Monday, June 27, 2011

First Look: Windows Phone 7 Mango

Microsoft's Windows Phone 7  Mango update is still months away. There is no confirmed date from Microsoft only the promise that it will be some time this "Fall" (that's Autumn for our British readers), and there are still features to turn on, fine tuning and tweaks to be done.

Still Pocket-lint was one of just four UK publications to be given access to Mango ahead of the official launch later this year to see what we thought.

Seven days later, and we've got an extensive preview of what to expect, whether you should be excited about upgrading and whether it's going to make you want to switch from the iPhone, BlackBerry or Android device you've currently got.

It's worth pointing out that everything below is based on our play with a beta build of the new operating system. The features aren't entirely locked down, some things are likely to change, and that there is still 4 months at least at the time of writing whereby Microsoft could change things up or hone performance. This is clearly a work in progress, but that said it is enough of a work in progress that Microsoft is happy to let us loose on our own.  

We tested the new Mango update first on the rather clunky Asus developer phone for 24 hours and after that an HTC 7 Trophy . We've lived with the phone as if it is our only device, ditching our Samsung Galaxy S II and the Apple iPhone 4 with iOS 5 that we've been using recently. The build is stable and with that out of the way, here's what we think.

It would be easy to say that design-wise nothing has changed. That's wrong of course, but to those unfamiliar with Windows Phone 7, showing you a Windows Phone 7.5 (as listed on the phone) or Windows Phone 7.1 (as listed in Windows Phone 7 Connector on the Mac) Mango device you aren't going to notice a massive difference.

The operating system's core Metro UI is still two panes - the home screen with the interactive tiles, and a list of apps (alphabetical) that you can scroll down to find what's what. Within the apps themselves the ethos is still about scrolling through panoramic vistas of information. It's very different to Android. It's very different to iOS 4 or 5. It is very different to any phone OS out there at the moment and its grid of apps.

Look slightly closer and there are changes however. The homepage tiles have become more interactive with developers given greater control over what information and how often that information can be displayed. BA's new app is a good example with the live tile giving you gate information and other bits and bobs over just a company logo that WP7 users get currently.

Other design elements that have been added include a stronger use of the search button. It's everywhere, so much so we aren't really sure how Microsoft can insist on a dedicated hardware button (leaked pictures of the Nokia Windows Phone 7 "Sea Ray"  smartphone suggest maybe they aren't in the future). That's no bad thing. A new search button on the apps list not only lets you search for the app on your phone, but also lets you search for the app in Marketplace - handy if you can't remember whether you have a weather app or not for example.

The design is clean and intuitive, while all the same integrating apps in the daily use of the phone. Like the original release of Windows Phone 7 you never have to think about opening an app, it's just there on your phone, and that's a very different philosophy to the other operating systems.

This is the bit that we are most excited about to be honest, and sadly the bit that we haven't been able to test out as much as we had hoped as some of the social networking features have yet to be turned on.

Twitter and LinkedIn have both been promised, are both present in the settings menu, and both say "Coming soon". It's understandable - it's an early build remember, but frustrating too, and we'll make sure we cover those elements if further detail when they do become available. Needless to say like Apple's iOS 5, Twitter will be "baked-in" to the operating system giving you a chance to share and interact with your Twitter followers without having to resort to the app.

Facebook, already available and up and running, has had a host of new features added too. New features include Facebook events being automatically added to your calendar, the ability to choose whether you show just the ones you've accepted or all of them and Facebook Chat to the messaging service. The last one is the most interesting as Microsoft have integrated it in such a way that you can have a threaded conversation with someone over text, Microsoft IM, or Facebook Chat all in the same window - it’s very webOS admittedly and very people rather than app focused. The person you are talking to might be darting from machine to machine or app to app, but you're just there in one thread as if nothing much is happening. It's pretty impressive and shows Microsoft's belief that apps are too linear and this way - the Mango way - is considerably more "big picture".

