January 26, 2009 09:00
Interesting article here describing sales differences between the Apple iPhone and Windows Mobile devices:
iPhone vs WM Sales
iPhone vs WM Sales
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bobetter Wrote:hmmm....does this mean that Active Captain Mobile development for the iPhone has been halted?Of course not! It just helps to show why sales of our WM version have been so strong.
GPSNavX Wrote:Microsoft still has no iPhone answerThe 22 million people who purchased Windows Mobile devices last year probably aren't asking a question.
ActiveCaptain Wrote:GPSNavX Wrote:Microsoft still has no iPhone answerFor example, I was just at the Miami Boat Show last week and experienced the following:
- Couldn't get a web site displayed on a high-end WM phone; pulled out the iPhone and it came up perfectly.
- Had no WiFi access and needed to do some database work on my web site requiring the laptop; the WM device got the laptop onto the network in 15 seconds; the iPhone sat powered off, unable to help at all.
- AppStore showed me that 5 apps had new updates - that is very slick; I have no idea how old my WM apps are and never check.
- TomTom on my WM device navigated me perfectly around all of the nasty Miami traffic; the iPhone's Google maps are nice but terribly inadequate for real world live navigating on streets.
All of these devices have their place.
Quote:The company also added that its policies on allowed Windows apps will be stricter than for Apple. It shares the iPhone's ban against apps that replace "core functionality" but will also reject mapping and navigation software from its store.
ReeferJon Wrote:The Psion Series 5 was an awesome little machine. I remember when it came out.. it was streets ahead of its time.
[image]http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/f/f7/Psion_5mx_17o06.jpg/240px-Psion_5mx_17o06.jpg[/image] Wikipedia Entry
I wish Psion had never canned it.. it was another example of a fantastic British product that was ahead its time but didn't survive commercially. Anyway, personally I never liked the resulting Symbian OS as much as the Series 5.
Similar story to Acorn Computers (Wikipedia Entry). We have them to thank for the first RISC-based personal computer and, more importantly the ARM processor that now powers the vast majority of Smartphones and PDAs.
Hey ho... enough flag waving ;-)
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