Blackberry

Windows Mobile 7

Ok, let’s put things into perspective. Microsoft wants to keep Windows Mobile 7 a secret right now because the competition between the 3 major players (Android, iPhone, and Blackberry) is as high as it has ever been in history.

So Microsoft turns to LinkedIn to find it’s mobile developer fixer-upper’s employees. Through these job listings, Microsoft is actually revealing a lot about Windows Mobile 7. For one, Silverlight seems to me a main focal point for the new mobile operating system. Secondly, WM7 is focusing a lot on PC-to-mobile hardware compatibility (i.e. USB support). Third, Internet Explorer for mobile is going to have huge improvements. What is a mobile internet phone without a decent browsing experience?

Anyways, more gold nuggets regarding the release of Windows Mobile 7 are expect soon. Or, if you are the kind of person who MUST have a date in their mind, Windows Mobile 7 will most likely be revealed in March of 2010.

Read more about Windows Mobile 7 leaks here.

We all need to be on the same page. What is a Smartphone exactly? A Smartphone is an electronic device that has mobile capabilities (i.e, you can call someone with it) and also has basic PC functions. Smartphones are not simply phones that run Windows Mobile. A Blackberry is a smartphone, for example.

Typically, if your phone has a touch screen, it is referred to as a Pocket PC rather than a Smartphone. Pocket PC’s have more PC functionality overall.

Smartphones are here to stay for the next decade or so. What will change though is who possesses the majority of Smartphone market share in this time. According to market share data from Canalys, the iPhone, Blackberry, and Google Android operating systems took a huge bite out of Windows Mobile’s warm apple pie in 2009. In fact, Android surpassed Windows Mobile’s growth rate in Q2 of 2009. Uh oh. This has scared the shit out of the Windows Mobile team, which explains why Steve Ballmer (Microsoft’s CEO) is revamping his Windows Mobile team personally. And since HTC manufactures 80% of Smartphones today, Microsoft doesn’t want them signing any long term contracts with Google Android or Palm.

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I’m certainly an avid Windows Mobile fan, but Microsoft did lose in the Smartphone market share challenge of 2009. Definitely expect more from Microsoft with Windows Mobile 7. If they don’t pull through, they will be out for good.