The end result is that we've been conversing more on Facebook in the last week than we ever have with the iPhone or Android handsets, and yet haven't actually installed the dedicated Windows Phone 7 Facebook app. We aren't even sure why you would bother. If Microsoft can deliver the same experience for LinkedIn - think contacts book - and Twitter for managing what's going on right now - they really are on to a winner.

However it's not without concern. Facebook integration works well within the People Hub's "What's New" pane because chances are you don't have hundreds of people that you follow. How it will work in practice with such a large group of followers is yet to be seen, and as such, an option could possibly overwhelm you with status updates to the point it becomes useless. Let's hope that's not the case and you can manage it.

It's funny that we said there needs to be a way to manage the flood of information because that's exactly what a new feature within the People Hub lets you do. Microsoft has introduced a new feature we just can't get enough of. Groups. Why are we about to rave about a feature so much? Well because it allows you to block out the noise that little bit easier - especially at weekends. The idea of Groups is that you select a group of people (Apple call them Favorites) and then that gives you access to them and only them alone in isolation of everything else going on in your life.

We set up one for the Pocket-lint team, one for the family, and then one for a group of close friends. The result is that we could easily see, at any given moment, what those people were up to without having to filter through all the other Facebook friend’s status posts (you can also pin the group to the start to make it even easier to see). Add Twitter into that later and you can see the power of it, especially if you use either for work and then want to dip in over the weekend without feeling like you're going to spot something that makes you want to jump back into action work wise.

But it's more than looking at Status updates. You can group email and group text those in the group making communicating (isn't that the point of a phone) so much easier. It even tells you if people within the group don’t have a phone associated so you know they aren’t going to get the message. We love it.

We also love the new history feature that lets you see when and what you last said to someone be it a text message, an email, or txt message.

If you hadn't already worked it out, if you're into Twitter, into Facebook, into LinkedIn, into any social networking platform you're a bit of an egotistical, narcissistic, kind of person that loves to gloat about what you do and why you are doing it. You might not agree with that, but if you do, Microsoft has you covered with called "Me" that's been enhanced for Mango.

That's right, you're so important that you've got your own live tile to see what's happening with you in case you find yourself waking up and forgetting who you are (Memento, Hangover, a regular Saturday night).

New is the ability check in (Facebook), as well as, set your Windows Live Chat Status, beyond giving you a constant reminder of what you look like and letting you quickly post a message. It's like you have a quick access button to tell the world that you're at the funky exclusive restaurant and they’re not with you.

If that wasn't enough to tickle your "I'm more important than you" fancy you can use the same area to find out who is commenting on your status updates, and what you've said in the past just in case you're trying to piece together the last 24 hours of your life. If you love yourself, or even if you don't, you'll sadly find this is a good way of getting social on your phone and that can only mean one thing - those that follow you are about to get a lot more messages from you in the future.

Apple has Safari, Android hasn't got Chrome, but Microsoft Windows Phone 7 Mango has the latest iteration of Internet Explorer 9. If you've used an iPhone or Android you'll know that the browser is really the key element that you use a lot in day-to-day use and here it's no different. For Mango, the browser has been expanded, and improved.

It now has hardware acceleration support meaning the better the phone's hardware capabilities the better your browsing is going to be. In a test against the iPhone 4 running iOS 5 and the Samsung Galaxy S II running Android 2.3.3 our Trophy came second place to the iPhone based on a simple frames per second test provided by Microsoft ( ie.microsoft.com/test-drive/ ).

That's not surprising for two reasons – (a) because the mobile safari is fast anyway, and (b) the Trophy isn't the fastest phone on the block. That said it's interesting that it still beat the power mad Galaxy S II. It will be interesting to see how it performs in the autumn on a Nokia dual-core smartphone (guesses and hopes rather than fact).

Speed isn't everything and Microsoft knows that. We doubt it's been an influence, but the browser has a strong similarity to Firefox for Android in that it believes that the accompanying faff should be ditched. The address bar is now at the bottom - easier to access - the menu is hidden, and the only other key is the refresh button. That leaves plenty of space for the web page you are looking at, and little to clutter the screen. Windows Phone 7 smartphones to date have already benefited from a bigger screen, but it all helps none the less, and Apple's suggestion that you always need to know the network you are on, your battery life, and the time, seems rather redundant.

