Windows Phone 8 Officially Unveiled
BogenDorpher writes with news that Microsoft has officially introduced Windows Phone 8. The new version of their mobile operating system will bring support for processors with up to 64 cores, as well as resolutions higher than 800x480 — up to 1280x768. It will also include better support for NFC and microSD cards. One important thing to note is that Windows Phone 8 won't be coming to current Windows Phone devices.
Now I can buy a Windows Phone to warm my hands on in the winter.
Hopefully if windows phone 8 comes out, the windows phone seven like the Nokia lumia will be available on pre paid carriers like vmo.
Why would you limit the max res like that?
Why not design it to scale from the very beginning so you don't have to hack it on later?
Why they could not support smp from the beginning had me wondering as well.
QUOTE: "Microsoft tirelessly pushed the idea that its saving grace, the Nokia Lumia 900, was the next big thing in smartphones. However, the fact that the Lumia 900..... won't be able to update will undoubtedly leave some owners of these devices feeling hung out..... Without the software update, potential customers will basically have no reason to snag a Lumia 900, a Titan II, or any other Windows Phone device for that matter, until Windows Phone 8 is available."
This move reminds me of when Apple stopped supporting PPC devices. The article says WinPh8 won't support single-core devices. I wonder why? That would be equivalent to them releasing Windows 7 and saying, "Won't support Pentium 4 or other single-cores."
My AC stalker: " I personally agree with your posts most of the time, but that won't keep me from modding you troll"
It seems they consistantly miss the mark in what consumers want to buy. OK great, 64-cores? who cares? What features does it offer the consumers who are supposed to purchase these to make their day to day lives more productive? Easier? More connected with friends / family?
None of my friends could tell you what WVGA or WXGA is, nor do they probably care.
I live in Boston and see hundreds of of people daily using a variety of phones. I have NEVER seen a Windows phone. not once. Why? Because it makes NO sense to buy one over Android/Iphone.
Microsoft needs to figure out quickly how to incorporate features, functions and uses that NO OTHER company has thought of. Until then, they will remain completely irrelevant and if I were a stock holder in their company, leave me questioning whether all that R&D money is being spent wisely.
S.t.e.v.e.
I'm wondering what the advantage of so many different - and incompatible - OSs on Phones is. iOS, Android, Blackberry, now Windows Phone, et cetera. Each with different APP stores, different SDKs and Apps... What's the point of it all? What does it matter where a Smart Phone with hardware specs XX runs Android, iOS or Windows Phone. ---------- The whole things seems like a waste of software developers' finite resources to me (having to develop separate versions of an APP for separate OSs and so forth). -------- Why can't the world of Smart Phones agree on one compatibility standard, and then everything runs fine on every device? -------- Good luck to MS. It may be getting into a fight in the smart phones space that isn't even worth winning. =)
Why did the chicken cross the road? Because Elon Musk put an AI chip in its head.
FTA:
And FTS plus the other article there:
So windows phone 7 is not selling... solution! Reveal windows phone 8 due in a few months which won't run on any phone bought now.... so better not buy now!
I'm sure this is *really* going to help them sell those phones and gain some marketshare to improve on the nonexistant one they have now... but good news though! The hundreds of thousands of excellent windows phone 7.5 apps will work on windows phone 8 ....
what else ? its a slow lumbering dino getting eaten by mammals like google and apple.
The most interesting point by far is arguably native code support, something that was sorely missing from WP7, and made porting apps from iOS and Android incredibly difficult (since you couldn't just share model code in C/C++ between the platforms). Not to mention the perf issues it created for games.
The iPhone 3GS, which was released in June 2009, is still being sold as Apple's low-end iPhone (usually for $0.99 on a contract), and it runs the current iOS 5. When iOS 6 is released this Fall, the 3GS will run that as well. Yes, there are features that are not available, such as Siri. Now look at Windows Phone. The flagship Nokia Lumia 900 was released in January of 2012, just six months ago, and now it will not be able to run WinPhone 7.
Seriously, that has got to be one of the ugliest phones I have seen in quite a while.
No upgrade path does indeed suck.
But on the other hand, it's better to say straight up that you can't upgrade, than to imply that you can, eventually, when the device manufacture has skinned the OS, and the carrier has signed off on it, 18 months from now, when the next-next version has already been released... Android...
Actually, all 1st gen devices will be getting Windows Phone 7.8, an update without all of the hardware-specific stuff.
They've always been good at FUD, but never at hype. This is as much of a yawn as always. I wish it were real competition to give apple and google something to actually care or even have to compare to, but it's not.
What does "better support for microSD cards" mean? Were they having problems with reliable reads/writes?
64 cores should be enough for anyone!
XML is like violence. If it doesn't solve the problem, use more.
Is it going to be like the days of Windows Mobile? the only way to get updates is to buy a new phone?
This is where Apple is winning, all phones get OS updates for several years. Google falls down on this as they let phone makers screw the users.
Microsoft had better offer a instant free upgrade to WP8 for all owners of the Nokia WP7 phones, or they might as well pack it in. Their "Screw the user, unless they have a credit card" attitude back with the Windows Mobile phones are what drove me to Apple in the first place.
Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
I know Windows Phone 8 shares the same exact kernel as Windows RT/Win 8 and only the services that start are different. I am curious if I can write a METRO app for Windows 8 on my laptop, will it run on a Win 8 phone?
http://saveie6.com/
this is like the 90's
you're supposed to sit for months or years waiting on their "announced" product to ship and not buy what ever is on the market NOW. because everyone knows the MS thing will be so awesome it will be worth the wait
and you know how the genius geeks love to wait while the dumb normal folk just buy whatever is in the store NOW
If their PC cash cows didn't give them so much money to subsidize their other often dubious product lines, there would very likely be no Windows phone of any kind. Seriously, would you care? Would anyone other than pundits even notice?
The new version of their mobile operating system will bring support for processors with up to 64 cores, as well as resolutions higher than 800x480 — up to 1280x768. It will also include better support for NFC and microSD cards.
Those are the highlights? "Improvements" as small as that wouldn't justify much more than a version 7.1. Even a small update to the Linux kernel has more meat in the changelog.
Microsoft needs to put water on the backlash for WP7 users that will be left with legacy devices, perhaps and upgrade program of some kind. The problem of course...is that carriers probably won't like this idea.
They will probably limit access to the device's API like WP7 and why Android is catapulting into the top spot for developers because we can access EVERY SENSOR easily, Bluetooth, ets, local database, Side loading... all CRITICAL for field and data capture apps,
Why Should I move to WP8? They are in the 4.8% OTHER world wide mobile vendors down from 6,x % the year before.
Sinking ship. Balmer has proved year on year that he has ZERO CLUE about mobile computing.
Developers are hitting iOS for one reason AD revenue on apps is COLLOSAL. and Android because the devices are cheap and 100% open so they can build data acquisition apps for the field market connecting to ERP systems. One CANNOT do this with Windows ANY phone. excep WinCE which was killed off.
ARM and X86 are not the same so maybe not or maybe only a limited set of API will work on both with the same code.
Can someone explain to me why Microsoft isn't capitalizing on the phone market in the same way they have the PC market? Why design a phone operating system that can only be run on a small niche of devices, and can't even upgrade phones that came with WP7? Why not instead go after the entire market and design an OS that can be installed on any mobile phone of adequate specifications.
While there may be some serious difficulties to overcome in the short term, this to me seems like a very possible end-state for the industry. Just look at what happened in the (non-Apple) PC market: competing hardware+OS standards evolved into a common hardware standard and a separate OS market that Microsoft dominated.
Disclaimer: this is not necessarily an end-state that I would like to see happen, just some ponderings that I've had.
Osborne Effect round 2, here we go, kicking Nokia in the nuts when its down. Elop will tell us all to just wait a bit longer for his master plan to work and profits to start happening.
I deny that I have not avoided attaining the opposite of that which I do not want.
"I hear you're having a life threating event. Do you need an app for that?"
But then, how can it sell any fewer ??
Sure go buy one, but don't expect to find apps for em :)
We are all focusing on droid and iOS :) And we WON'T be supporting brickOS :)
Enjoy your blue brick.
"that Windows Phone 8 won't be coming to current Windows Phone devices."
This is an old tune, from the Windows CE days. No matter the reason, Windows portable devices, from CE on through to now Phone 8, just don't update previous devices.
At one time, this was just an annoyance, realizing you were going to have to buy a new phone/etc. But we are in a different world. Phone 7 devices are pretty capable. Microsoft just doesn't get it - they leave every generation behind, even a month or two later, and are doing it now.
Good luck, guys. We're really gonna invest in Windows phones now, you betcha.
deleting the extra space after periods so i can stay relevant, yeah.
It is starting to look likely.
Burning brightly right out of the gate.
When all you have is a hammer, every problem starts to look like a thumb.
I like what I see with surface. Maybe MS should focus on building ultraportables that can run apps common to tablets and metro desktops, kind of how Sony did the PS3/Vita crossplatform. Sort of like turning Surface into an extension for your desktop, and a stand a lone tablet. It would work very well with the cloud.
The penguin made me do it.
How does this relate to Windows RT? When are Microsoft going to calm down and stop forking off a million different mobile/embedded OS? Having made it clear they want to "do an Apple" with regards to software/hardware marriage, when are they going to learn that Apple's more consistent approach to these concerns is what a lot of consumers appreciate?
64 cores?!
Do you see what I did there?
Stockholders love this sort of thing. You have to be in it to win it.
Like Apple does, so MS has completely integrated user experience with Windows devices - if they are learning from Apple play book
Wait, what?
How does Windows Phone 8 relates to Windows 8 for phones? Is that still another iteration of an OS that will die in (by MS's predictions) half a year?
Rethinking email
An external display was my first thought, and it seems like the forward thinking idea -- which is kinda-sorta here already -- is that the phone WILL be the laptop/PC for many people, and jacking it into a dock or a slot or via some kind of wireless device mirroring mode so you can use a full keyboard/mouse/display.
