phone 7 smartphones in 2012.
HTC, however, said the Kaixuan is different in that its Windows Phone 7.5 OS has been localized for Chinese users. For instance, the Kaixuan comes installed with Sina Weibo, China's version of Twitter. Windows Phone 7 is however coming to China at a time when Google's Android OS is dominant, with a 56 percent share of the market in 2011, according to research firm Canalys. Android's open source nature has been the big reason behind the success of the OS, said Canalys research director Nicole Peng. This has allowed Chinese companies and developers to build a strong ecosystem around Android, resulting in localized versions of the OS and apps specially built for average Chinese consumers, she added. To compete with Android, Microsoft will need to develop the same kind of ecosystem for its Windows Phone 7 OS, which it so far lacks in China. "For Windows Phone 7, the biggest problem is the system is not localized enough," Peng said.



SHARE OUR NEWS DIRECTLY ON SOCIAL NETWORKS:-

Windows Phone 7 Connector For Mac By Microsoft Corporation


Windows Phone 7 Connector is a simple, easy-to-use application designed to sync your favorite media files from your Mac, with your Windows Phone 7 or Zune HD. You can also sync photos and videos you captured on your phone with your Mac, and when needed, update your Windows Phone 7 software. Microsoft’s latest release of the Windows Phone 7 Connector is said to fix a number of bugs, including the spotty connectivity that a number of users have reported.

Features:-

Full sync and import support for Apple Aperture software
Drag and drop import of files from Browse Device
Ringtone transfer support (for phones running Windows Phone 7.5 or later)
Improved video conversion process with user configuration options
Support for Windows Phone Marketplace (for phones running Windows Phone 7.5 or later)
Localization support for 13 additional languages
Improvements to backup and restore operations
Improved configuration for podcast sync and photo import
Improved iTunes import support in certain languages
Improved metadata support for videos

Fixes :-
Added additional error codes and help references for device update
Resolved connectivity issues with certain devices
Resolved album art display issues for certain device

For More Information & to Download Windows Phone 7 Connector For Mac Click Here 


SHARE OUR NEWS DIRECTLY ON SOCIAL NETWORKS:-

Microsoft Unveils Windows Phone 8 Codenamed “Apollo”

Microsoft Unveils Windows Phone 8 Codenamed “Apollo”

Few days ago in a report we have said that Microsoft is expected to launch it's own tablet (Microsoft Surface) while aiming to compete with iPad. Redmond based software and hardware giant just unveiled the next big step in its mobile software, Windows Phone 8 codenamed “Apollo” Windows Phone 8 brings the platform in line with other mobile OSes by adding support for muti-core processors, higher screen resolutions and newer wireless technologies like near field communication (NFC). Importantly, Microsoft has re-coded Windows Phone from the ground up for the new version. Previous versions of Windows Phone were based on Microsoft’s old mobile OS, Windows CE, but now the platform will share the same source code as the company’s coming desktop OS, Windows 8. That has big consequences for developers and consumers. For developers, it will be extremely easy to create a Windows Phone app if they already have a Windows 8 app that runs in the Metro environment (and vice versa). For consumers, it means more apps and better hardware to run them. It also has the effect of rendering every current Windows Phone obsolete, since those phones won’t be able to run the new software. They will, however, get an upgrade to Windows Phone 7 to 8. Windows Phone 8 adds support for many new hardware features. The most anticipated is support for multi-core devices, which have become common on both Android and iOS platforms. There’s also support for better screen resolutions, including 720p and 1,280 x 768 (WXGA). That’s not quite retina, but it’s better than the 800 x 480 screen of the Nokia Lumia 900, one of the current leading Windows Phones.

New Features At a Glance :-
  • Support for multi-core processors. Existing support for single core has been a major concern for some high-end users wanting faster processing ability.
  • Two new high-definition screen resolutions for the coming OS. They are 1280 x 768 and 1280 x 720.
  • Removeable micro-SD support for the first time to allow expansion of base storage.
  • A busier start screen with room for more live tiles than in Windows Phone 7.5. Today's Windows Phones have room for up to eight live tiles and WP8 will have room for up to 32 live tiles, which can be sized differently.
  • IT support. Adminstrators will see some gaps in the existing OS filled, including support for encryption and secure boot in WP8, as well as the ability to allow IT to deploy apps without going through Windows Marketplace.
  • Built-in Nokia Navteq map technology, with turn-by-turn driving instructions in many countries.
  • Full Internet Explorer 10 support with more features of HTML 5 added. Belfiore said that Windows Phone 8 with IE10 will download Web pages slightly faster than three other popular smartphones on the market.
  • Native code support, a feature seen as useful to developers eager to move their apps from iOS or Android to Windows Phone. 


