lippidp
New member
If you're serious about email you should not use gmail.Sure. But if you're serious about Gmail, the integration into Android is so tight that WP will be lacking.
If you're serious about email you should not use gmail.Sure. But if you're serious about Gmail, the integration into Android is so tight that WP will be lacking.
+1If you're serious about email you should not use gmail.
If you're serious about email you should not use gmail.
+1. Gmail works great for me. It is my most used email account.I use GMail on my phone and it works perfectly. If you set it up like an exchange account instead of a Google account it works much better.
Sent from my HTC Trophy using Board Express
What is wrong with Gmail? My main mail is a hotmail though, I use my Gmail for signing up on places I know I'm going to get spam on...
Microsoft Exchange.Heh, k--what's the better webmail option with equally massive flexibility, organizational capacity, and quality UI?
Heh, k--what's the better webmail option with equally massive flexibility, organizational capacity, and quality UI?
Microsoft Exchange.
I will try to give you my opinions as a Windows Mobile, Symbian, Android and Windows Phone user, and to give some balance to the many unfounded Android opinions here.
I changed from Android top WP for a while because of how MS described Windows Phone 7 to be the future, the had rebuilt Windows Mobile from the ground, they would go "all in" with WP7 etc. And because my computers and home server runs Win.
Windows Phone has the looks, definitly. But as with most blonde beautiful girls, it is just a shallow outside and when the first excitement is gone, there is nothing at the inside.
Seriously, I dont consider me to be a really advanced user, but it was just too many features and options missing in WP, that I had been used to having in Nokias from the early 2000 and even in Windows Mobile and definitly in Android.
The biggest phone magazine here made a comparsion of the three big phone OSes and while they had good things to say about WP too, their conclusion was that WP was definitly the OS that you will get bored with first. I agree with that, stylish and minimal is not always a good thing.
Sure, WP has the nicest and smoothest interface, but apart from that I can not come up with one thing that WP can do that Android cant do better.
Android has better integration and options for SkyDrive, an offical OneNote app with SkyDrive sync, just to mention the parts which are usually considered WPs strenght.
To make another example, in Android I can have my SMS redirected to a locked private inbox or a standard inbox depending on which contact is sending, great when using the phone at office and home. I can have the phone not showing the content of a new SMS when notifying me meaning I can safely have my friends playing games or trying apps on it.
And when it comes to speed, Android is not nearly as smooth as WP, but in Android you can have your shortcuts to options and things on the home screen or in the notification drawer which you have to browse through three-four menus in WP to find. Although the interface may not be as fast, you can still access and do your everyday tasks just as quick or even quicker in Android.
And while the WP OS itself may be more stable then Android, I think it is the opposite when it comes to app quality. My experience is that Android versions of apps is in 9 of 10 cases less buggy, definitly have more features and are much better supported with updates and fixes. Like Spotify for WP, it is so smooth, but also so incredibly buggy and hasnt got updated ONCE and is lacking options for better bit rate etc. Even the Internet Explorer in WP restarted my phone a few times a month while I never had a web browser restarting the phone in Android.
I think and hope WP8 will be a huge improvement in many areas and will probably address many issues found in WP7 but since the disappointment WP7 was I try to not have too high expectations.
As a side note I can tell you that native apps (like Android has) were seen as the devil himself among the WP community, until it was announced that WP8 will support native apps... Now it is considered a gift from God.
To summarize my way too long and in probably many eyes too negative post, I think it comes down to one thing for you to consider:
Do you want a good looking, smooth, simple, not so smart phone? Which is good for the basic tasks? You use it mainly because it is necessary to have a phone? Go WP.
Or do you want a device which is more like a small computer, not so stylish but with the latest software and endless options and possibilities? Do you enjoy playing with your phone on your spare time and try out new things, customize, tweak etc? Go Android.
And if you are willing to spend an evening to learn how to install custom roms you will give your phone almost eternal life. Androids community support is simply unbelievable.
