Microsoft unveiled the latest version of its mobile phone software and new handset partners on Tuesday as it seeks to claw back market share from Apple and Google.
The Redmond, Washington-based personal computer software powerhouse said the update to its Windows Phone operating system, code-named “Mango,” features over 500 new features and faster browsing with Internet Explorer 9 (IE9).
Microsoft said Mango will be available for free to existing Windows Phone 7 customers and will ship on new phones this fall from Samsung, LG and HTC Corp (宏達電) and new partners Acer Inc (宏碁), Fujitsu and ZTE (中興).
Photo: Reuters
Microsoft said it is also working on a Mango handset in its labs with new partner Nokia, the Finnish mobile phone titan which announced in February it would begin using Microsoft’s platform as its smartphone operating system.
Mango comes seven months after the release of the first smartphones running Windows Phone 7, which were well received by industry analysts, but failed to catch on with the public.
When Mango-powered phones do eventually hit stores this fall, they’ll likely be facing competition from a new iPhone from Apple and the latest versions of handsets running Google’s Android software.
“Today is a bit of a pre-emptive strike by Microsoft,” Gartner analyst Michael Gartenberg said.
“From the technology point of view it looks very, very good,” Gartenberg said. “But it’s not solely about the technology. It’s about who can educate and evangelize the customer better.”
Gartenberg and Forrester analyst Charles Golvin said Microsoft’s smartphone rivals already offer a lot of the features introduced on Tuesday.
“The Mango update contains a mixture of new capabilities that provide some differentiation for Microsoft’s platform, but many of the touted additions are merely keeping pace with the competition,” Golvin said.
“These improvements continue to reinforce the viability of the platform, as does the Nokia deal,” he said. “However, it will be challenging for their manufacturer and operator partners to differentiate their Windows Phone 7 products based solely on these improvements.”
Andy Lees, president of Microsoft’s Mobile Communications, who presented Mango to reporters at a preview event in New York, said the objective is to “make smartphones smarter and easier for people to do more.”
Mango can show multiple e-mail accounts in a linked inbox and is also capable of displaying the thread of a conversation — whether it be by text, Facebook chat or Windows Live Messenger — in a single window.
“[Mango] organizes information around the person or group people want to interact with, not the app they have to use,” Microsoft said.
Mango emphasizes social networking by integrating Twitter and LinkedIn feeds and features the latest innovations from Microsoft’s search engine Bing.
A Bing search for a movie, for example, will show movie times and theater locations and the option to connect to a Fandango application to purchase a ticket.
Microsoft provided a display of the speed of Web browser IE9 by comparing the time it took to load a Web page on a Mango device, on a BlackBerry from Research In Motion, on an iPhone 4 and on an Android device from HTC.
Unsurprisingly, Mango won.
As Microsoft seeks to increase its market share, the company said Mango would support additional languages including Chinese, Dutch, Greek, Japanese, Korean, Polish, Portuguese and Russian.
According to Gartner, Android will power about half of the smartphones worldwide by the end of next year with a 49.2 percent market share.
The market share for the iPhone was forecast to remain relatively stable at 18.9 percent next year.
Windows will account for 5.6 percent of the smartphone market at the end of this year, but will rise to 10.8 percent next year, according to Gartner.
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