-Source (Mshable & CW)




SHARE OUR NEWS DIRECTLY ON SOCIAL NETWORKS:-

Windows 8 Consumer Preview & Windows Server 8 Beta By Microsoft (Freely Downloadable)

Microsoft Released Windows 8 Consumer Preview & Windows Server 8 Beta (Freely Downloadable)
A double boom for Windows lovers. Software giant Microsoft has officially released the Consumer Preview Windows 8 & Windows Server 8 Beta.
Windows 8 Consumer Preview :-
The Windows 8 Consumer Preview offers a more robust experience for testing the world's most popular operating system and is available to the widest range of people yet following the initial release of the Windows 8 Developer Preview late last year. The Developer Preview received more than 3 million downloads.
"With Windows 8, we reimagined the different ways people interact with their PC and how to make everything feel like a natural extension of the device, whether using a Windows 8 tablet, laptop or all-in-one," said Steven Sinofsky, president of the Windows and Windows Live Division at Microsoft. "The Windows 8 Consumer Preview brings a no-compromises approach to using your PC."
The test "beta" version of the revamped system was introduced at the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, the planet's largest cell phone trade show, and borrows some of the look of Microsoft's Windows Phone 7 software for Windows 8. Windows 8 doesn't have the traditional "Start" menu, and applications are spread across a mosaic of tiles in a design Microsoft calls "Metro" -- seen as an attempt by the company as a scramble to preserve its market share. And executives said it powers up on PCs in eight seconds, much faster than the previous version.
What is New In Windows 8 Consumer Preview :-
  • Broad range of product changes and improvements. Since the Developer Preview in September, designed to preview the programming platform, Windows 8 has progressed across every dimension. From completing the user experience for touch, keyboard and mouse to refining the development platform, the Consumer Preview improves performance, quality and reliability across all subsystems.
  • With the added features, it represents a more complete view of the capabilities of Windows 8. Windows Store with new apps. The Windows 8 Consumer Preview marks the beta opening of the Windows Store, which is filled with a variety of new Metro style apps from both third-party developers and Microsoft. During the Consumer Preview, these apps are available to try and experience at no cost to users. The Windows Store will offer personalised recommendations, and Windows 8 gives users the ability to take their apps and settings with them across multiple PCs, making it easy to discover and try new apps while offering developers the greatest opportunity of any platform.
  • Connecting to the cloud across Windows-based PCs and Windows Phone 7. The Windows 8 Consumer Preview offers seamless integration with the content people care about across their Web services. An optional additional sign-on with a Microsoft account provides access to a host of features, including the ability to roam all settings, use cloud storage, communicate with email, calendar and contacts, and connect to a broad range of services. Your connection to the cloud works across your Windows-based PCs and your Windows 7 phones.
  • Internet Explorer 10 Platform Preview 5. The best way to experience the Web on Windows is with Internet Explorer 10. The browser has been re-imagined to create a new experience designed specifically for Windows 8 devices. It provides an edge-to-edge user interface that is all about less browser and more Web. Fast and fluid, Internet Explorer is hardware-accelerated to enable Web performance.
  • Preview of new hardware capabilities. At the event, Microsoft also showcased Windows 8 running on a wide range of new x86- and ARM-based reference hardware. This hardware will be available to select developers for trial and testing as previously announced.
Additional details can be found on the official website of Microsoft Windows. Also Microsoft makes Windows 8 Consumer Preview is made available for free Download

Windows Server 8 Beta :- 
The beta of Windows Server 8 is now available for IT professionals and software developers around the world to download. In the Windows Server official Blog Bill Laing, Corporate Vice President of Microsoft Corporation Said - In September we introduced Windows Server “8” with a preview to help developers and hardware partners prepare new and existing applications, systems and devices. The response from that community, along with hundreds of customers in our early adopters program, has been incredibly positive. A common theme of feedback has been how broad and deep the new capabilities are. Now is the time for you, IT professionals in organizations of all sizes, to get your hands on this new release, discover the new capabilities and contribute to the development of what we call the cloud-optimized OS.
I’ll highlight in this post just a few examples of new capabilities that you’ll want to explore. With the new Hyper-V we are taking virtualization above and beyond to provide a multi-tenant platform for cloud computing. For example, with Hyper-V Network Virtualization you can create virtual networks so different business units, or even multiple customers, can seamlessly share network infrastructure.  You will be able to move virtual machines and servers around without losing their network assignments. In Windows Server “8” we are delivering high availability and disaster recovery through software technology on much more cost effective hardware. For example, with File Server Transparent Failover you can now more easily perform hardware or software maintenance of nodes in a File Server cluster by moving file shares between nodes with little interruption to server applications that are storing data on those file shares. We’re also delivering a tremendous amount of new capabilities for multi-machine management and automation. You will want to explore the dramatic new improvements to Server Manager, as well as the new Windows PowerShell. With 2,300 commandlets provided out of the box, Windows PowerShell allows you to automate everything you can do manually with the user interface. And, with technologies like Intellisense, we’ve made it very easy for you to master all of that power. Additionally, Windows Server “8” provides a powerful server application platform that enables you to develop and host the most demanding of application workloads. For example, with .NET Framework 4.5 you can take advantage of new asynch language and library support to build server and web applications that scale far beyond what other platforms provide. Our new IIS 8 web server provides better security isolation and resource sand-boxing between applications, native support for web sockets, and the ability to host significantly more sites on a server.