Other new features of note include the ability to now share the page via messaging, email, or social networks. We can't believe this wasn't here before but it's sorely welcomed. Surprisingly while you can still Pin to Start a website, it still takes the image of the page to that tile without updating it. That's confusing, especially if your favourite websites look similar, and we would much prefer Microsoft to take Apple's approach and use the website’s favicon or Windows 7 start bar icons instead, which we believe would have created a much cleaner more dynamic looking feel to the homepage tiles.

All the above aside, the Internet Explorer browser works, works well, and does what you expect.

Part of your internet experience on any smartphone will be search. Whether you are an iPhone or Android user searching for stuff, be it a local bar or just the answer to something to prove your mate wrong, is key to your day-to-day mobile life. It's here then that switchers will find the biggest challenge. You've got to use Bing.

It's been our biggest learning curve over the week, the bit that we’ve struggled with, the bit that's made us install gMaps (a Google Maps clone for WP7) and Google Search (Google's official search app for WP7). Strangely in doing so, we've actually not used the Google app downloads. Maybe it's the different user interface of maps that got us flummoxed, or the poor search results of Bing web that didn't give me the results we wanted or expected.

It's a shame because beyond the basic search there are some really nifty features here. Bing Music for example gives you Shazam-like capabilities that will let you record a snippet of music in a bar, tell you what it is, and then give you the option to download it straight from the Zune Marketplace.

Bing Vision likewise is a fantastic feature that is Microsoft's equivalent to Google Goggles letting you take pictures of text - be it a menu or some industrial espionage and have it translated or merely put into text you can then edit later. Then there's Bing Voice that like Google's Voice Search lets you search for queries just by saying them. It's quick. It's simple. It works.

But best of all is Local Scout that by pressing gives you a list of places to eat and drink in your near vicinity, what to see and do, where to shop, and highlights of the area you are in. Once you've got that list you get something Microsoft calls Quick Cards. For restaurants that's key details like a phone number, an address, and reviews pulled from the web.

With so many websites opting for Flash-based content with pictures of polished cutlery and big glasses, getting to the information quickly and then offering a single press to make a call is very welcomed.

Taking it one step further is App Connect that means that third party apps can connect into that experience. Although we don't have any “Connected” apps on our device to see this in action, numerous chats and talks with Microsoft highlight that this will allow apps like Top Table to integrate into the experience allowing you to find extra information - or in the case of Top Table - actually book a table in the restaurant you've found.

The only hindrance? The information wasn't 100 per cent up to date. A quick search in Pocket-lint's headquarters town of Ascot gave us a bar that's since changed its name. The number was correct, but the details of the bar and what cuisine it serves out-dated, 2 years+ out-dated.  And that only highlights how frustrating Bing can be. The feature is a fantastic idea, the results no so much.

If Nokia are going to bring their camera expertise to Windows Phone 7, then you'll want decent photo options within the operating system and Microsoft seem to have acknowledged that. New to Mango is Face Detection and People tagging that if you are sharing that image with Facebook or Microsoft's SkyDrive cloud storage option then will let you tag people before you upload.

That's handy if you're into your social networking, not so much if you don't care. None the less, no other OS lets you tag people in your photos at the point that you take the shot. Well done Microsoft.

You also get auto-fix something that HTC users already have, but now it's available to everyone straight after you've taken the shot rather than having to load the dedicated app. Apple is set to offer this too in iOS 5, so it's good that Microsoft have made sure it's here too. The results are, as you would expect, compensating for low light, and generally pumping up the "fill light" levels. That means you'll be able to see what's going on in those dodgy pictures at the end of the evening.

Video can now be shared, alas not to YouTube, and you'll be able to go straight to the camera by holding down the dedicated shutter button on the phone. That dedicated shutter button can also be accessed when the phone is in locked mode, and for those that worry that might be accidentally taking pictures of your pocket don’t worry, you can turn it off.

