Well, there was the caveat... "you've used"I'm shocked that there's no Windows mobile reply so far.
I can't be that old to have used a Windows mobile phoneWell, there was the caveat... "you've used"![]()
I'm shocked that there's no Windows mobile reply so far.
Win CE may have been a poor OS from a user interface point of view. It was still using resistive screens and a stylus to get some accuracy. But from a functionality point it was very good.
Back in 2007 I had a TYTN 2, Android had yet to get a phone on the market and apples original iPhone was an mp3 player with some phone elements (no MMS, no copy/paste, no push email, only Edge connection)
RIMs blackberry's were also pretty slick at this time and their messenger app was a killer feature and great email support. Web browsing was heavy on reformatting pages which sucked, as did media playback due to lack of support for many codecs.
Now there is no practical difference between Usability and functionality between phone OS's if you are buying at the top end.
Which made me think that they were never serious about this whole "smartphone" thing taking off or could never imagine what it has become. I mean, the iPhone didn't pop up over night, it was developed for a good 3-4 years prior to its release so I doubt MS/Nokia/BB didn't see it brewing from afar.The issue, I'd say, was that Microsoft, BlackBerry and Nokia all assumed that they would always have the functionality advantage, and that this would override Apple's interface advantage. They forgot that it's easy to catch up on features -- it's much harder to catch up on fundamental interface breakthroughs. Sure, the 2007 iPhone wasn't what you wanted if you had to have 3G, or copy-and-paste, or enterprise features... but those came quickly. It took Microsoft 3 years to offer a serious response to Apple's UI (even longer for BlackBerry and Nokia), and by that point it was too late.
Which made me think that they were never serious about this whole "smartphone" thing taking off or could never imagine what it has become. I mean, the iPhone didn't pop up over night, it was developed for a good 3-4 years prior to its release so I doubt MS/Nokia/BB didn't see it brewing from afar.
I'll give Apple all the credit it deserves for revolutionizing the smartphone market. They saw all the half-assed attempts on the market back then and go "we can do it better", and they did. Oh how I would love to hear the rationale from those MS/BB/Nokia execs for not further developing their OSes...