For Additional Information & To Download Windows Server 8 Beta Click Here


SHARE OUR NEWS DIRECTLY ON SOCIAL NETWORKS:-

Windows Phone App Analyser By David Rook aka SecurityNinja

 Windows Phone App Analyser By David Rook aka SecurityNinja
David Rook, (aka SecurityNinja) has officially released Windows Phone App Analyser. Version 1.0 of the application allows for the evaluation of Windows Phone 7 .xap files and supports the automatic decompilation of the .dll files within them. The tool is inspired by static security analysis tool Agnitio, also from Security Ninja, and presents a tree view of the contents of the .xap file allowing manual review of the files; clicking on .dll files decompiles them to .cs files for viewing or passing to an automated review using CAT.NET or FxCop
The Windows Phone App Analyser also allows researchers to run Microsoft's own Capabilities Detection tool which works out what capabilities the app uses and allows comparison with the app's manifest declarations. 

Key Features Of Windows Phone App Analyser :- 
  • Analyse Windows Phone application source code from a security point of view.
  • Automatically decompile Windows Phone .xap application to easily analyse the original source code
  • Launch and review results from third party scanning tools (CAT.NET, FxCop and the capabilities detection tool).
Features such as keyword editor, store paths to scanning tools so you don’t have to browse to them, option to automatically execute automated scans etc., will be included in the next couple of releases. 

For detailed information & to download Windows Phone App Analyser Click Here

 

 

SHARE OUR NEWS DIRECTLY ON SOCIAL NETWORKS:-

Microsoft Admits to More Windows Phone Update Problems


Yet another problem has cropped up preventing some Windows Phone 7 users from getting two software updates, adding a new chapter to the update saga that started in February.
Microsoft acknowledged that some Samsung Focus owners in the U.S. haven't yet received notification that the updates are available for them. "They're looking into the situation, but I'm afraid there's not much to report yet," wrote Michael Stroh, a Microsoft employee who is answering questions posted to the comments section on the Windows Phone blog.
On another Microsoft forum, some Focus users who haven't received the updates noticed that they have a more recent build version of the phone. While people with version REV 1.3 have gotten the updates, some of those with REV 1.4 haven't.
In addition, Stroh said that Microsoft has stopped sending updates to the Omnia 7, a phone available in Europe. "The team discovered a technical issue with the update package for this model. The work of fixing and testing the package is nearly done, and the team hopes to resume update deliveries soon," he wrote.
These are the latest issues to plague Microsoft as it tries to send out new software to Windows Phone 7 handsets. Microsoft started in February by pushing out software designed to make the update process smoother. It pulled that update shortly after because it made some Samsung phones unusable.
The company then delayed the first update of substance, known as NoDo, which adds the capability to cut and paste, to try to avoid similar problems. It is now pushing out both pieces of software simultaneously.
In the U.S., the software is being delivered to all phones except the HTC Surround, according to astatus page from Microsoft about the process. The updates are being delivered in most international markets as well.

SHARE OUR NEWS DIRECTLY ON SOCIAL NETWORKS:-

Why did Microsoft spend $8.5bn on Skype? (Detailed Report)


