Windows Phone

October 7, 2009 by Mike  
Filed under Technology

Today can be marked as the last day of the “Windows Mobile” device brand as Microsoft has announced the availability of Windows Phones worldwide at an exclusive event in NYC hosted by Robbie Bach, president of Microsoft’s Entertainment and Devices Division. The devices announced today ship with Windows Mobile 6.5, which has been a long time coming.

So what is a “Windows Phone” one might ask? “Our lives increasingly have become this complex mash-up of our professional and personal worlds, so we need a better way to connect to the people we care about and an easier way to connect to the information that matters to us,” Bach said during his welcome at the Open House.

Windows Phone

A Windows phone offers a variety of software and applications including: Mobile versions of Windows Live, Microsoft Office, Internet Explorer, Windows Media Player, Facebook, Twitter, MySpace, and much more. A redefined e-mail experience which the ability to manage multiple accounts using Outlook Mobile and Exchange Server synchronization.

One of the applications that was announced today at the event was My Phone, which was announced earlier this year at Mobile World Congress (Our first impressions. My phone is a free service that helps people manage, backup, restore, synchronize data between PC’s, and share information from their Windows phone directly to Microsoft’s secure My Phone servers .

Additional features of the My Phone service is a set of “lost phone” features that are currently free of charge until November 30th, and for $4.99 after. This package allows users to immediately locate the phone’s current location on a map (U.S. only), remotely lock a phone, post an “if found” message to its screen, loudly ring the phone even if it’s set to vibrate or silent mode, or to remotely completely erase the phone’s content.

Here’s a list of Windows phone available today or in the coming weeks (country and carrier):

In North America:

•HTC Pure from AT&T
•HTC Imagio from Verizon Wireless
•Samsung Intrepid from Sprint, available Oct. 11, 2009
•HTC Tilt 2 from AT&T, available in the coming weeks

In Latin America:

•Samsung Omnia II available in the coming weeks from TIM Brasil

In Europe:

•MDA Vario V, MDA Compact V and HTC Touch2 and the Samsung Omnia II from Deutsche Telekom in select European markets
•HTC HD2 from Orange, available in the coming weeks in France
•HTC Touch2 from Orange, available in the coming weeks in France, Spain, Switzerland and Romania
•A software update for the HTC Touch Pro2 from Orange, available in the coming weeks in France, U.K. and Romania
•Samsung Omnia II from Orange, available in the coming weeks in Poland, Switzerland and Slovakia and from early December in France
•Samsung Omnia LITE from Orange, available in the coming weeks in France and Spain
•Samsung Omnia PRO B7320 from Orange, available in the coming weeks in France and the U.K.
•Toshiba TG01 W from Orange, available as an update to the TG01 in the coming weeks in France, the U.K., Switzerland and Romania
•LG GM750 and Samsung Omnia II from SFR in France
•TMN Bluebelt 2 and TMN Silverbelt, made by ZTE Corp., from TMN in Portugal
•Samsung Omnia II and Omnia LITE from TMN in Portugal
•HTC Touch Diamond2 from Vodafone in Germany, Spain, the Netherlands, Australia, South Africa and Central Europe
•HTC Touch Pro2 from Vodafone in the U.K. and Switzerland
•LG GM750 from Vodafone in Germany, the U.K., Spain and the Netherlands

The following phones are available on the open market in Europe:

•Samsung Omnia II, Omnia LITE, Omnia PRO B7320, Omnia PRO B7330 and Omnia PRO B7610 available in October

In Asia:

•ZTE X60 from China Unicom
•HTC Touch Diamond2 from Telstra

The following phones are available on the open market in Asia:

•Acer beTouch E100, beTouch E101, beTouch E200 and Acer neoTouch
•Garmin-Asus nüvifone M20
•HTC Snap, HTC Touch Pro2, HTC Touch Diamond2 and HTC Touch2
•LG GM730 and LG GM550
•Samsung Omnia II and Samsung Omnia PRO B7320, Omnia PRO B7330

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Member Comments


  1. WinMo doesnt really appear to be branching out of its business market niche. I hope MS has a Tegra(2?) based Zune Phone up their sleeve because iphone needs a decent competitor that is a general puprose phone/browser/gaming/multimedia device that is more accessible to the public that the WinMo platform.

    Astro - by Astrotoy7  

  2. This blog entry has a long video demoing the phone UI (or probably something close to the final UI)

    http://windowsteamblog.com/blogs/win...-and-tell.aspx - by mikehayton  

  3. wow - this looks really amazing - great work from MS on this new UI and great to see them (hopefully) back in the game. I think the problem in the past was always that they were trying to downsize (cram) the windows desktop experience into a mobile - and it just didnt work for a lot of reasons. (my wife has an omnia and she totally hates it).

    There's still the question of whether MS + manufacturers will manage to do the other really important thing - make the hardware and 3g plans affordable (via way of subsidization) - which will really determine the success in the marketplace. When I bought my iphone - it was the first time the carriers were actually offering low usage ($30/month + $0 upfront) plans with decent mb's. At the time all the Windows mobile devices were always $80+ per month spend with huge upfront spend (+$300) - which meant I'd never justify going with those (and previously had always just gone with cheaper/simpler smartphones like S60 based ones).

    Anyhow - I really do hope MS+Manafacturers are going to sort out this side of things and make this a popular device. (it simply won't fly if it's too expensive no matter how good the o/s is). My iphone 3g contract is up in August and really hoping I can jump ship - but aren't going to if it doesn't cater for low usage plans. (as my predominant usage will be around the house on wireless).

    I also am really looking forward to the Mix'10 developer announcements - and am hoping it will allow Silverlight based app's (not just XNA like the Zune) - and offer a great app store experience (and accessibility for small 3rd party developers).

    my 2 cents..

    Niall - by Niall  

  4. Looks like you might have got your wish Niall. Leaked docs seem to indicate that it's built around Silverlight, as well as XNA and compact .net.

    http://www.engadget.com/2010/02/18/w...elines-leaked/ - by dgaust  

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