There’s the new look for starters, bringing the design into line with what the Xbox 360 interface will look like later this year, but also really just a move to include all the features in the Extra’s app into the main app. That means you get a 3D avatar that likes to bounce around, greater control over your achievements, profile and messaging.

It looks clean and easy to understand, and if you’re a gamer welcomed. It’s one of those areas you are going to use to show off your phone, and Windows Phone 7 needs more of those.

Probably one of the most ugly elements of the phone. Mango embraces multitasking letting you zip between apps - or tasks - at speed. It's ugly because it seems so disjointed from the experience the rest of the phone gives.

Accessed by holding down the back key you get a webOS like view of what's running as if they were cards in Texas hold 'em with you having the ability to slide between them. That's fine, but not only does it not really look that pretty, but there are no real options available to you other than choosing which bit of the phone to go to next. We expected the ability to kill apps or tasks, or at least do something more, and instead we get something that is incredibly basic.

We’ve seen demos of it in action, however with no multitasking apps on our device yet (developers have to build them to be multitasking a bit like Apple devs did when they added the feature) we’ve not been able to test it for ourselves in our weeklong test. From what we’ve seen however the apps are frozen in a suspended state to be brought back to life when you need them.  

By now you're probably wondering what hasn't been updated for the new Windows Phone 7 Mango update. Email and Office get a look in to with new features designed to make working from your phone even easier.

On the email front the biggest change is Linked Inboxes that allow you to join together a number of email accounts into one tile. It’s handy if you’ve got a couple of personal accounts or a personal and work account on the phone and just want to see what’s coming in in one go. Linking them is incredibly easy, as is unlinking them. Gripes? You can’t set a default email account within the Linked inboxes meaning you’ll have to choose every time from a drop down list of which account you want to send it to.

The other major improvement is threaded conversations. If you're used to Gmail that is a big plus and it goes as far as showing you the emails you've sent too within that list. Delete the conversation and the emails are deleted while yours remain. Clever.

Other email treats include the ability to read Rights Protected emails - handy if that's something your work uses. We weren't able to test this on our device however we did see in on our Microsoft contact's phone. You'll be able to read those emails, but neither send them on or copy and paste from them. We also like the ability to "Pin" email folders to the start, allowing you to highlight a group of emails be it from someone in particular or a project on your home page as a tile.

As for the Calendar there is now a To Do list that lets you set Due Dates. It’s handy if you’ve got to remember to do something later in the week/month and will no doubt be loved by the forgetful.

On the office front there is greater support for Microsoft's SkyDrive service (now with 25GB of storage) and Office 365 support (this service isn't live at time of testing). There is also support for Lync, but again we don't have a means of testing this. Excel gets formula assist for those doing auto sum - it works - while Word gets better comments usage for marking up documents. All in all it's just easier to access your documents and then work on them.

Not all of the new features of Windows Phone 7 Mango are about giving you stuff that is quickly noticeable. Microsoft says there are hundreds of new features to improve the OS and some of those have to be hunted out.

Take the battery save feature. Not something that you are going to brag to your friends about but none the less useful. Like the power saver mode found on the Samsung Galaxy S II, Microsoft's new update has the ability to go into "please last until I get home" mode. You can either set it to always be that way, or just as a one off until you next find power. Enabling it means that you won't automatically receive email and apps won't run in the background when you are low on power.

As with other phones we found ourselves struggling to get through more than a day of heavy use and so this mode, just like it does on our S II, means that we've still got enough juice to text Mrs Pocket-lint to let her know that we have caught the last train home and aren't passed out in a gutter in Shoreditch. The page also gives you real information beyond stuff like 23% left. Like how long in hours you've got left and how long it's been since your last charge. It's not ground breaking, but it is useful when you are worried you aren't going to make it to power soon.

Other new treats worth mentioning are the ability to add custom sounds to emails, Smart DJ that works in a virtual identical way to Apple's Genius playlists within iTunes, the ability to see download progress via the apps list after you've exited Marketplace, and the chance to speak your text messages to the phone with Microsoft working out what you’ve said and then writing it up for you. 