Microsoft Skype
In a bold move, Microsoft acquires Nokia and catapults itself to the top of the smartphone world. The full integration of Windows Phone 7 software into Nokia hardware will result in a better user experience for customers, a zero-fragmentation platform for developers, easier deployment of a smaller number of SKUs for retailers, and more reliable update management for carriers.
It's worked before. Microsoft's hardware/software integrated devices, Xbox and Kinect, are enjoying strong revenue growth and great margins: $1.9bn revenue last quarter, 50% more than last year, with 10% operating profit.
In a prepared statement, Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer says:
I welcome Stephen Elop back into my executive staff. His brief leave of absence has allowed us to more fully explore the possibilities of combining the best smartphone hardware, Nokia's, with the best OS, Windows Phone 7. Google's anticompetitive Android free and open licensing practices unfairly tilted the playing field against our better product; they made it impossible for us to sell Windows Phone 7 software. Instead, we're now ready to do battle with Apple from a superior position: a stronger product carrying the Windows Everywhere flag, wider carrier distribution around the world, and more retail partners in US, Europe, and BRIC nations. With our acquisition of Nokia, we're now a $100bn company, back where we belong: at the top of the high-tech industry.
When I woke up, I heard a different story: Microsoft bought Skype for $8.5bn.
We all know Skype: free voice and video calls from computer to computer, plus paid services if you need to dial a phone. As Skype prepared for its long-awaited IPO, we got financial data from their S-1filing with the SEC. S-1s are always instructive: This is usually the first time a private company opens the kimono – and the SEC watches closely as you prepare to sell shares to widows and orphans.
The Profit & Loss statement in Skype's S-1 looks like this:
With revenue of $860m in 2010, Skype's operating profit is a modest $20m, with a net loss of $69m due to interest expenses stemming from $686m in long-term debt. Except for in 2008, when they saw a $42m profit, Skype has racked up huge losses, including $1.4bn in 2007 and $370m in 2009.
(Technically, these figures straddle two different corporate structures because of Skype's complicated history. Started in 2003 as an independent European company, Skype was acquired by eBay in 2005 for a price pegged between $2.6bn and $3.1bn. After the acquisition, eBay discovered its ownership of Skype was "encumbered": A crucial piece of Skype's technology was owned by another company, Joltid, which was essentially in the hands of Niklas Zennström, one of Skype's founders. eBay settled with Joltid for about 14% of Skype. This caused wags to say the crafty Skype founders sold the company twice – and it certainly didn't make the ex-management consultants running eBay look so sharp. In 2009, eBay sold 70% of Skype to private equity and venture investors in a transaction that valued the company at $2.75bn.)
Why did Microsoft pay $8.5bn – 10 times the company's revenue – for a business that has changed hands so many times, never made money, and comes with substantial debt? (Admittedly, the $686m debt number is manageable – for Microsoft).
One eloquent answer comes from Brad Horowitz, a partner at the Andreessen Horowitz venture firm started by Netscape's founder. Horowitz invokes the network effect: A large number of users attracts more users and so on, in a kind of gravitation well:
500,000 new registered users per day – 170 million connected users – 30 million users communicating on the Skype platform concurrently – 209 billion voice and video minutes in 2010
And he concludes:
Today, I tip my hat to an old rival, Microsoft. By acquiring Skype, Microsoft becomes a much stronger player in mobile and the clear market leader in internet voice and video communications. More importantly, Microsoft gets a team, ably led by the exceptional Tony Bates, that can compete with anyone.
Well, this is a nice encomium to the guys who transformed the venture firm's $50m investment in Skype a few months ago into a $150m payday. My own venture investor hat is tipped to MM. Andreessen and Horowitz.
But not so much to Steve Ballmer.
Looking at Microsoft's recent quarterly numbers, we see the continuation of a now old and getting older tradition: losses in the Online Services Division. Only a few weeks ago, TechCrunch wondered: When Will Microsoft's Internet Bloodbath End? Business Insider provided a vivid illustration for the problem:
In just the past 12 months, Microsoft has lost $2.5bn in its online business. They spend $2 to make $1 in revenue. Buying and "integrating" Skype will make the picture even redder.
So, again, why spend $8.5bn on Skype?
The official explanation is that Skype will be targeted at professional users. For these, Microsoft already has a product called Lync, although not many have heard of it. And they have Messenger for consumers. (Actually, it's Windows Live Messenger for Windows and Microsoft Messenger for the Mac.) I don't think it's unfair to ask how, how well, and when Microsoft's Grand Unified Messaging platform will effectively exist, and how it will be monetised.
Given Microsoft's track record, there isn't much evidence of its ability to perform such integration, nor of its ability to move a big platform forward at a competitive pace, certainly not faster than what Google seems able to do with Google Voice, Talk and Google Video for Business.
The theory must be that every Windows PC will come with "Skype inside". But that isn't much progress: There are already 170 million connected Skype users, and 500,000 new registrations everyday. And imagine how carriers will react when they see a Skype client bundled with every Windows Phone 7 device, further pushing them towards their preordained destination: dumb pipes.
Today, Skype is joyfully used in both consumer and business environments. It's not perfect, but the price is right and Skype is now a verb. The next thing we know, Microsoft will take a good if imperfect service and "improve" it by integrating it with Office or SharePoint (a good product on its own). And, at some point, Microsoft will try to make us pay for it. In more ways than one.
But, again, the history isn't there. Microsoft's ability to successfully charge for a formerly free product is lacking.
Reactions to the Skype deal have been negative, if not downright derisive. Many see the Skype acquisition as more evidence that Microsoft can't innovate, or even effectively copy and out-implement any more. One local exec asked, rhetorically, how much it'd take to re-implement Skype. $100m? $1bn? It's not a question of money. Microsoft spends tons in R&D: 15% of sales, about $9bn per year. (Apple spends 2% of revenue, less than $2bn.) Think of iTunes: it's been out there for close to 10 years and there's no iTunes clone coming out of Redmond. Microsoft has to buy what it no longer has the people or the culture to create – or copy.
David Pogue, the NY Times' tech guru, thinks this acquisition will go where so many went before: to failure by mediocrity and to poisoning by matrix management.
Ben Brooks, a Microsoft shareholder – and not the disgruntled kind – comments on the Skype deal and concludes: The Ballmer Days Are Over. Perhaps, but who can tackle the job of turning Microsoft around?
In last year's 30 May Monday Note, I wrote Ballmer had opened the "Second Envelope". He was running out of explanations: first blame your predecessor, then fire a few subordinates. Next, you're out of excuses and out the door.
Since then, a few more subordinates have decided to "spend more time with their families": CTO Ray Ozzie, who wrote a long, long farewell memo (don't do that, it doesn't make you look good); tablet executive Bill Mitchell; Bob Muglia, president of the server and tools division. We'll exclude Stephen Elop, the president of the business division who went on to rescue Nokia, as he might have left of his own volition – or of his seeing Ballmer looking for the next excuse.
Last year, I noted Microsoft's stock had been stagnant for almost 10 years. Things haven't improved since then:
In the past 12 months, Microsoft's stock has fallen by 11% while the Nasdaq climbed 25%, Google 7%, and Apple 44%.
Having run out of ideas and envelopes, is Ballmer spending $8.5bn of Microsoft's $50bn cash, its biggest acquisition so far, as a desperate tentative to keep the company, or himself, in the game?



