The Wayback Machine - https://web.archive.org/web/20110527024717/http://www.reuters.com:80/article/2011/05/24/us-microsoft-phones-idUSTRE74N4F620110524

Microsoft revamps phone software, adds handset makers

A Windows Phone 7 is seen at the Windows Phone 7 launch press conference in New York, October 11, 2010. REUTERS/Jessica Rinaldi

A Windows Phone 7 is seen at the Windows Phone 7 launch press conference in New York, October 11, 2010.

Credit: Reuters/Jessica Rinaldi

NEW YORK | Tue May 24, 2011 11:36am EDT

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Microsoft Corp launched an update of its Windows phone software on Tuesday, hoping a host of new features will help it close the gap on smartphone leaders Google Inc and Apple Inc.

The updated software, code-named Mango, will appear on new Windows phones beginning this autumn, and be available for existing Windows phone users before that, although Microsoft has not set a timetable for making the update available.

The update -- announced eight months after the launch of Windows Phone 7 -- involves 500 new features, including Internet Explorer 9 as the mobile browser, integrated Twitter and LinkedIn feeds, automated Facebook check-ins, and access to more than 17,000 downloadable applications.

The update improves Microsoft's distinctive "live tiles", which allow users to see real-time information on the phone screen without actually opening an application, and allows more than one application to run at the same time.

Microsoft said Acer Inc, Fujitsu Ltd and ZTE Corp were planning to bring new Windows phone devices to market, joining established handset makers Samsung Electronics, HTC Corp and LG Electronics.

The new Windows phone handsets will be exclusively powered by Qualcomm Inc's second-generation Snapdragon mobile processors, the chip-maker said.

Microsoft is banking on the new version of its phone software to get its recent alliance with Nokia off to a strong start. The first phones made by Nokia using Windows software are expected late this year or early in 2012.

The two have some work to do to catch up with Google's Android, which now runs 36 percent of smartphones sold globally, followed by Apple with 17 percent, according to research firm Gartner.

Last quarter, Microsoft held only 4 percent of the smartphone operating system market, but was looking to convert the 27 percent market share held by Nokia's Symbian, which will be replaced by the Windows system in most of Nokia's new phones.

(Reporting by Bill Rigby; Editing by Maureen Bavdek and Tim Dobbyn)

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Comments (4)
DaveII wrote:

I’ve had Windows 7 Mobile for about 4 months, and it is sorely missing a file manager. IF this phone croaked today I would be an Android user tomorrow.

May 24, 2011 1:10pm EDT  --  Report as abuse
Ocala123456789 wrote:

go away microsoft

May 24, 2011 2:33pm EDT  --  Report as abuse
electric38 wrote:

Why not make the size a little larger and offer it free (or minimal cost) to schools across the country. Sounds like multilingual educational multimedia and digital (low cost) textbooks are right in step.

The education system is leaning this way already. A little incentive may be all it takes. Other countries with a lot less resources are looking at it, why shouldn’t the U.S. be the first?

Use the cream of the crop of only our best, most productive teachers. Open the educational suggestion box for new ideas. Allow software developers involvement so that the cost of programs decrease.

May 24, 2011 5:12pm EDT  --  Report as abuse

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