Showing posts with label MICROSOFT. Show all posts

Microsoft announces mobile apps store, backup service  

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Microsoft will introduce an application store with its newest version of Windows Mobile software, it planned to announce at Mobile World Congress, where it also was to formally open a limited beta for its My Phone data backup offering.

Windows Marketplace for Mobile will come with Windows Mobile 6.5, the newest version of the operating system, and will give users access to thousands of applications, said Scott Rockfeld, group product manager for Windows Mobile. Microsoft also introduced Windows Mobile 6.5 at MWC on Monday, saying the software should become available on phones early in the second half of the year.

While applications stores have been around for some time, Apple’s easy-to-use App Store, accessible from the iPhone, popularized the idea of buying and downloading mobile applications. Now, independent companies, operators and mobile phone makers are building stores that are accessible from handsets and that offer wireless downloads.

Nokia also planned to announce at MWC a new application store that will carry content and programs for users of its phones that run the S60 and S40 operating systems.

Offering an applications store is “table stakes” these days, said Sean Ryan, an analyst at IDC. However, Microsoft hasn’t disclosed a lot of details about its store, such as how easy it will be to use. “So there are still a lot of factors out there. But as a concept it’s a good thing and something they need to do,” he said.

While Windows Mobile phones come in many different form factors, Microsoft offers developers a module they can use to ensure their applications work across all the phones, Rockfeld said. That means most applications in the store should work on most phones.

He sought to minimize the potential conflict between Microsoft and its device-maker customers and operator partners, some of which may also be building application stores. “This isn’t the end-all be-all,” Rockfeld said. “Handango will be there, mobile operators will have their stores. We’re not forcing anyone to make the decision to come to us.”

In addition to the Handango mobile application Web site, PocketGear launched a store for Windows Mobile applications last week. PocketGear also runs a store for Palm applications.

Microsoft has already begun doing outreach to the developer community to let them know how the store works and how they can get their applications into it, Rockfeld said.

Another new service that Microsoft will offer and that the company planned to discuss at MWC isMy Phone. Details about the mobile backup service leaked out in early February. It is now available in a limited invitation-only beta, Rockfeld said.

My Phone will be built into Windows Mobile 6.5 phones and will be downloadable to users of versions 6.0 and 6.1, he said. The service backs up calendar items, contacts, tasks, texts, photos, videos, music, documents and anything on storage cards, to the Web.

Users can set the service to automatically back up phone data once a day. They can also store photos, for example, on My Phone online and later restore those photos to the phone.

My Phone only comes with 200MB of storage space and IDC’s Ryan wasn’t clear on the market need for the service. “The idea of a smartphone is everything is backed up on the PC too, so I don’t fully understand it,” he said. “Maybe for people who don’t want to or don’t know how to back up on a PC might find this more intuitive.”

Rockfeld said My Phone will be valuable for people who lose their phones or who want to upgrade their device but worry about the hassle of transferring all their data to a new phone.

The service is different from Apple’s Mobile Me, said Rockfeld. “Mobile Me from Apple is really about PIM [personal information manager] synching,” he said. Microsoft figures it has sync covered with Exchange, which syncs e-mail, calendar and contacts with Windows Mobile devices.

He also differentiates between My Phone and Mesh, another Microsoft offering. Mesh is more about syncing items from specified folders and sharing that data among multiple PCs and phones. “My Phone is truly a backup and restore service,” he said. “Will these things work more closely together in the future? It makes sense.”

The My Phone service is based on technology Microsoft acquired along with MobiComp in June last year.

Microsoft also announced at MWC that as part of a new contract LG Electronics will make Windows Mobile its primary, although not exclusive, mobile-phone software platform for the next four years. LG plans to launch 50 new Windows Mobile phones, including 25 in 2012, as part of the agreement, Rockfeld said.

Windows Mobile Online Storage Beta Coming Soon  

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Microsoft has revealed some details of a forthcoming service that will allow Windows Mobile users to synchronize information between their phone and the Web.

The service, called My Phone, will provide a place to store data such as photos, videos, text messages and calendar items. Users will then be able to share that data with others or use the service as a way to back up information on their phone.

A description of My Phone appeared earlier Friday at getskybox.com, but Microsoft pulled the site after several blogs wrote stories about it. Getskybox.com now redirects to a new URL that has much of the same description.

Getskybox.com went live earlier than planned, and Microsoft will offer more details about My Phone at the Mobile World Congress trade show in mid-February, said a Microsoft spokesman. The service will be available at that time as a limited, invitation-only beta, he said.

Microsoft already has a service that does something similar to My Phone. Live Mesh lets people upload photos and other information to a Web page and access the data from a mobile phone.

But My Phone may be different because it will automatically synch a wide array of information from phones. In addition, while anyone with a phone and a browser can use Live Mesh, My Phone will be limited to people using phones with Windows Mobile 6.

Miss Vista's Taskbar Or Quick Launch? Here's How You Get It Back  

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The taskbar in Windows 7 is a revamped combination of the previous Quick Launch and Vista's taskbar, but if you really, really miss Quick Launch, then keep reading.

1. First, right-click on the taskbar and turn off "Lock the Taskbar."

2. Right-click the taskbar, hover over Toolbars, and select New Toolbar.


3. When it asks you to select a folder, enter this string: %userprofile%\AppData\Roaming\Microsoft\Internet Explorer\Quick Launch

4. Find Quick Launch (it may be on the right side of the taskbar), right-click the divider and disable "Show Text" and "Show Title." Make sure "Small Icons" is enabled.

5. Drag the divider to rearrange Quick Launch on your taskbar (using left-click).

6. Right-click and lock your toolbar again.

Dell Builds Prototype Android and Windows Mobile Phones, May Finally Sell Them  

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Stop me if you've heard this one: Dell might go into the smartphone business. OOOLLLDDD? But today the WSJ reports Dell's closer than ever, with prototypes built in two different styles and two competing platforms.

The two styles may seem familiar to you, as demonstrated by my totally fake images above. One, we'll call "iPhone," is described by the Wall Street Journal as "a touchscreen but no physical keyboard." The other, which we'll call "Pre," is a "slider-style phone with a keypad and that slides from beneath the screen." Dell is reportedly exploring both Windows Mobile and Android, and has both operating systems running on its prototypes. The WSJ cites those always helpful "people familiar with the matter," and says the formal move into the phone market could happen as early as February, perhaps just in time for the 3GSM global phone biz show in Barcelona on the 15th.


As I so subtly alluded, Dell has been in the smartphone business, or at least rumored to be, for some time. We heard about an impending smartphone in April 2007, then again in December 2007, solidifying last January before being quickly smashed down again.
Just two weeks ago, the rumors surfaced again, as analyst extraordinaire Shaw Wu predicted Dell would do the Android secret handshake, publicly, at 3GSM. So the Journal report confirms these rumors, with solid substantiation. (Let's just hope the "people familiar with the matter" don't all turn out to be Shaw Wu wearing wigs and fake moustaches.) As the Journal states, the most likely peg for this happening soon, and reason for the delay up till now, is that Ron Garriques, former head of the cell business at Motorola, can finally build phones for Dell.

He left the burning building in Libertyville Schaumburg, IL for the greener pastures of Round Rock, TX under a noncompete clause that won't lift until...yep...next month. Garriques and his former Moto crony, John Thode—current head of netbooks and cheap PCs at Dell—are probably planning one heck of a comeback. If the combination of Dell and Motorola DNA doesn't render that completely impossible

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