Most Popular in Microsoft
-
Microsoft Exec Confirms Facebook Acquisition Attempt
-
Sun Type 6 Keyboard in Windows
-
Google Android To Sync Household Appliances and Google Flu Trends A Medical Tool
-
Microsoft Shouldn't Think About A Twitter Acquisition
-
Obama Patent Czar: 'Millions of Jobs Lying in Wait'
-
What Microsoft really gets from its $9bn in R&D
-
Teens Migrating to Twitter?Sometimes for Privacy
-
Microsoft Research Unveils 'Career Reflections Collection'
-
Donald Brinkman Polymath, Poet, Gaming Geek
-
How to speed up Windows 7
Opera Debuts Browser Optimized for Windows Mobile
In addition, the company claims that Opera Mini compresses data traffic by up to 90 percent, which in turn translates into reduced costs in the event that a phone roams or is locked into a pay-per-usage plan.
"Windows Mobile deserves a mobile browser that looks better, handles better and delivers better than the default browser," Dag Olav Norem, Opera's vice president of products and evidently not someone to mince words, wrote in a March 4 statement. "We are pleased to offer the world's most popular mobile Web browser as a native Windows Mobile application."
My question is this: with Windows Phone 7 Series coming by the end of the year, and indications that devices currently running Windows Mobile won't be upgradable to the new smartphone operating system, how much longer will we be seeing announcements like this?
Microsoft has claimed, repeatedly, that it'll continue to support Windows Mobile in parallel with Windows Phone 7 Series. If businesses choose to stick with Mobile out of a concern for legacy applications (not to mention the cost of a total mobile-IT-infrastructure revamp), then I could see developers and companies like Opera providing support for quite some time. But then that'll run contrary to Microsoft's inevitable impulse to get everyone onto Windows Phone 7 (similar to what they're doing to try and move everyone using either XP or Vista onto Windows 7).
I guess the question becomes, how seriously will Microsoft support Windows Mobile once the new smartphone OS comes out? I'm interested in hearing how you think the inevitable rough dance between third-party developers, Microsoft and legacy consumers will play out in the mobile space circa early 2011.
More Stories in Microsoft Watch
- Windows Phone 8 Details Revealed
- Leaked Windows Phone Road Map Traces Future Updates
- Microsoft, CEA Take Different Views on CES Pullout
- Microsoft, Nokia Considered RIM Takeover: Report
- Windows 8 App Store Promises Apple App Store Battle
- Microsoft Preps Xbox Dashboard Revamp
- Salesforce CEO Benioff Slams Microsoft
- Microsoft Bing's Most-Searched Terms Include Bieber, Xbox
- Microsoft, Yahoo, AOL Partner on Advertising
- Bing for Mobile Embraces HTML5 for Android, iOS
Most Popular Stories
A fix for those "Pairing Record Missing" errors
Blog sale!
You're the Pundit: Does a 7" iPad make sense for the education market?
Anonymous Hacks Syrian President?s Email. The Password: 12345
HMC Commands
Backdoor in TRENDnet IP Cameras Provide Real-Time Peeping Tom Paradise?
Server error: 501 #5.1.3 in UNIX
Adobe confirms: no Flash for Chrome on Android
Replace pipe with Broken Pipe
Twelve South HoverBar a unique way to marry iPad and iMac