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Wikipedia

Windows Mobile

Windows Mobile is a discontinued mobile operating system developed by Microsoft for smartphones and personal digital assistants.[1]

Windows Mobile
Windows Mobile 6.5.3 screenshot, showing the Today screen
DeveloperMicrosoft
Working stateSucceeded by Windows Phone
Initial release (2000-04-19) (2013-01-08)April 19, 2000 – January 8, 2013
(12 years, 8 months, 2 weeks and 6 days)
Final release6.5.3 / February 2, 2010; 14 years ago (2010-02-02)
Final preview6.5.5
Marketing targetMobile devices
Update methodAdaptation kit upgrade
Kernel typeHybrid
Default
user interface
Graphical
LicenseProprietary software licensed to OEMs
Succeeded byWindows Phone
Official websitehttps://www.microsoft.com/windowsmobile/default.mspx
Support status
Unsupported

Its origin dated back to Windows CE in 1996, though Windows Mobile itself first appeared in 2000 as Pocket PC 2000 which ran on Pocket PC PDAs. It was renamed "Windows Mobile" in 2003, at which point it came in several versions (similar to the desktop versions of Windows) and was aimed at business and enterprise consumers. When initially released in the mid-2000s, it was to be the portable equivalent of what Windows desktop OS was: a major force in the then-emerging mobile/portable areas.

Following the rise of newer smartphone OSs (iOS and Android) Windows Mobile never equalled the success and faded rapidly in the following years. By February 2010, Microsoft announced the more modern and consumer-focused Windows Phone to supersede Windows Mobile. As a result, Windows Mobile has been deprecated since existing devices and software are incompatible with Windows Phone.[2][3][4] The last version of Windows Mobile, released after the announcement of Windows Phone, was 6.5.5. After this, Microsoft ceased development on Windows Mobile in order to concentrate on Windows Phone.

Microsoft released a similarly-named Windows 10 Mobile in 2015 which was part of the Windows Phone series, and it is unrelated to the retired Windows Mobile operating systems.

Features edit

Most versions of Windows Mobile have a standard set of features, such as multitasking and the ability to navigate a file system similar to that of Windows 9x and Windows NT, including support for many of the same file types. Similarly to its desktop counterpart, it comes bundled with a set of applications that perform basic tasks. Internet Explorer Mobile is the default web browser, and Windows Media Player is the default media player used for playing digital media. The mobile version of Microsoft Office is the default office suite.[citation needed]

Internet Connection Sharing, supported on compatible devices, allows the phone to share its Internet connection with computers via USB and Bluetooth. Windows Mobile supports virtual private networking over PPTP protocol. Most devices with mobile connectivity also have a Radio Interface Layer. The Radio Interface Layer provides the system interface between the Cell Core layer within the Windows Mobile OS and the radio protocol stack used by the wireless modem hardware. This allows OEMs to integrate a variety of modems into their equipment.[5]

The user interface changed dramatically between versions, only retaining similar functionality. The Today Screen, later called the Home Screen, shows the current date, owner information, upcoming appointments, e-mails, and tasks. The taskbar displays the current time as well as the volume level. Devices with a cellular radio also show the signal strength on said taskbar.[citation needed]

History edit

 
An Alpha build of WinPad in the early days of development showing off stylus compatibility

Windows Mobile is based on the Windows CE kernel and first appeared as the Pocket PC 2000 operating system. It includes a suite of basic applications developed with the Microsoft Windows API, and is designed to have features and appearance somewhat similar to desktop versions of Windows. It allowed third party developers to develop software for Windows Mobile with no restrictions imposed by Microsoft. Software applications were purchasable from Windows Marketplace for Mobile during the service's lifespan.[citation needed]

Most early Windows Mobile devices came with a stylus, which can be used to enter commands by tapping it on the screen.[6] The primary touch input technology behind most devices were resistive touchscreens which often required a stylus for input. Later devices used capacitive sensing which does not require a stylus. Along with touchscreens, a large variety of form factors existed for the platform. Some devices featured slideout keyboards, while others featured minimal face buttons.[citation needed]

Windows CE edit

Microsoft's work on handheld portable devices began with research projects in 1990, with the work on Windows CE beginning in 1992.[7] Initially, the OS and the user interface were developed separately. With Windows CE being based on Windows 95 code and a separate team handing the user interface which was codenamed WinPad (later Microsoft At Work for Handhelds).[7] Windows 95 had strong pen support making porting easy; with some saying "At this time, Windows 95 offers outstanding pen support. It is treating pens right for the first time."[8] WinPad was delayed due to price and performance issues,[9] before being scrapped in early 1995 due to touchscreen driver problems relating to WriteTouch technology, made by NCR Microelectronic Products.[8] Although WinPad was never released as a consumer product, Alpha builds were released showcasing many interface elements.[10] During development of WinPad a separate team worked on a project called Pulsar; designed to be a mobile communications version of WinPad, described as a "pager on Steroids".[7] This project was also canceled around the same time as WinPad. The two disbanded groups would form the Pegasus project in 1995. Pegasus would work on the hardware side of the Windows CE OS, attempting to create a form factor similar to a PC-esque PDA like WinPad, with communications functionality like Pulsar. Under the name Handheld PC, a hardware reference guide was created and devices began shipping in 1996, although most of these device bore little resemblance to the goal of a pen-based touchscreen handheld device.[11] A specification for a smaller form factor under the name Palm-size PC was released in 1998.[11]

