Results 21 to 29 of 29
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February 24th, 2011 09:18 AM #21
Well, leave it to Microsoft to release a software update that will fix 10 bugs and introduce 20. :D
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February 24th, 2011 10:05 AM #22
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February 24th, 2011 10:21 AM #23
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February 24th, 2011 10:45 AM #24
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March 6th, 2011 09:52 PM #25
i don't get why they took out multi-tasking too. the OS is going backwards...
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March 6th, 2011 11:30 PM #26
Ang problem sa Microsoft OS, iba ibang hardware manufacturers ang gumagamit, so iba-ibang hardware configurations and features. Mas may potential magkaproblem.
Unlike Apple, sila gumagawa ng hardware and software.
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March 9th, 2011 01:14 PM #27
they went the tombstoning route - saving the application state when it exits so that it restores back to the same state when relaunching the app. this frees up resources making for a more responsive gadget not to mention extending the battery life.
Originally Posted by boybi
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April 27th, 2011 08:27 AM #28
http://www.engadget.com/2011/04/26/w...veloper-atten/
Windows Phone and BlackBerry struggle to attract developer attention
By Terrence O'Brien posted Apr 26th 2011 6:11PM
We're taking this with a grain of salt, since it applies only to users of the cross-platform Appcelerator Titanium development environment, but it appears that Windows Phone 7 is facing an increasingly uphill battle for mobile mind-share. At this point it should go without saying that a platform lives and dies by its developers and, according to Appcelerator, they're growing less and less interested in creating apps for Microsoft's smartphone OS. Only 29-percent of devs responded to the company's quarterly survey that they were "very interested" in putting their wares on WP7, a fall of 7 points from last quarter and far less than market leaders Android and iOS. News is even worse for RIM, which saw a fall of 11-points in developer interest for BlackBerry, and now trails the folks from Redmond. Again, this survey is based only on the responses of 2,760 developers using a particular product, so we'd refrain from calling the results incontrovertible. Still, it reinforces something that even a casual observer could discern: BlackBerry and Windows Phone 7 have a tough row to hoe.
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April 29th, 2011 01:09 PM #29
WP7 is sort of in between iOS and Android. Microsoft specify on what processor/speed/spec to use, also camera shutter is a hardware button. Manufacturers also can not install GUI on top of the Operating system ie Touchwiz (Samsung), Sense(HTC), Motoblur (Motorola) etc....
I had a WP7 for almost a month (returned). It is a Samsung Focus, very fast and stable, the UI is almost zero learning curve, you only swipe once from the live tiles to the rest of your apps. I really like the WP7/Samsung Focus combo, the phone has super amoled 4" screen, very light and thin and yet the battery last very long. Facebook integration is awesome. Windows Xbox live games are second to none (superb graphics), camera/video is also great. What I don't like, not to many apps when I had it (about 5000 apps around March) I felt like having a very capable phone and yet there is nothing much you can do to it. Internet Explorer sucks, there is no Opera Mini or Skyfire back then, I don't know about now. Apps tend to be more expensive. I waited for the first update (NoDo) which never came during that time. Overall I really like the phone.
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