I guess if there's a thread about Android there can be at least a little one about this thing
The first bigger review surfaced yesterday:
Windows Phone 7 OS review: From scratch - GSMArena.com
The review is quite positive despite the fact that there are many disadvantages pointed out. To me they are disqualifying the system:
And if you're looking for a comparison with Android:
However it's worth reading the whole review as there are also many positives. Just not much innovative to be honest. Also the system doesn't have basic functionality available to Android.
The first bigger review surfaced yesterday:
Windows Phone 7 OS review: From scratch - GSMArena.com
The review is quite positive despite the fact that there are many disadvantages pointed out. To me they are disqualifying the system:
No system-wide file manager
No videocalling
Limited third-party apps
No Bluetooth file transfers
No USB mass storage mode
No memory card support
No multitasking
No copy paste
Too dependent on Zune software for computer file management and syncing
No music player equalisers
No Flash or Silverlight support in the web browser
No sign of free Bing maps Navigation so far
No DivX/XviD video support
No videocalling
Limited third-party apps
No Bluetooth file transfers
No USB mass storage mode
No memory card support
No multitasking
No copy paste
Too dependent on Zune software for computer file management and syncing
No music player equalisers
No Flash or Silverlight support in the web browser
No sign of free Bing maps Navigation so far
No DivX/XviD video support
However, the imposed minimum hardware requirements for a phone to qualify for WP7, practically guarantee that each and every one of them will be an expensive high-end phone.
And if you’re paying big, you’d expect high-end functionality. But Windows Phone 7 falls short of expectations on several occasions – Android 2.x and iOS 4.x will wipe the floor with it as far as power users are concerned.
And if you’re paying big, you’d expect high-end functionality. But Windows Phone 7 falls short of expectations on several occasions – Android 2.x and iOS 4.x will wipe the floor with it as far as power users are concerned.