Pocket PC 2000 edit

 
Pocket PC 2000 Today screen

Pocket PC 2000, originally codenamed "Rapier",[12] was released on April 19, 2000, and was based on the Windows CE 3.0 kernel.[citation needed]

Pocket PC 2000 was the debut of what was later to become the Windows Mobile operating system, and was meant to be a successor to the operating system aboard Palm-size PCs. Backwards compatibility was retained with such Palm-size PC applications.[citation needed]

Pocket PC 2000 was intended mainly for Pocket PC devices; however, several Palm-size PC devices had the ability to be updated also. Furthermore, several Pocket PC 2000 phones were released (under the name Handheld PC 2000), however at this time, Microsoft's "Smartphone" hardware platform had not yet been created.[citation needed]

At this time, Pocket PC devices had not been standardized with a specific CPU architecture. As a result, Pocket PC 2000 was released on multiple CPU architectures, such as SH-3, MIPS, and ARM. The only resolution supported by this release was 240 x 320 (QVGA). Removable storage card formats that were supported were CompactFlash and MultiMediaCard. Infrared (IR) File beaming capability was among the original hardware features.[citation needed]

Aesthetically, the original Pocket PC operating system was similar in design to the then-current Windows 98, Windows 2000, and the yet-to-be-released Windows Me desktop operating systems. Crucially, the Pocket PC had a less cluttered interface more suitable for a mobile device, unlike the interface on predeceasing Palm-size PCs.[11] Mainstream support for Pocket PC 2000 ended on September 30, 2005, and extended support ended on October 9, 2007.[citation needed]

This initial release had multiple built-in applications,[13] many of them similarly branded to match their desktop counterparts; such as Microsoft Reader, Microsoft Money, Pocket Internet Explorer and Windows Media Player. A version of Microsoft Office called Pocket Office was also bundled and included Pocket Word, Pocket Excel and Pocket Outlook. Notes, a note-taking app saw its first release and would be supported by most later versions of Windows Mobile. Intelligent character recognition support allowed Notes to distinguish styles of handwriting to be learned by the OS during processing to improve accuracy and recognition levels.[citation needed]

Pocket PC 2002 edit

 
Pocket PC 2002 Today screen

Pocket PC 2002, originally codenamed "Merlin",[12] was released in October 4, 2001, and was based on the Windows CE 3.0 kernel, like with Pocket PC 2000.[citation needed]

Although targeted mainly for 240×320 (QVGA) Pocket PC devices, Pocket PC 2002 was also used for Pocket PC phones (Pocket PC 2002 Phone Edition), and for the first time, smartphones (Smartphone 2002).[14] These Pocket PC 2002 Smartphones were mainly GSM devices. With future releases, the Pocket PC and Smartphone lines would increasingly collide as the licensing terms were relaxed allowing OEMs to take advantage of more innovative, individual design ideas.[citation needed]

Aesthetically, Pocket PC 2002 was meant to be similar in design to the then newly released Windows XP. Newly added or updated programs include[15][16][17][18] Windows Media Player 8 with streaming capability; MSN Messenger, and Microsoft Reader 2, with Digital rights management support. Upgrades to the bundled version of Office Mobile include a spell checker and word count tool in Pocket Word and improved Pocket Outlook. Connectivity was improved with file beaming on non-Microsoft devices such as Palm OS, the inclusion of Terminal Services and Virtual private networking support, and the ability to synchronize folders. Other upgrades include an enhanced UI with theme support and savable downloads and WAP in Pocket Internet Explorer.[citation needed]

Windows Mobile 2003 edit

 
Windows Mobile 2003 for Pocket PC Today screen

Windows Mobile 2003, initially named as Pocket PC 2003 and originally codenamed "Ozone",[12] was the first release under the Windows Mobile banner, released on June 23, 2003, based on the Windows CE 4.x kernel.[citation needed]

It came in four editions: "Windows Mobile 2003 for Pocket PC Premium Edition", "Windows Mobile 2003 for Pocket PC Professional Edition", "Windows Mobile 2003 for Smartphone" and "Windows Mobile 2003 for Pocket PC Phone Edition". The last was designed especially for Pocket PCs which include phone functionalities. The Professional Edition was used in Pocket PC budget models. It lacked a number of features that were in the Premium Edition, such as a client for L2TP/IPsec VPNs. All versions of Windows Mobile 2003 were powered by Windows CE 4.20.[citation needed]

