Windows Phone 7.1 ‘Mango’ update to land this fall

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Microsoft on Tuesday unveiled its forthcoming major update to its Windows Phone platform — Windows Phone 7.1 “Mango.” We gave you live coverage of the event as well a hands-on look at the update, and now that the dust has cleared we can finally sit down and collect ourselves. In short, Mango looks awesome. We’ve seen plenty of promise in the Windows Phone platform right from the start, but we also thought Microsoft rushed the OS to market — understandably — and a lot of key features and functionality were missing as a result. Mango goes a very, very long way in bringing the emerging platform up to date, and Microsoft has named HTC, LG, Samsung, Dell, Acer, Fujitsu Limited, ZTE Corporation and of course Nokia as partners moving forward. Windows Phone 7.1 will be the launch platform for upcoming Windows Phones from Nokia, by the way, and Microsoft confirmed that Nokia has already built devices running Windows Phone 7.1 that are currently being tested in its labs. Mango will add more robust multitasking support, messaging threads, deeper social integration, a unified email inbox, voice-to-text and text-to-voice support, and about 500 other enhancements to the Windows Phone platform when it launches this fall. Hit the break for Microsoft’s full press release along with a video of some of the new features Mango will bring to the Windows Phone platform.

Microsoft Previews Next Release of Windows Phone

“Mango” to deliver smarter and easier communications, apps and Internet experiences and bring Windows Phone to more customers around the world.

REDMOND, Wash. — May 24, 2011 — Microsoft Corp. today previewed the next major release of Windows Phone, code-named “Mango,” through a series of media events around the world. “Mango” will deliver more than 500 new features to push the boundaries of the smartphone experience around communications, apps and the Internet. The “Mango” release will be available for free to Windows Phone 7 customers and is scheduled to ship on new phones beginning this fall. More details on device update timing will be provided closer to availability. Windows Phone will also add support for additional languages, expand access to apps by launching Windows Phone Marketplace in new countries, and partner with new OEMs to enable expansion to new markets.*

“Seven months ago we started our mission to make smartphones smarter and easier for people to do more,” said Andy Lees, president of the Mobile Communications Business at Microsoft. “With ‘Mango,’ Windows Phone takes a major step forward in redefining how people communicate and use apps and the Internet, giving you better results with less effort.”

Communications: Easier to Connect and Share

The smartphone experience can be complicated by a sea of disconnected apps and accounts as people attempt to keep pace with all the ways they communicate — from calls, texts, email and instant messages (IM) to status updates, Tweets, check-ins, photo posting and tagging. To help people stay on top of that growing complexity, the “Mango” release organizes information around the person or group people want to interact with, not the app they have to use.

Threads. Switch between text, Facebook chat and Windows Live Messenger within the same conversation.
Groups. Group contacts into personalized Live Tiles to see the latest status updates right from the Start Screen and quickly send a text, email or IM to the whole group.
Deeper social network integration. Twitter and LinkedIn feeds are now integrated into contact cards, and “Mango” includes built-in Facebook check-ins and new face detection software that makes it easier to quickly tag photos and post to the Web.
Linked inbox. See multiple email accounts in one linked inbox. Conversations are organized to make it easy to stay on top of the latest mail.
Hands-free messaging. Built-in voice-to-text and text-to-voice support enables hands-free texting or chatting.

A Smarter Approach to Apps

Windows Phone will challenge the way people think about apps. Today their usefulness is measured by what can be done within the app, but Microsoft sees the promise of apps in how they can be integrated directly into the core experiences of the phone. In addition to making it easy to get timely notifications and updates from apps right from the Start Screen, the “Mango” release also will surface apps as part of search results and within Windows Phone Hubs. As a result, a useful app is more likely to be right there when needed.

App Connect. By connecting apps to search results and deepening their integration with Windows Phone Hubs, including Music and Video and Pictures, “Mango” allows apps to be surfaced when and where they make sense.
Improved Live Tiles. Get real-time information from apps without having to open them. Live Tiles can be more dynamic and hold more information.
Multitasking. Quickly switch between apps in use and allow apps to run in the background, helping to preserve battery life and performance.

Taking the Internet Beyond the Browser

In addition to including Internet Explorer, the “Mango” release will connect the power of the Web to the unique capabilities of Windows Phones, such as location awareness, camera and access to apps, to present a way of viewing the Web that is more localized, actionable and relevant.

Internet Explorer 9. A browser based on the powerful Internet Explorer 9 and including support for HTML5 and full hardware acceleration.
Local Scout. Provides hyperlocal search results and recommends nearby restaurants, shopping and activities in an easy-to-use guide.
Bing on Windows Phone. More ways to search the Web, including Bing Vision, Music Search and Voice so it’s easy to discover and decide.
Quick Cards. When searching for a product, movie, event or place, see a quick summary of relevant information, including related apps.

