I'm surprised still at the amount of sales people who say buy android not a windows phone. Windows phones are business phones for people who need Word etc.. I've been put of twice now in stores, they prefer i buy an Android thoughts?.
that's just the usual excuse to desert from the front lines
The UI of Windows Phone 8.1 looks good to me too. Very modern and the right amount of customization available to me. You see the similar style in current advertising and recent publishing. I use the largest tiles for my lively live tiles. I like one handed use. The other mobile OSes just look old and boring at best and messy at worst.I agree. Having the Office suite on my phone was really cool at first, but I've never sat down and typed out a Word document using it. OneNote does rock, however...but, it rocks just as hard on iOS and Android, unfortunately. The thing that continuously attracts me to Windows phones over and over is the UI. Regardless of any negatives that I have with Windows phone, the UI just looks really good to me.
The UI of Windows Phone 8.1 looks good to me too. Very modern and the right amount of customization available to me. You see the similar style in current advertising and recent publishing. I use the largest tiles for my lively live tiles. I like one handed use. The other mobile OSes just look old and boring at best and messy at worst.
Just my opinion.
I'm surprised still at the amount of sales people who say buy android not a windows phone. Windows phones are business phones for people who need Word etc.. I've been put of twice now in stores, they prefer i buy an Android thoughts?.
I agree. Having the Office suite on my phone was really cool at first, but I've never sat down and typed out a Word document using it. OneNote does rock, however...but, it rocks just as hard on iOS and Android, unfortunately. The thing that continuously attracts me to Windows phones over and over is the UI. Regardless of any negatives that I have with Windows phone, the UI just looks really good to me.
In the vast majority of cases, a "business phone" needs to be able to handle email and calendar items, and view documents/PDF files as well as being able to connect to the corporate network. Ideally they should be able to be administered through group policy/MDM. Personally, I don't mind my 950XL being subject to my company's IT policy. Having it wiped doesn't bother me as all my stuff gets synced to the cloud. My firm's policy doesn't allow for tethering (even though I pay for my own internet use), but I hardly ever user that so it doesn't bother me that much.
In reality, business users are just as fickle and prejudiced as ordinary users and would prefer to use Android or Apple devices (i.e., they have to be seen to be using something that's commercially relevant).