Skip to navigation
   
Simon Bisson & Mary Branscombe's Blog

Well, that’s about it for Windows Mobile then

By Simon Bisson & Mary Branscombe in Editorial

Posted in Mobile, Microsoft on November 19, 2008 at 1:54 pm

Permalink | Author Profile

There’s a new kind of spin out there. Make a big splash announcement in a blog entry, and then follow it up (after an appreciative pile-in of positive comments) with a comment full of caveats and gotchas. It manages the bad news, and keeps people from finding out what you’re really doing.

Microsoft recently made a big splash about the much-awaited release of IE6 for Windows Mobile, and then went and hid the bad news in a blog comment. You might still think that all recent WinMo devices will be upgraded with the new browser, but you’d be wrong. After all, that’s what Microsoft implied when it first announced the new browser project over 18 months ago at the last MEDC in Las Vegas, when it indicated that there’d finally be some respite from the much disliked browser that ships with its mobile operating system.

But what the blog promises, the comments taketh away.

It turns out that the new browser, which was Windows Mobile’s main hope in the battle with the latest WebKit-powered phones, will only run on new hardware.

As the comment said:

Regarding making IE Mobile available as a separate download or update, the rich media experiences that IE Mobile 6 enables require more powerful, advanced devices. That is why it will not be available as an upgrade or direct download for current phones, but rather will be made available on new phones.

It’s not that new phones are necessarily going to be more powerful than the phones already on the market. I suspect a Samsung Omina or HTC Touch Pro user is going to be quite offended by the thought that their top-of-the-range device with the latest processors will be consider inferior to a budget ARM-powered device that just happens to ship after Microsoft releases WinMo 6.1.4.

If you’ve got a current phone, then sorry, thanks for all the support, you’re going to be left behind. Sure, there’s the promise of Mozilla’s Fennec next year sometime, or the pay-for Opera Mobile today, but that’s not the same as a first class integral browser. Is it any wonder HTC are making Opera the default browser on their latest devices?

Why can’t Microsoft leave it up to the operators and the handset manufacturers as to whether they can ship updaters (or heaven forfend that Microsoft use the Windows Update tool in the latest Windows Mobile builds to actually ship an update). By all means profile devices to see if they’re able to run the new browser before opffering a download, but don’t leave users second class citizenson the web.

There is no mobile web. WebKit and the iPhone have given that concept the kick into touch that it so rightly needed. There is only one web, and millions of Windows Mobile users have been given a glimpse of it, before being told that it’s not for them. Is it any wonder they’re deserting the platform for iPhones and BlackBerrys? The next major release is now over a year away, and Microsoft’s main competitors are streaking ahead with new form factors, new devices, and better user interfaces. Windows Mobile 6.5 is a finger in the dyke, but it’s too obviously a stop gap.

Even companies that have built themselves on Windows Mobile are walking away. Why else has HTC started shipping Android-based devices? Microsoft appears to have no faith in its mobile OS, and the industry is responding to its inactions.

I’d like to be wrong, but I don’t think I am. I’ve been a Windows Mobile user for years, but I recently switched to the iPhone 3G. Everything I could do on my Windows Mobile device I can do on the iPhone - even administer my Windows Servers - and I can do it with a 21st century user experience, not something that still feels like a cut-down version of Windows 95. The only thing my HTC Kaiser is left doing is turn-by-turn GPS - and I have a feeling that the iPhone may well be doing that soon, too.

–Simon

12345
Rated: 80% (4 votes)
Loading ... Loading ...

Previous Post | Next Post

 
 
Comments

Comment by hi - November 22, 2008 on 10:14 pm

Simon -

Your overreaction and claim that you can duplicate WinMo functionality with iPhone 3G is all the evidence us readers need to know that you are just a hitman hired by el Jobso. Even if you are not getting paid, your lies are unbecoming.

For example, I record TV shows and movies on my DVR. Every night before bed I dock my Windows Mobile 6.1 device. The next morning on my way out the door, I grab my smartphone, and take the train into NY. I catch up on the recorded shows on the train thanks to Vista’s Media Center sync cabilities to my phone. Think about that…

I do not have to pay for “Heroes” or any show I record. With iPhone you have to pay for that via iTunes. It is free for me. For those who want to know how:

http://www.pocketnow.com/index.php?a=portal_detail&t=reviews&id=1113

BTW -I am not connected to Microsoft in anyway, and would not want to be. I do not like its reactionary attitude. I love what Apple is contributing to the smartphone industry. Its UX is second to none, but please stop yodeling about its capabilities. You sound awfully desperate for someone who is not getting paid for every iPhone sold.

Comment by Ian Betteridge - November 24, 2008 on 11:17 am

“hi” - I can do exactly the same with a Mac, iPhone/iTunes and EyeTV. In fact, I suspect you could do the same on Windows, too, so I’m not sure what your point is.

Comment by Simon Bisson & Mary Branscombe - November 24, 2008 on 5:54 pm

What you *can’t* do on an iPhone is A copy and paste B flag messages in email for follow-up. That and the soft keyboard and the immersive interface (to use an iPhone you have to give it your full attention) keep me on WM; but that doesn’t mean that I don’t feel Microsoft is betraying its users by promising a real browser and then giving up. Let’s not start on how late Windows Mobile 7 is…

-Mary

Make a comment

* required

* required

We stop spam using reCaptcha.
Type the words below and click Submit Comment.