But building a phone that does that would cut off PC OS and app sales and Microsoft would rather sell you a limited device so that you have to turn around and buy another device chock full of MS hardware later on.
The smartest thing Microsoft could have done five years ago would be to have setup a mobile division someplace like Manhattan or Orange County, given them $5 billion and access to the panoply of MS IP and then left them alone until they had a finished product for MS to sell.
Microsoft consistently hinders their own new product development by allowing existing product managers to cripple new products in order to save existing products. Thus you end up with a phone that will never compete with a desktop, despite the fact that the future stand-alone desktop looks an awful lot like a cell phone with a keyboard and a monitor.
Microsoft announced the successor to its popular Windows Phone 7 platform.
Perhaps I'm out of touch, and this isn't meant to be snarky, but that's an interesting definition of "popular". Honestly I've never seen a Windows 7 phone.
Kin Phone 9
heh
the preceding comment is my own and in no way reflects the opinion of the Joint Chiefs of Staff
Considering the late start, the Windows Phone team has done a great job on this OS. The UI is best, and all features slick and well implemented. Its just matter of time to get the market share it deserves. I know slasdotters will find it difficult to accept, but the product is good and it will be in the top 3 contenders from here on.
lol another pathetic C# fool praying his skills stay relevant
Admittedly, this is about WP8, and so there's no guarantee that they won't manage to actually lock the bootloader properly this time. However, quite a few WP7 devices already have bootloader unlocks and custom ROMs available. All of the HTC phones, the gen1 Samsung phones, and some of the Lumias are currently able to load and run custom ROMs.
Actually, that raises an interesting question: just how hard will it be to port WP8 unofficially? The difference in the hardware is going to be significant, but not necessarily crippling (for example, the HD2, a WinMo phone, has several very nice WP7 custom ROMs available for it which work around the fact that it doesn't quite conform to the WP7 chassis spec).
Furthermore, the question of "what (aside from hardware-dependent features) will WP8 get that WP7.8 wont?" is quite relevant. There's no reason that I can see why WP7.8, even if it sticks with the current kernel design, couldn't feature Skype call integration and proper turn-by-turn navigation.
In fact, my suspicion is that this whole thing is yet another collassal marketing/branding fuckup by Microsoft. Obviously, WP8 will support hardware than no WP7.x phone has; that's fine and will provide a compelling upgrade path. But unless there's some serious reason that the current phones can't run WP8 (the only thing that comes to mind is that a 1GHz ARM chip might be too slow, and even then that only applies to the earlier WP7 devices) I suspect they'll actually release "WP7.8" as simply a build of WP8 that lacks the drivers for new hardware. In which case, the obvious question is "Why not just call it WP8 the way Apple calls it iOS 5 even on phones that can't fully use iOS 5 features"?
The only answer I can see to that is because Microsoft, especially where phones are concerned, has absolutely no fucking clue how to do branding properly. The approach they're taking is already making people forget claim the death of WP7 as a platform, even as another update for it rolls out now (Tango) and a fourth (Apollo, or whatever they're calling 7.8) has been announced. All Microsoft had to do to forstall that was announce that WP8 would in fact come to WP7 devices, but due to the older hardware would be unable to use some features.
There's no place I could be, since I've found Serenity...
its going to need it..
---- Booth was a patriot ----
Praying? Funny stuff, go look around, C# is probably one of the most in demand skills right now. In this case Anonymous Coward is spot on.
Is probably just the switch to the NT kernel from a stripped (legacy removed) CE kernel. I hope the speed and stability carries through! It's so weird saying that about a Microsoft product but as anybody who has actually used WP7 knows, it's generally rock solid.
Switching to the NT kernel is what has enabled the multicore support and it probably also enables the use of any future x86 hardware platforms too. Obviously moving to NT also helps Microsoft unify their infrastructure because it means they only have 1 kernel to worry about (and mostly just the Metro framework).
Normally I'd be the first one to bash Microsoft about the whole WP8 not being on older devices thing, but since WP8 runs a completely different kernel it'd be foolish to expect them to support older devices which probably don't even have device drivers written for the NT kernel.
Windows Phone 8 Officially Unveiled . I'm so excited.
I really love club dresses ,
The company I work for just had a bid led by our MS developers to start issuing Windows phones to employees. They ordered some demo units and gave them out and the next day when people started coming to IT and asking "how do I download skype?", "how can I get pandora?" the fact that apps make or break a phone platform finally sunk in.
Modern Windows NT-based kernels support up to 256 cores though... see here for reference:
http://www.digitaltrends.com/computing/windows-7-boasts-better-multi-core-support-for-up-to-256-cores/
* Vista had up to 64 cores iirc, but Windows 7 "upped the mark"... a good thing!
APK
P.S.=> Seems sort of odd MS would limit it to 64 cores only, but then again? I don't know of any smartphones that possess THAT many cpu cores presently either (unless someone knows differently, I'd stand by that, but then again - I can always stand to learn a new thing or two, & things are nearly constantly changing in the art & science of computing too)... apk
Does this really have to be marked +5 Funny? How far away into the future will we mark it Informative? (Not that I expect for /. to survive that long...)