SHARE OUR NEWS DIRECTLY ON SOCIAL NETWORKS:-

Microsoft blocks updates for cracked versions of Windows Phone 7


Microsoft is constantly and successfully combats pirated copies of its operating systems. Recently, they decided to apply their skills to its new operating system Windows Phone 7, as the company reported in its official blog.
Smartphone owners, upgrade your phone based on WP7 any way different from the official way to upgrade the firmware now can not get operating system updates. With utility Zune is no longer possible to install firmware 7392, which was released on May 3 and includes important bug fixes. All new firmware will automatically check for software smartphone and if it detects illegal software then install the new firmware version will be discontinued.
The latest version of flash, buyout will install smartphone with cracked software - 7390 (NoDo) released in March.
For the first time Windows Phone 7 was hacked in November 2010. This allowed users to install applications from any source, not from the official store Microsoft. At the end of the week, program to crack Chevron WP has been removed from easy access by developers. The reason for such action was an agreement with Microsoft, the deal were not disclosed.
Nonetheless, the creators of Chevron WP7, in his twitter reported that Microsoft is still considering the possibility to allow users to update the firmware hacked versions of smartphones.

SHARE OUR NEWS DIRECTLY ON SOCIAL NETWORKS:-

Microsoft Patches Windows Phone Against Comodo Hack


Microsoft is rolling out updates to devices and platforms, including Windows Phone 7, affected by the fraudulent SSL certificates issued by Comodo. It is nice to see Microsoft both willing and able to get updates out to its phone platform in a timely manner. After the delays of the February 2011 update and the March NoDo update, people were beginning to wonder.
Just this week Microsoft started rolling out NoDo to the HTC Surround on AT&T and to customers of Optus in Australia. Telestra customers are in the "scheduling" phase which means they should get the update in a few days. NoDo was released in March, so for some this is coming six weeks late. 
As a result of being forced to wait by some carriers that didn't take their customers' desire for copy and paste seriously, some people took a shortcut. There was a hack (by the same people that gave us Chevron7) that would download the update directly from Microsoft, bypassing the carrier entirely. Microsoft warned that this wasn't a smart thing to do. The consequences of this rogue update process may leave the phone in an unpredictable state and prevent further updates. Turns out Microsoft was right.
The Comodo issue involved mail.google.com, login.live.com, login.skype.com, www.google.com, and five other popular sites. While Comodo has added the bad certificates to its certificate revocation list, Microsoft decided to patch Windows Phone 7 as well as most of its supported desktop platforms. Windows Mobile 6.x, the Kin, and all Zune devices are affected as well, but no word yet on whether or not they will get updated. 
As Microsoft began releasing the new update, dubbed 7392, it discovered that phones that had the Chevron7/NoDo hack wouldn't take the update. Their response? "We told you so" about sums it up. Honestly, I see no other reasonable response for Microsoft to make. Why should they spend any resources customizing an update to work on a device that has been hacked and configured in an unexpected way?
That said, the creators of Chevron7 developed another fix to undo the mess they made and Microsoft worked with them to verify it put the devices back the way they were so 7392, and presumably future updates, would take.


SHARE OUR NEWS DIRECTLY ON SOCIAL NETWORKS:-

Microsoft Ending Support for Windows Mobile 6.x

Earlier this week, Microsoft announced Windows 7.1 Mango, their latest and greatest software. Well, amidst all the fanfare, the company also quietly revealed the end of support for the older Windows Mobile 6.x software, a move which will be taking place on July 15th.

This means that several things will be going down on the 15th, here are the specifics:
  • “App Submission and Management. On July 15, 2011, we will no longer be accepting new Windows Mobile 6.x applications or application updates. In addition, it will no longer be possible to modify prices, metadata, or other information. However, you will still be able to remove your apps by contacting support.
  • App Distribution. Even though app submission will stop on July 15, users will still be able to purchase and download your Windows Mobile 6.x applications through the Windows Marketplace for Mobile.
  • App Reporting. Sales and download reports will continue to be available for your Windows Mobile 6.x applications through the App Hub after July 15.
  • Developer Payouts. Developer payouts will continue to be processed in accordance with the provisions of the Windows Phone Marketplace Application Provider Agreement.”
In short, the marketplace will still be available post-July 15th but Microsoft will no longer be accepting applications for the dated software. So, if you’ve been toting a Windows Mobile 6.x device around, it might be time to start thinking about making the upgrade to Windows Phone 7, especially now that developers are being forced to abandon ship.