   
Tag cloud

search mscape CIO SapphireSteel Microsoft machine learning data centre transformation Wyse user interface Safari education 3G Frauenhofer NGSCB privacy netbook ribbon international roaming yahoo IO future in review Bill Gates evernote web2expo RAZR RSA 2008 verdana hibernation webkit Asus NexT Netscan installation electricity price data loss troubleshooting information rights management Windows Server 2008 eu BitLocker ATI SSD open source server sprawl Vista beta test images IDF management RSS search LiveID biometrics T9 flex hardware bolt Protected View calit2 Dell IM Nokia accelerator advertising upgrade outlook service oriented enterprise BBC gameboard netbooks task bar gabriola developer WinHEC identity metasystem html SMB 2 voice recognition ports utility virus hdmi switch cellcrypt phone settings culture Google IO traffic laptop database Embarcadero Mini-Note innovation RIM productivity relocation Internet Explorer 8 Nuance EEE ultraportable safend appzero OEM target DisplayLink .NET business technology automation Loki O2 claims camera city drivers rc NVIDIA DSL DLP vmware UMPC Lenovo voice web Tablet PC patent IT automation accessories Wimbledon gamer Volume Shadow Copy RIA national museum of computing Adobe Numenta web 2.0 expo Motorola conferences macbook telecoms mythbusters tele atlas isps cold fusion application compatibility Opera geneva streaming media ipv6 semiotics cloud Toshiba Portege R500 colossus Reqall old software bandwidth spam microsoft security essentials competition timezones ADFS 2.0 965 parallel computing design pixetell hard drive phone management fonts venture capital Express Gate Google turing secure wireless USB support Crossfader geocaching navteq OQO community Active Directory Dopplr browser hyper-v Verbatim Istanbul CERN Acrobat Pro HSDPA p2v cloud service google online applications 2009 desktop. PC bbc iplayer adfs instant messaging merger Qualcomm disaster recovery whitelist cam numbers CPU Enterprise 2.0 TSA video virtualisation moblin GPL business model ruggedized anti-virus Xen lawsuit virtual desktop macro context DOSBox workflow Windows Mobile bug magic forensics g-2 g-1 OpenID insert SIM HMT it pro Tom Hogan Gartner how do I get the back off? regulation apps anti-patterns windows xT9 MIX08 BlackBerry mobile network 2.0 development pre-boot mobile Linux winhec2008 Vodafone power supply MAX direct access i-mate Seagate Eee PC cracking IT transformation power demo09 twitter Palladium TechEd 2008 windows 7 police visualisation Google Sets hierarchical temporal memory OFCOM fault identitity AIR Mercury designer conference social engineering no signal WWW Netscape Tablet Kiosk data tariff HTML 5 mapping london FUD office aws HP appstore Location identity theft Corsair deperimeterization rtm public cloud data centre Linux nvision08 mysql Greasemoneky EMC Hugh Thompson Smartbook tennis Firefox screencam people firewall tablet wildfire microsoft research Silverlight ikea Palm netiquette greenplum active digitiser toshiba IBM terabytes citrix Trampoline dvi Intel mobility M&A MIX Windows Server ballmerbot training user experience installer BES docking station legacy gaming business intelligence october Girl Geek Dinners Bing dual display GPS flash bletchley park icons emulator Chrome dual boot 64-bit analytics christmas flash drive SBS Moonlight AMD hold music Secunia Opsware system management Tripit enterprise architecture WEI Ray Ozzie multiple monitors security theatre Internet data loss prevention pgp Windows Live Visual Studio lockdown regulations screen LHC enterprise Windows 7 vs Windows Vista security paradox SKU CUDA office 2010 lost server history uninstall control panel optical interconnects beta AuthenTec information cards Sony natural interface information spam fighting Live Mesh media media center distributed computing networks wifi migration VSSAdmin Internet Explorer benchmark Bill Cheswick Large Hadron Collider mms 2009 Google Spreadsheets catalyst sun isp Fire Eagle cloud computing Pal disk cosmic rays CES amherst malware co-processor routing fingerprint scanner interoperability wave MWC TouchSmart iPass IIW2008b consolidation private cloud thin client mobile working credit crunch legislation congestion charge Apple Credentica goview Facebook DOS offload trends network business keyboard high performance computing Gears rich client ontier Itanium futura Opteron Beacon quiz fibre moscow geek tourism Mono social networking Salesforce todo list transcoding Clear RX CTO Treo Pro Mark Hurd vulnerabilities Previous Versions android email Java politics geotagging licensing Jeff Hawkins business technology optimisation server deborah adler exabytes Barracuda logitech ec2 Tim Berners-Lee case griffin encryption MING collaboration NAS remove back d2c MacWorld 2008 bugs ucsd Ruby Magny-Cours meaning fire GPU maps Trolltech thermo Delphi bea exchange demo HTC infrastructure robot backhaul green IT T-Mobile connectivity wes performance Xobni SP1 ANR oracle Web 2.0 ProCurve HSPA cables pen computing mobile broadband mash-up windows server 2008 r2 clean install atom ipsec downturn patch Tuesday mainframe Ask.com Trend Micro acquisitions IT value disk space cisco hp microsoft research open setup bombe O'Reilly anti-trust Ruby On Rails Jeff Jones Skyfire Tombstone Objects monitor BT system center smartphone Mozilla MRDA market share processors iPhone ubuntu etech IT policy annotation utilities radeon MacBook Air security wubi amazon mobile project battery life usb data navigation codec power saving teched augmented reality storage business continuity display mobile data tariffs CardSpace AskEraser RBL WPF ClipMate office politics green printing Quest hacking power cuts mobile ofcom network QWERTY fingerprint Hp 2710p software applications
Advertisement
Advertisement