Follow Us

Windows Phone 8 previewed by Microsoft

Will use same core OS as desktop version

Microsoft is planning to base its upcoming Windows Phone 8 OS on the same OS core as its Windows 8 software for desktop and laptop computers, the company said yesterday.

The move marks a major change for Microsoft, which used the Windows CE core as the basis for its current Windows Phone 7 OS.

"As phones get more powerful, we have been feeling more and more that phones could benefit from an upgrade at the core," said Joe Belfiore (top image), corporate vice president of Microsoft, speaking at a developer presentation in San Francisco.

"For consumers, this new shared core is going to mean a much greater choice in hardware and some new experience that cross over between phone and PC," said Belfiore.

Microsoft said the switch would mean several changes, including greater support for NFC (near field communications) wireless technology for mobile wallet applications and the ability to easily support ports of Windows games to Windows Phone 8.

The latter feature, Belfiore said, will mean, "we're going to see some freaking killer games."

For corporate IT managers, the new OS will include encryption and secure boot-up, the ability to roll out applications to phones without having to go through Microsoft, device management applications and support for Microsoft Office applications.

Windows Phone 8 will also mean the adoption of Nokia Maps as the default mapping client. In some countries this will include turn-by-turn navigation. Microsoft and Nokia reached a broad phone development deal in 2011 that would put Windows Phone on Nokia devices and make Nokia's mapping software a key part of the OS.

Other features announced included two new screen resolutions: 1280 by 720 and 1280 by 768 pixels.

A major cosmetic change to the OS will be a refresh of the home screen. The current screen includes a number of customizable tiles that can be one or two columns wide. The new home screen will feature up to four columns of tiles, giving users a chance to put more applications and information on the home screen.

The announcement was targeted at the developers Microsoft needs to get on board to make the new OS a success. As such, the company didn't announce end-user hardware devices.




Comments



Send to a friend

Email this article to a friend or colleague:

PLEASE NOTE: Your name is used only to let the recipient know who sent the story, and in case of transmission error. Both your name and the recipient's name and address will not be used for any other purpose.

Techworld White Papers

Choose – and Choose Wisely – the Right MSP for Your SMB

End users need a technology partner that provides transparency, enables productivity, delivers...

Download Whitepaper

10 Effective Habits of Indispensable IT Departments

It’s no secret that responsibilities are growing while budgets continue to shrink. Download this...

Download Whitepaper

Optimise Performance For Global eCommerce

Global is all the rage: eBusiness teams are feverishly building new international initiatives in...

Download Whitepaper

Gartner Magic Quadrant for Enterprise Information Archiving

Enterprise information archiving is contributing to organisational needs for e-discovery and...

Download Whitepaper

Techworld UK - Technology - Business

Part 2 of your journey to virtualisation

You can still access part 2 of our virtualisation journey - explore how you can improve your servers, storage and networks by developing your infrastructure.

Watch now...
Techworld Mobile Site

Access Techworld's content on the move

Get the latest news, product reviews and downloads on your mobile device with Techworld's mobile site.

Find out more...

From Wow to How : Making mobile and cloud work for you

On demand Biztech Briefing - Learn how to effectively deliver mobile work styles and cloud services together.

Watch now...

Site Map

* *