Strengthening the Ecosystem

The Windows Phone ecosystem has grown steadily since Windows Phone 7 first launched in October, with more than 17,000 apps currently available on Windows Phone Marketplace and Windows Phone handsets available from a range of partners worldwide, and Microsoft’s recently announced partnership with Nokia. “Mango” will further expand and strengthen the Windows Phone ecosystem through new partnerships with Acer Inc., Fujitsu Ltd. and ZTE Corp., which today announced plans to deliver new Windows Phone devices in markets around the world. Furthermore, Microsoft announced it will support additional languages, including Brazilian Portuguese, Simplified and Traditional Chinese, Czech, Danish, Dutch, Finnish, Greek, Hungarian, Japanese, Korean, Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese, Russian, and Swedish, and will greatly expand the list of countries where consumers have access to apps via Windows Phone Marketplace. As well, a beta release of the free Windows Phone Developer tools, which will be used to create the next generation of “Mango” apps and games, will be posted for public download to Microsoft’s website within 24 hours of today’s events. More information about what “Mango” means for developers, the tools and a link to the public download page is available at http://windowsteamblog.com/windows_phone/b/wpdev/archive/2011/05/24/developer-news-beta-mango-tools-available-today.aspx.

22 Comments
  • The truth

    “Mango will add more robust multitasking support, messaging threads, deeper social integration, a unified email inbox, voice-to-text and text-to-voice support, and about 500 other enhancements to make it almost as good as Android.” Fixed that for your guys.

    • Anonymous

      Android 3.0 sucks! Whats the use of these features on Android when your apps keep crashing every 2 min! Atleast, WP 7.1 won’t be “beta” like Android….

  • Anonymous

    Ah. So in between today and WP7.1 we’ll see the Pre3, the HP TouchPad, iOS 5, iPhone 5 and the entire summer season. Then. once MS announces the delay of 7.1 to “Spring 2012″ we’ll add in an iPad 3, Droid 3, PlayBook 2, etc, etc, etc. 

  • Anonymous

    Yawn

  • kwicktech

    This update will be INCREDIBLE!  The webcast video demos show a lot of the updates…and I am excited!  Yes, it is about time….but holy cow, this is a major update!

    • Anonymous

      By “about time” you mean “about time to wait another 6 months.”

      • Anonymous

        Kinda like waiting for the new iPhone yes?

  • Anonymous

    Fall??  LOL  Where will iOS and Android be by that time… HUGE fail on MS part…lol

    • Anonymous

      Where will iOS and Android be by that time?  Eons behind in UI design thats where.

  • http://twitter.com/Translatethis27 Translatethis27

    WP7 = FAIL = KIN   

    • Anonymous

      You’re an insane person.  What exactly do you do all day when you aren’t spamming every blog on the planet with the same posts over and over?

      • Anonymous

        Some just have to show off their ignorance. Poor thing.

  • http://www.techhog.com Michael T. Blake

    This update, in my opinion, needs to be released now. If Microsoft wants to capitalize on the the buzz. When this update is released on new handset’s Apple (dispite the haters here) new iOS 5 and iPhone 4S (or 5) will be announced taking all the wind from MS’s sails. Not to mention Ice Cream Sandwich in Nov/Dec. So once again by the end of this year, they’ll be in 4th place (behind RIM) exactly where they are now.

    In order for this OS to have chipped away Apple or Google’s position it should have launched ready. Granted Apple and Android didn’t have all the features they have today, BUT, that doesn’t mean you launch WP7 without features that are now considered “standard” just to make a release date. They sacrificed features to make an impact, that has failed to connect thus far and are now trying to say, HEY we have that, but not until later.

    So Microsoft, to little, to late. While it is a nice looking and fairly smooth OS that should have had promise, your audience has jumped ship. Getting people to come back and board WP7 is going to be more difficult than White Star Cruise Line (makers of Titanic) trying to convince people to try their next NEW ship. 

  • Anonymous

    Fall? That’s nice and vague. I’m thinking fans of WP7 will be lucky to get this in 2011.

  • http://www.sk1wbw.wordpress.com Wayne Williams

    I was on WP7 for a few months.  Nice OS, clean and fast.  It’s all about the apps, though.  They suck.  Absolutely suck.

    • Anonymous

      Honestly what do you think is missing? I can say IM Clients for sure, but that has been a multitasking issue in not being able to run. I don’t see much of an issue outside of that.

  • ExecTech

    Can I just have speed dial?

  • serpentor

    While y’all be hating, ima be using them all….

    WP7 because it’s the best looking OS.

    Android for google integration.

    webOS for best UI.

  • Bullyboyb

    I think microsoft has. Done a great job considering they built the os from scratch early 2010.
    6ter the update which will be made available by microsoft this year they would have caught up with the competion in my opinion, and that even the next iphone launches with 4G. (Microsoft just announced that with the rerlease of mango there will also be 4G devices).
    If anyone can tell me how wp7 will be lacking against other platforms after this release I am listening (don’t tell me about apps or in-app billing, API have been released today and I hope developers start porting apps and innovating.
    Please remember I am talking about software as microsoft is not a hardware manufacturer, blame that on samsung, dell, htc and LG for their lack of imagination.

    • Mm77can

      the one thing I can see is that as a wp7 user, it does not allow me to have multiple calendars like it will for multiple emails. I would like to see that and would find that useful. I’d like to have personal and work appts seperate. Right now on WinLive, they are both together as the phone onlly takes one calendar.

  • Anonymous

    I enjoy my Win7 device as is, but Mango did add more excitement to the picture. Eagerly waiting forward to installing it.

  • http://theurbanblend.com Damian015

    Im an Android guy and will probably be for a long time but you have to give to Microsoft. Windows Phone 7 is really coming along great. 

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