With so many new features adding to those already available, it's hard to find what's missing and where Microsoft needs to improve. That's not to say there isn't room for improvement. The biggest problem and the one that will stop you moving over to Windows Phone 7 when Mango is released is that there is still a lack of apps that you are probably using on a daily basis on the iPhone or Android, and that for the most part you have to re-wire how you use your phone.

The first one is fixable. We are already starting to see the bigger names come to the platform - Evernote, Flickr, BA, Angry Birds and others are big app titles that will only help propel the platform forward. Come Christmas we would expect that more will create apps to make that not really an issue, and once services like Spotify, Dropbox, and even Sky see this as something that's worth developing for that will open the floodgates to others getting on board. Microsoft buying Skype will help too.

However the biggest challenge for any would-be user is going to be a move away from Google to Bing. That might sound strange but Google is, whether you like it or not, in your life every day, and more importantly probably at the core of your internet usage. Whether it's searching on the desktop, using Google Maps on your phone, it's the move away from the company's services and apps that has had us most at a loss.

We've taken to Facebook just being there, or using a different RSS Reader, but it's the search and mapping that's been the hardest one to re-programme ourselves on. For new users, first time smartphone users, this won't be a problem, but for switchers is something you are going to have to bare and take, almost as if you are going cold turkey from the Mountain View based company. And for many that's going to be hard.

What's missing?

There isn't any real "Cloud" backup. No re downloading of apps if you loose your phone, or saving of those Groups and tiles you're going to create. In swapping phones mid-way through our test it was easy to see how even in the short space of time we've been using iOS 5 and the longer use of app backup in Android, how switching phones in Windows Phone 7 isn't as easy. For many that shouldn't be a problem yet, but it's going to be something that Microsoft should fix for the next update. We don’t want to have to re-setup the phone when we upgrade. Apple's iCloud, and Google's app backup features, are nice and it's a shame they are missing here.

With data at a premium, especially for those that travel, we also wanted the ability to turn off certain areas of the constant updates and notifications. It's something none of the mobile operating systems do very well, and Microsoft is no exception. When abroad you might not want Facebook or Twitter, but you do want email.

If we've sounded gushing, that’s because we are. Windows Phone 7 is a mobile operating system that offers something very different to Android and Apple's iOS, while still giving them a good run for their money. Everything bounces, swishes, swirls, and dances on the page making this a spritely jovial experience.

Windows Phone 7 versus Windows Phone 7 Mango: there is no contest. The operating system is light years ahead of what is available now and will be very much welcomed by all those that upgrade. It is a considerable jump forward in what it offers, more so than just another Android update, and on par with Apple's "hundreds" of new feature updates every year.

As for how it fairs against Android and iOS 5, it proves that there are now three operating systems to look at and that BlackBerry's OS isn't really up to par. For BlackBerry users this offers virtually everything that BB OS 6 and BB OS 7 offers and better, including BBM and that security through Rights Protected emails.

So should you swap from your iPhone or your Android device? Sadly there is no simple answer. Windows Phone 7 is the most social OS out there, taking Android, taking HTC Sense and taking iOS and creating an operating system that isn't about isolated apps, but about an integrated experience.

We've certainly felt that over the last week. We've Facebooked more, we've seen friends pictures more, and that's without notifications or a slide down from the top menu bar that tells us what's happening in our lives. For Microsoft the whole homepage is that notifications drop down.

Ultimately for us the Achilles’ heel is Bing and it's search results excluding the feature sets like Local Scout, Bing Vision, and Bing Music. It's the only thing that has frustrated us over the last week.

One thing's for certain though. Android certainly doesn't look as shiny, and as for Apple, since our play, we certainly notice a lot more "Windows Phone 7 features" in the latest iOS 5 Beta builds.

Windows Phone 7 Mango is due out later this year.

Phones , Mobile phones , Windows Phone 7 , Microsoft , HTC , LG , Samsung , Dell , Nokia , First look

Source: http://www.pocket-lint.com

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