SHARE OUR NEWS DIRECTLY ON SOCIAL NETWORKS:-

Microsoft, Skype Deal Could Exploit Synergies with Nokia, Enterprise



Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer is known for his public exuberance, punctuating keynote addresses with the sort of high-decibel verbal fireworks commonly associated with high-school coaches trying to goad a touchdown.
“Developers! Developers! Developers!” is one of his more famous refrains.
As Microsoft headed into the final stages of its acquisition negotiations with VOIP (voice over IP) and video-conferencing provider Skype, Ballmer’s shout to any Microsoft executives reluctant to embrace the deal might have been: “Synergy! Synergy! Synergy!”
Microsoft is paying a lot for Skype: $8.5 billion. In return for that hefty chunk of change, it will become a business division within Microsoft, headed by Skype’s current CEO Tony Bates. Skype in its new form will support Microsoft products, such as Windows Phone and Xbox Kinect, and integrate across the breadth of Microsoft’s already-extensive portfolio—including the Lync unified-communications platform. 
But that’s not necessarily enough to justify the biggest-ever payout in Microsoft’s history. According to some analysts, the secret sauce of the Skype deal—so to speak—is its potential to bolster Microsoft’s recent partnerships with other companies, as well as its relationship to the enterprise.
“Of [Skype’s] 633 million users, fewer than 8 million are paying users. No matter. What is important is that many of these users would love to make free calls on a mobile phone,” Mike Gualtieri, an analyst with Forrester, wrote in a May 11 corporate blog posting. “Microsoft’s plan to acquire Skype fits in perfectly with its recent partnership with Nokia because both offer incredible reach.”
In other words, Skype could allow Microsoft to boost its competitiveness in the mobile realm against both Apple’s iPhone and the growing family of Google Android devices. “There is no stopping Apple when it comes to mobile and cultural dominance,” he wrote. “But Microsoft could displace Google as the alternative based on the great UX provided by Windows Phone 7, the Nokia partnership and the Skype deal.” 
Whether or not that takes place—despite some analyst assertions that Windows Phone will increasingly dominate the market, Microsoft’s share of smartphones reportedly remains low—the Skype deal could allow Microsoft to maintain its grip on a segment very near and dear to its heart, or at least its bottom line: the enterprise.
That is, if Microsoft manages to swallow Skype without too much indigestion, according to a May 11 blog post by Yankee Group analyst Emily Green: “Two of the many reasons these things fail after the photo-op: a) they buy something sizzling hot, hoping to reinvigorate their own less dynamic offerings and culture—but end up suffocating the entrepreneurial spirit in the acquired firm that made it sexy in the first place. Or, b) they buy something that’s only available because it’s on the ropes.”
That being said, Green views the Skype-Microsoft deal as capable of sidestepping those pitfalls, if only because supple, lightweight VOIP and video-conferencing assets can serve Microsoft’s designs on the enterprise.
Specifically, as those enterprises shed physical infrastructure, “their leaders have to ask some very tough questions about investing in conventional hard-wired telecommunications infrastructure.” That, in combination with employees’ seemingly unstoppable desire to bring consumer software into the enterprise, could create an opportunity for Microsoft to “tightly weave Skype’s functionality into its corporate offerings” in ways that meet the approval of executives and IT administrators. In turn, that could give Redmond the opening it needs to “maintain relevance with the new breed of enterprises being born in this century.”
However, Green concedes that earning back the enormous costs associated with the acquisition “is another story.”
Skype found itself an acquisition target in 2005, when eBay agreed to pay $2.6 billion in cash and stock for the then two-year-old company. Four years later, a team of private investors—including Silver Lake Partners and Andreessen Horowitz—took it off the auction Website’s hands for $1.9 billion in cash. Skype had reportedly been raising money for an IPO, but that offering was delayed after the company appointed Bates to the CEO role in October.
For that substantial bump-up in cash, Microsoft is purchasing one of the Web’s most recognizable consumer brands—albeit one that’s faced increased competition from Google and others in recent quarters.
But one of Skype’s private investors took to the blogosphere to discount that competition as a threat. In a May 10 posting on his personal blog, Andreessen Horowitz co-founder and partner Ben Horowitz suggested that Google’s attempt to market a similar VOIP offering had failed to stop Skype’s momentum: “What was the result of this effort? … Skype new users and usage growth has accelerated since Google’s launch.”
Apple’s Facetime, he added, also failed to blunt Skype’s momentum: “How did that impact Skype’s use on the iPhone? 50 million users have downloaded Skype’s iPhone product since the release of Apple’s FaceTime.”
If you believe Horowitz’s assertions, then Microsoft managed to sidestep the potential acquisition dangers outlined by Green. But how well the company will integrate its newest property—and create synergy with its partners—remains the question of the hour. 