Sure. But if you're serious about Gmail, the integration into Android is so tight that WP will be lacking.
I will try to give you my opinions as a Windows Mobile, Symbian, Android and Windows Phone user, and to give some balance to the many unfounded Android opinions here.
I changed from Android top WP for a while because of how MS described Windows Phone 7 to be the future, the had rebuilt Windows Mobile from the ground, they would go "all in" with WP7 etc. And because my computers and home server runs Win.
Windows Phone has the looks, definitly. But as with most blonde beautiful girls, it is just a shallow outside and when the first excitement is gone, there is nothing at the inside.
Seriously, I dont consider me to be a really advanced user, but it was just too many features and options missing in WP, that I had been used to having in Nokias from the early 2000 and even in Windows Mobile and definitly in Android.
The biggest phone magazine here made a comparsion of the three big phone OSes and while they had good things to say about WP too, their conclusion was that WP was definitly the OS that you will get bored with first. I agree with that, stylish and minimal is not always a good thing.
Sure, WP has the nicest and smoothest interface, but apart from that I can not come up with one thing that WP can do that Android cant do better.
Android has better integration and options for SkyDrive, an offical OneNote app with SkyDrive sync, just to mention the parts which are usually considered WPs strenght.
To make another example, in Android I can have my SMS redirected to a locked private inbox or a standard inbox depending on which contact is sending, great when using the phone at office and home. I can have the phone not showing the content of a new SMS when notifying me meaning I can safely have my friends playing games or trying apps on it.
And when it comes to speed, Android is not nearly as smooth as WP, but in Android you can have your shortcuts to options and things on the home screen or in the notification drawer which you have to browse through three-four menus in WP to find. Although the interface may not be as fast, you can still access and do your everyday tasks just as quick or even quicker in Android.
And while the WP OS itself may be more stable then Android, I think it is the opposite when it comes to app quality. My experience is that Android versions of apps is in 9 of 10 cases less buggy, definitly have more features and are much better supported with updates and fixes. Like Spotify for WP, it is so smooth, but also so incredibly buggy and hasnt got updated ONCE and is lacking options for better bit rate etc. Even the Internet Explorer in WP restarted my phone a few times a month while I never had a web browser restarting the phone in Android.
I think and hope WP8 will be a huge improvement in many areas and will probably address many issues found in WP7 but since the disappointment WP7 was I try to not have too high expectations.
As a side note I can tell you that native apps (like Android has) were seen as the devil himself among the WP community, until it was announced that WP8 will support native apps... Now it is considered a gift from God.
To summarize my way too long and in probably many eyes too negative post, I think it comes down to one thing for you to consider:
Do you want a good looking, smooth, simple, not so smart phone? Which is good for the basic tasks? You use it mainly because it is necessary to have a phone? Go WP.
Or do you want a device which is more like a small computer, not so stylish but with the latest software and endless options and possibilities? Do you enjoy playing with your phone on your spare time and try out new things, customize, tweak etc? Go Android.
And if you are willing to spend an evening to learn how to install custom roms you will give your phone almost eternal life. Androids community support is simply unbelievable.
I was a "power Android user" a while ago and I customized like crazy the whole time. I even decompiled .apk's and modified some to get a matching look for everything if I could.
The thing is the customization kind of took over my life and I was never happy how my phone looked no matter how "clean" it looked. I was happy with it for a few days at most but then I just felt the urge to customize again just because I could.
I decided to try out Windows Phone a few months ago and since then I have never ever looked back. The OS is beautiful and uniform and pretty much all the apps are designed with the metro theme in mind so everything looks very uniform and sexy even if you install a lot of apps.
Because of Android is so open and you can do whatever you like with it it also is very unstable at times and the apps force closes a lot and the OS crashes which makes for a so-so experience a lot of the time.
Windows Phone is a breath of fresh air and it's so nice to use and I still often just unlock my phone and play around and get lost in the beatiful OS that just works.