anon(1019781)
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- Dec 8, 2011
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Remember this?You are trying to compare that to what Microsoft has done. Windows Phone 7 (and more 8) is trying to rethink how people can use the phone in a better way then the other two. If it had every feature of the other two, it would just be creating another of the same.
Windows Mobile - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
What happened to those 12 years worth of features in a touchscreen smartphone Microsoft has been selling since the year 2000? Seemingly vanished, haven't they?
Microsoft is just doing what Apple did, putting a new spin on smartphones but leaving out the features and hoping users love the interaction with the phone.
The problem is that Apple actually did something revolutionary while Microsoft just put its spin on what Apple did first, along with the HUGE weaknesses that iPhone had when it first came out. iPhone didn't have all the features of Blackberry and Symbian but people didn't really care since the interaction between them and the phone was so vastly different. There's not much difference between Windows Phone and iPhone, even down to the business model, and Microsoft should have realized this and said: "we're going to learn from our experience with Pocket PC 2000, Pocket PC 2002, Windows Mobile 2003, WM5, WM6, etc and just put ALL the features we used to have into our new phones so customers will be confident in switching to Windows Phone because all of the features they would expect in a smartphone WILL be there."
Did that happen? ....Nope. Heck, you can't even attach a PDF to emails on Windows Phone 8. Not even with years of putting out Windows Mobile/Pocket PC did they do such a thing like putting all those things in their touchscreen devices, and THAT is why Windows Phone isn't taking off as well as it should.
You can make fun of iPhone and Android all you want for not having too many features when they debuted, but Apple and Google never did a mobile OS before, while Microsoft did, yet today's Microsoft mobile users are back to square one in the functionality of their devices, and there's no excuse for that.
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