SHARE OUR NEWS DIRECTLY ON SOCIAL NETWORKS:-

Microsoft Opens Up About Mobile Tracking



Microsoft recently responded to questions regarding its storage and use of location data on Windows devices, in marked contrast to Apple and Google as growing controversy over mobile tracking heats up
When asked by CNET if it stores location information on users' phones, Microsoft promptly responded with specifics about how it does so minimally and securely.
The Redmond, Wash.-based company said only user-allowed, location-based apps collect location data from its phones. Those apps' data isn't stored on the phone itself, though, and so can't be hacked by third parties or synced back to the company.
Of course this data is stored somewhere, but only when "the application or user makes a request for location information," the company said.
In technical terms, Microsoft's mobile OS will transmit a Windows Phone device's unique identification number, along with the phone's signal strength, a randomly generated device ID, and GPS coordinates, but only if someone decides to run a location-based app. This information is all encrypted, according to Microsoft.
This differs from Apple's practice of recording the locations of iPhone and iPad devices in an unencrypted file on the device, which can result in more than a year's worth of data being quietly logged, according to two researchers who recently discovered the feature in Apple mobile devices. Google's Android devices collect tracking data, but records only the last few dozen locations.
These practices have resulted in a firestorm of outcry, with senators and House representatives, consumers, and even international governments demanding answers to sensitive questions on what the data is being used for and why it is being gathered in the first place.
Apple is now being sued for violating Fourth Amendment rights as well.
Microsoft's quick, pro-active response contrasts to Apple and Google's relative silence upon being asked similar questions about their tracking policies this week. Google recently responded to the Wall Street Journal to questions, insisting however that the data is anonymized without going into detail about exactly how. But Apple has stayed officially silent on the matter.
The software company's relative openness about its data gathering practices may cast it in a favorable light as attention only intensifies, especially as members of Congress begin to scrutinize privacy issues and demand answers not just from Apple and Google, but other mobile companies.
This, along with burgeoning governmental concerns about data and privacy in general, only means that the question will not go away. Microsoft's response may be its way of opening a conversation on its own terms, and highlights its relative security when it comes to location data collection.
The company could use this good PR about now, as they trail behind competitors Apple and Google. It trails these two companies in a distant third in sales in the smartphone market.
It may be too much to hope Microsoft's relative respect for consumer privacy will boost Windows 7 Phone sales greatly, but the company can perhaps claim some high ground in what continues to be a controversial matter.

SHARE OUR NEWS DIRECTLY ON SOCIAL NETWORKS:-

Nokia Maps Compromised

After Nokia drive get hacked now the Nokia XDA developper has confirmed that Nokia Map get hacked Nokia Maps and is now available for all Windows Phone 7 (WP7) devices . The new app launched with the Lumia 710 and 800 would very soon be available for other WP7 devices as well according to Nokia, but now you can test it out now by downloading the XAP file.
The app can only be installed in a unlocked WP7 device (dev-unlock or ChevronWP7 Labs). Nokia Maps is was developed specifically for their new line of WP7 phones and Nokia were banking on this as one of their key selling points. Now that two exclusive apps have already been leaked at a very early stage even before the phones hit the market, it hurt the sales of the new devices as they loose some of the exclusivity. At this point, Nokia can’t really do much about this, but just wait and hope that the new Lumia duo has enough going for it for them to stand out in the competition.


-News Source (Engadget, Tech2)


SHARE OUR NEWS DIRECTLY ON SOCIAL NETWORKS:-

Google Vs. Microsoft (For Cloud)


Google has locked horns with Microsoft in a high-stakes showdown to dominate what could be the next great mother lode of Internet-derived profits. Each is seeking to attract businesses to lease its hosted versions of essential communications and office programs, instead of maintaining these basic tools in house. It's an emerging form of digital office outsourcing — often referred to as cloud computing — one which Microsoft's outspoken CEO, Steve Ballmer, has vowed to own. "At Microsoft, for the cloud, we're all in," Ballmer told an auditorium full of University of Washington computer science students last spring. "It's just a great time to be all-in and really drive the next generation of technology advances." The software giant recently released a near-final test version of Office 365, a hybrid of its ubiquitous productivity software suite. Tuned for the Internet, Office 365 extends the slow-but-steady advances the company has been making since 2002 in delivering business programs over the Web, much as a utility delivers water or electricity. But now that's being challenged again by search-advertising company Google. At its recent Google I/O developer conference, Google made a move to steal some of Ballmer's thunder. There, Google unveiled Chromebooks, stripped-down computers optimized to run its hosted messaging, calendaring and collaboration tools. "Chromebooks is actually a huge leap forward for cloud computing," says Dave Girouard, Google's president of enterprise. "We're excited about putting more pieces of the puzzle together. Our aim is to be No.1 in cloud computing." Delivering software over the Internet is nothing new. Cloud computing occurs when an individual accesses services housed on a third-party server rather than a local PC. Consumers use cloud computing with free Web mail services and popular social-networking sites. The race among Amazon, Google and Apple to popularize cloud-based storage of your music collection is yet another example. And Salesforce.com and NetSuite have long supplied businesses with specialized customer relationship management and bookkeeping programs as hosted services. Yet, a confluence of developments has buoyed the big pushes by Microsoft and Google to extend cloud computing to basic workplace tools: e-mail, messaging, calendaring, word processing, spreadsheets, slide presentations and file sharing. Many companies that hunkered down during the recession are eager to refresh aging systems. Security has become a major pain, and everything is getting more complex as mobile-device use rises. And capital spending budgets are as tight as ever. A desire to become more efficient and reduce long-term costs was identified as an influential factor by 60% of information technology buyers from government agencies recently surveyed by CompTIA, a non-profit association for IT pros. For the tech companies wrestling for the future of office software, the stakes are high. Tech researcher Gartner forecasts that global spending on e-mail, collaboration and cloud-based applications will more than double to $20.7 billion by 2014, up from $9.8 billion this year. 


