- Aug 21, 2012
- 14
- 0
- 1
OK so as a end user, power user, developer and future employee (high hopes) to one of these technologies, I would like to discuss a couple observations I have made about Windows Phone and how it stacks against the competition. Also, I want to point out some of the items that make Windows Phone a 'not so jump to-able' OS right now. I love intelligent discussion so please discuss! 
When you look at current smart phone line-ups you see HUGE differences between iOS/Android and Windows Phone devices. Windows Phone is sporting a new interface once called "metro" using live tiles and iOS/Android use the standard icons. Yes Android has widgets but what normal consumer actually cares? So a customer jumping ship from Android to iOS will either be comfortable OR bored quickly from the repetitiveness of the operating system. Most CS students learn your first day of programming concepts that in the world of consumer electronics UX is key. Now with that being said I will say that iOS and Windows Phone has this area on lock. I see Android as the Linux of the smartphone world. If you know how to use it and tweak it Android can be great! But for the normal users sudden crashes and perplexed developer options could deter them from completely liking the product. Keeping this in mind iOS has dominated with a polished, easy to use interface that has kept users happy since 2007.
Now we come to the age of Windows Phone, yes I said it, Windows Phone. I don't see Android as a viable competitor for much longer. With a mobile operating system using C++ and Silverlight (remember these are the same languages Windows 8 and Xbox... XBox... XBOX use) the game has changed drastically! iOS has dominated the games market with Zynga and Popcap type games but let us think for a second. Android has Playstation mobile (ported games?), iOS has iOS games (proprietary in Xcode like good ole' Apple wants), and Windows Phone will sport... Xbox Live games (in C++). Why is this important for the consumer you ask? While the iOS farmvilles, dragonvilles, and blah with friends might be popular right now, in the future imagine being able to pick up your phone and continue a cloud saved game of Call of Duty! This will be a game changer that I believe iOS and Android can't match on any level.
Current Windows Phone 7 devices and the Windows Phone 8 upgrade scare. We all knew this was coming and if you didn't you were in denial. When Windows 8 looked like the phone they just developed... yep... something is about to change. When a whole code base changes you HAVE to make changes to hardware to support the infrastructure you want to work on. But this is for the better of the customer and power users alike. When most customers are upgraded to Windows Phone 7.8 they wont know the difference from Windows Phone 8 and I am sure they will be happy for the change. Power users and developers alike will rush to the stands and buy the latest and greatest Windows Phone 8 and start tinkering around with it.
Now with most of the users sporting the Nokia line of phones that were released about 5-6 months ago this gives developers and Nokia time to play catch-up and early Windows Phone 8 adopters will be the "beta testers" like we were (yes I sport a Nokia Lumia 900, cyan, looks awesome!) with the Windows Phone 7 devices. If we rewind in history to Apple's first iOS devices there were applications that could not run between iOS versions until they got it polished. I remember having the first iPhone that couldn't even send a picture message and crashed about 10 times out of the day. Fast forward to present day and look at what Apple has accomplished with iOS today. You don't have to be the "now" in the technology world, you just have to pass everyone else in the race.
The point is Windows Phone 7 has already provided users with an easy-to-user Apple alternative. While we have some power users who really didn't think out the whole code change probability when they KNEW it was coming and are now mad about not being able to upgrade to WP8, most users are happy with the devices. While as of right now it lacks a lot of features they are being added slowly and correctly. While Android gets 2,3,4... updates every 6 months and break more things than they fix, WP7 has had some very solid UX experience updates that do not break other things within the OS. Right now Windows Phone 7 doesn't have as many of the games that iOS and Android provide but look into the future of gaming and see that the worlds leading gaming console maker is going balls to the wall on bringing Xbox Live to the smartphone. I don't care what websites paid by Google, Apple, and Microsoft say Windows Phone has a future, I just hope they do it correctly.

When you look at current smart phone line-ups you see HUGE differences between iOS/Android and Windows Phone devices. Windows Phone is sporting a new interface once called "metro" using live tiles and iOS/Android use the standard icons. Yes Android has widgets but what normal consumer actually cares? So a customer jumping ship from Android to iOS will either be comfortable OR bored quickly from the repetitiveness of the operating system. Most CS students learn your first day of programming concepts that in the world of consumer electronics UX is key. Now with that being said I will say that iOS and Windows Phone has this area on lock. I see Android as the Linux of the smartphone world. If you know how to use it and tweak it Android can be great! But for the normal users sudden crashes and perplexed developer options could deter them from completely liking the product. Keeping this in mind iOS has dominated with a polished, easy to use interface that has kept users happy since 2007.
Now we come to the age of Windows Phone, yes I said it, Windows Phone. I don't see Android as a viable competitor for much longer. With a mobile operating system using C++ and Silverlight (remember these are the same languages Windows 8 and Xbox... XBox... XBOX use) the game has changed drastically! iOS has dominated the games market with Zynga and Popcap type games but let us think for a second. Android has Playstation mobile (ported games?), iOS has iOS games (proprietary in Xcode like good ole' Apple wants), and Windows Phone will sport... Xbox Live games (in C++). Why is this important for the consumer you ask? While the iOS farmvilles, dragonvilles, and blah with friends might be popular right now, in the future imagine being able to pick up your phone and continue a cloud saved game of Call of Duty! This will be a game changer that I believe iOS and Android can't match on any level.
Current Windows Phone 7 devices and the Windows Phone 8 upgrade scare. We all knew this was coming and if you didn't you were in denial. When Windows 8 looked like the phone they just developed... yep... something is about to change. When a whole code base changes you HAVE to make changes to hardware to support the infrastructure you want to work on. But this is for the better of the customer and power users alike. When most customers are upgraded to Windows Phone 7.8 they wont know the difference from Windows Phone 8 and I am sure they will be happy for the change. Power users and developers alike will rush to the stands and buy the latest and greatest Windows Phone 8 and start tinkering around with it.
Now with most of the users sporting the Nokia line of phones that were released about 5-6 months ago this gives developers and Nokia time to play catch-up and early Windows Phone 8 adopters will be the "beta testers" like we were (yes I sport a Nokia Lumia 900, cyan, looks awesome!) with the Windows Phone 7 devices. If we rewind in history to Apple's first iOS devices there were applications that could not run between iOS versions until they got it polished. I remember having the first iPhone that couldn't even send a picture message and crashed about 10 times out of the day. Fast forward to present day and look at what Apple has accomplished with iOS today. You don't have to be the "now" in the technology world, you just have to pass everyone else in the race.
The point is Windows Phone 7 has already provided users with an easy-to-user Apple alternative. While we have some power users who really didn't think out the whole code change probability when they KNEW it was coming and are now mad about not being able to upgrade to WP8, most users are happy with the devices. While as of right now it lacks a lot of features they are being added slowly and correctly. While Android gets 2,3,4... updates every 6 months and break more things than they fix, WP7 has had some very solid UX experience updates that do not break other things within the OS. Right now Windows Phone 7 doesn't have as many of the games that iOS and Android provide but look into the future of gaming and see that the worlds leading gaming console maker is going balls to the wall on bringing Xbox Live to the smartphone. I don't care what websites paid by Google, Apple, and Microsoft say Windows Phone has a future, I just hope they do it correctly.