mmcpher
Member
I hope so. I currently have 3 Windows Mobile devices, including my daily driver, all operational and in use. Where else can I go to get this kind of content? It's not that I'm unsympathetic to Windows Central's plight. WC is hanging fire like the rest of us while Microsoft dithers. And lets not kid ourselves, Microsoft itself is at risk, no matter how blithely they pretend to be unconcerned. It's not going to disappear from the face of the earth, but it will continue to hemorrhage users, subscribers, customers, so long as they continue their mobile ineptitude, their inability to close the gaping door that leads to Android, to Chrome, to Chromebooks, to Google Drive, Google Docs, to Gmail. . . . and to iOS, to. . . . . . you get the idea. Microsoft also needs to give people a reason to stay and for new people to at least poke their head in the door and look at their Mobile alternative.
So change is necessarily coming and given the stakes, it won't likely be a slow, whimpering death. There will be Code Blues and shouts of "Clear! Clear!" and many death throes and thrashings about. And the patient just might pull through! The one thing WC needs to do is to find a way to remain relevant without resorting to the sort of click-baiting headlines (like in the title to this thread). I'm not criticizing the OP, as WC's editors and contributors themselves have been running a series of similar articles for weeks now. It makes sense to discuss these issues here, of all places, and peppy cheer-leading will make matters worse. But there has to be a concerted effort to avoid turning WC into a virtual deathwatch. That tired meme is everywhere already anyway. Microsoft has to find a way forward on Mobile. I would love it if they would retain the best elements of W10M, the Live Tiles and Continuum. I don't like the alternatives so I wouldn't like it if they cast their lot with their rivals in the way that BlackBerry was forced to do with Android.
I am willing to run the risks yet again, provided Microsoft commits to investing in a viable future. I have an HP Elite x3 and am happy with it. Recently, there has been speculation that it might be "left behind" in the Windows 10 on Arm Mobile Future (or whatever today's elegant phrase is). I don't know about that, as I think there might be away to keep both alive. But I don't want to keep W10M stuck where it is even if it comes at a cost of having to upgrade again to the next iteration of devices. There will be plenty to talk about it the months ahead. I, for one, could do without having every thread and article bracketed by the throat-clearing reminder that Windows\Phone\Mobile has failed in the past. I. Get. That. Already.
So change is necessarily coming and given the stakes, it won't likely be a slow, whimpering death. There will be Code Blues and shouts of "Clear! Clear!" and many death throes and thrashings about. And the patient just might pull through! The one thing WC needs to do is to find a way to remain relevant without resorting to the sort of click-baiting headlines (like in the title to this thread). I'm not criticizing the OP, as WC's editors and contributors themselves have been running a series of similar articles for weeks now. It makes sense to discuss these issues here, of all places, and peppy cheer-leading will make matters worse. But there has to be a concerted effort to avoid turning WC into a virtual deathwatch. That tired meme is everywhere already anyway. Microsoft has to find a way forward on Mobile. I would love it if they would retain the best elements of W10M, the Live Tiles and Continuum. I don't like the alternatives so I wouldn't like it if they cast their lot with their rivals in the way that BlackBerry was forced to do with Android.
I am willing to run the risks yet again, provided Microsoft commits to investing in a viable future. I have an HP Elite x3 and am happy with it. Recently, there has been speculation that it might be "left behind" in the Windows 10 on Arm Mobile Future (or whatever today's elegant phrase is). I don't know about that, as I think there might be away to keep both alive. But I don't want to keep W10M stuck where it is even if it comes at a cost of having to upgrade again to the next iteration of devices. There will be plenty to talk about it the months ahead. I, for one, could do without having every thread and article bracketed by the throat-clearing reminder that Windows\Phone\Mobile has failed in the past. I. Get. That. Already.
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