Cloud savings 
Now cloud computing is getting a second look by often-conservative IT buyers because Internet connectivity has become ubiquitous, and data storage, dirt cheap, says Wes Miller, industry analyst at research firm Directions on Microsoft. "But the real reason people are flocking to it has to do with saving money, whether directly or indirectly." In many cases, the first basic tool companies look to outsource is e-mail. Shane Ochotny, tech architect at Tampa General Hospital, had four technicians working full time maintaining e-mail for 7,000 employees, including 1,000 physicians, spread through the hospital, a clinic and separate administrative offices. After testing several hosted e-mail services, including Google's Gmail, Ochotny chose to outsource e-mail, instant messaging and video conferencing to Microsoft; the software giant first began offering hosted e-mail in 2002, and it added other services in 2005 and 2008. That freed four technicians to create a customized program that provides instant e-mail access to new workers. Next up for the hospital's techs: developing a way to integrate video conferencing with instant messaging and voice over Internet. While some analysts worry that cloud outsourcing will ultimately cut employment, Tampa General's experience is likely more the norm. "Moving stuff that isn't central to the business into the cloud frees up IT people to work on systems that are central," says Rob Helm, analyst at Directions on Microsoft. The hospital is one of the early testers of Office 365, which features a lightweight version of Office that can be accessed by workers from any device with an Internet browser. Ochotny is prepping a test to see if Microsoft's approach to cloud computing — which continues to require traditional desktop PC software in combination with new hosted services — can be tweaked to let doctors and nurses instant message each other on their iPhones, as well as BlackBerry, Android and Windows Phone 7 smartphones. "Since we spend less time on maintenance, we can focus on innovation and better use of existing tools," says Ochotny. Microsoft's huge advantage over Google: "The sheer number of companies of literally every size for whom Office is the de facto productivity suite," says Charles King, principal analyst at Pund-IT. "After years of fumbling with its online strategy, Microsoft now has a viable plan with Office 365 to entice enterprises to dip a toe in." 


Google’s cloud 
Google's strategy is 100% cloud-based. Basic versions of Gmail and its office productivity suite, Google Apps, are free to consumers; businesses pay a monthly per-user fee for commercial versions. It all runs through a Web browser on servers owned and maintained by Google. This arrangement works especially well for businesses looking to extend Internet communications and file sharing to managers in far-flung operations or to workers on the factory floor or out in the field. Jason's Deli, a Beaumont, Texas-based restaurant chain, uses Google Docs to schedule meetings, share reports and plan events among managers working in 230 eateries, five corporate offices and two food distribution hubs. "Our use cases are wide and varied," says Kevin Verde, chief information officer of Jason's Deli. "We currently have 10,000 documents that our users are collaborating on using Google Docs." When Google approached Jason's Deli about testing Chromebooks, Verde says, he was skeptical that a device built solely to access a Web browser, and which could not store files nor run applications as a tablet or laptop PC could, would prove useful. But he distributed test models to sales reps who spend all day pitching catering services to schools, churches and local businesses. He was pleasantly surprised. Using Chromebooks, the reps could tap into spreadsheets and monitor successful sales campaigns in other regions. They could access customer relationship management programs hosted by Salesforce.com. Verde is now a Chromebook fan. "The administration side of the Chromebook is almost effortless, and that is a big deal for corporate IT," he says. But can Google make any meaningful encroachment on Microsoft's turf? Chromebook, while intriguing, is going head-to-head against tablets and netbooks, priced roughly the same. "The competitive landscape has been complicated by the emergence of tablets, particularly the iPad," analyst King says. "Though tablets essentially offer the same browser-centric experience Google is promoting, they also enhance the user experience via a wide variety of apps." Google remains undaunted. In an effort to entice Microsoft Office fans to give Google Docs a whirl, the search giant in March 2010 reportedly spent $25 million to acquire start-up DocVerse, launched by two former Microsoft engineers. DocVerse subsequently came out in February as Google Connect, a free browser plug-in that lets users access Microsoft Office files using Google Apps. "It really knocks down some of the last reasons people have for not wanting to use Google," says Girouard. "This makes it easier." Microsoft swiftly counterpunched., with officials lambasting Google Connect in the tech media for ruining the formatting of complicated Office docs. Lately, they've been spinning Connect as a concession that Office cannot be displaced. "Google was trying to shoehorn a consumer offering, Google Apps, into an enterprise value proposition, by telling customers, 'You don't need Office anymore,'" says Tim O'Brien, general manager of Microsoft's platform strategy. "That strategy failed. So now they've changed tack and are telling customers, 'We don't think Office is going anywhere soon, so let us show you how our product can work alongside of it.'" Maybe, but Microsoft can't get complacent, analysts say. Google claims more than 30 million "active users" of Google Apps at some 3million businesses, with more than 3,000 new sign-ups every day. That includes midsize companies, such as Virgin America and National Geographic, and a few large ones, such as Jaguar Land Rover, Motorola andInterContinental Hotels. "Google is a serious wannabe contender," says King. "The search giant has to be taken seriously if only because it has deep pockets and a strong will."

SHARE OUR NEWS DIRECTLY ON SOCIAL NETWORKS:-

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...