To help us provide you with free impartial advice, we may earn a commission if you buy through links on our site. Learn more





Microsoft held a global press conference yesterday to talk about the next version of Windows Phone 7, codenamed “Mango”, and to announce the release of the beta version of the developers tools.
It also announced three new hardware partners – Acer, Fujitsu and ZTE – but there were no announcements regarding new phones, and no firm dates announced. Microsoft promised the new operating system and new phones would be available in “early fall” this year.
Microsoft’s Corporate Vice President of Windows Phone Marketing, Achim Berg, told a gathering of journalists and developers that Mango was a “major release” in which communications, apps and the web were the primary focus. Berg claimed that Mango will be the first mobile operating system to aggregate communications across a variety of services, such as Facebook, SMS and email. It also introduces multi-tasking, which Berg claimed would help increase battery life.
The new update would see apps become more integrated with the operating system, for example with the ability for apps to create new “live tiles” on the phone’s home screen, or the ability to pass searches on to specialty apps from within other apps – for example, the ability to search for a film on IMDB when looking for cinemas in a listings app. Berg was keen to show off Local Scout, a search tool that used the phone’s GPS chip to provide search results that were more relevant to your current location.
Our overwhelming impression from the press conference was that Microsoft is living in a bubble in which it has just invented the smartphone. Sadly, the world already owns either an iPhone or an Android phone, and only those tied into a Microsoft-reliant corporate ecosystem will find any of Mango’s new features revolutionary.