Communications interface were enhanced with Bluetooth device management, which allowed for Bluetooth file beaming support, Bluetooth headset support and support for Bluetooth add-on keyboards. A pictures application with viewing, cropping, e-mail, and beaming support was added. Multimedia improvements included MIDI file support as ringtones in Phone Edition and Windows Media Player 9.0 with streaming optimization. A puzzle game titled Jawbreaker is among the preinstalled programs. GAPI was included with this release to facilitate the development of games for the platform.[19]

Other features/built-in applications included the following:[20] enhanced Pocket Outlook with vCard and vCal support, improved Pocket Internet Explorer and SMS reply options for Phone Edition.[citation needed]

Windows Mobile 2003 SE edit

Windows Mobile 2003 Second Edition, also known as "Windows Mobile 2003 SE", was released on March 24, 2004, and first offered on the Dell Axim x30. It was based on the Windows CE 4.x kernel. This was the last version which allowed users to back up and restore an entire device through ActiveSync.

This upgrade allows users to switch between portrait and landscape modes and introduces a single-column layout in Pocket Internet Explorer. It includes support for Wi-Fi Protected Access (WPA) and new screen resolutions: 640×480 (VGA), 240×240, and 480×480. It was powered by the same OS as with Windows Mobile 2003, which was Windows CE 4.20.

Windows Mobile 5 edit

 
Windows Mobile 5.0 Today screen

Windows Mobile 5.0, originally codenamed "Magneto",[12] was released at Microsoft's Mobile and Embedded Developers Conference 2005 in Las Vegas, May 9–12, 2005, and was based on the Windows CE 5.0 kernel.

Microsoft offered mainstream support for Windows Mobile 5 through October 12, 2010, and extended support through October 13, 2015.[21] It was first offered on the Dell Axim x51. It used the .NET Compact Framework 1.0 SP3, an environment for programs based on .NET. Windows Mobile 5.0 included Microsoft Exchange Server "push" functionality improvements that worked with Exchange 2003 SP2.[22] The "push" functionality also required vendor/device support.[23] With AKU2 software upgrades all WM 5.0 devices supported DirectPush.

Other features included an enhanced battery-saving capability called persistent storage capability. Previously up to 50% (enough for 72 hours of storage) of battery power was reserved just to maintain data in volatile RAM. This continued the trend of Windows-based devices moving from using RAM as their primary storage medium to the use of a combination of RAM and flash memory (in use, no distinction between the two is obvious to users). Programs and frequently accessed data run in RAM, while most storage is in the flash memory. The OS seamlessly moves data between the two as needed. Everything is backed up in the flash memory, so unlike prior devices, WM5 devices lose no data if power is lost. New to 5.0, OS updates were released as adaptation kit upgrades, with AKU 3.5 being the final released.

Windows Mobile 5 comes with Microsoft Office Mobile which includes PowerPoint Mobile, Excel Mobile with graphing capability and Word Mobile with the ability to insert tables and graphics. Media management and playback was enhanced with Picture and Video package, which converged the management of videos and pictures and Windows Media Player 10 Mobile. Among new hardware features were enhanced Bluetooth support, default QWERTY keyboard-support and a management interface for Global Positioning System (GPS). Improvements were made to ActiveSync 4.2 with 15% increased synchronization speed. Business customers benefited from a new error reporting facility similar to that present in desktop and server Windows systems. Caller ID now supports photos so a user can apply an image to each contact to show when a call is received. DirectShow was also natively added. This release was the first to include DirectDraw with hardware acceleration, replacing the deprecated graphics component of GAPI.[19]

Windows Mobile 5.0 requires at least 64 MB of ROM (it's advisable to have 64 MB of RAM), and the device must run an ARM compatible processor such as the Intel XScale or the Samsung and Texas Instruments ARM compatibles.[24]

Windows Mobile 6 edit

Windows Mobile 6, formerly codenamed "Crossbow",[12] was released on February 12, 2007[25] at the 3GSM World Congress 2007 and was based on the Windows CE 5.2 kernel.

It comes in three different versions: "Windows Mobile 6 Standard" for Smartphones (phones without touchscreens), "Windows Mobile 6 Professional" for Pocket PCs with phone functionality, and "Windows Mobile 6 Classic" for Pocket PCs without cellular radios.[26]

Windows Mobile 6 is powered by Windows CE 5.0 (version 5.2) and is strongly linked to the then newly introduced Windows Live[27] and Exchange 2007 products. Windows Mobile 6 Standard was first offered on the Orange's SPV E650,[28] while Windows Mobile 6 Professional was first offered on the O2's Xda Terra.[29] Aesthetically, Windows Mobile 6 was meant to be similar in design to the then newly released Windows Vista. Functionally, it works much like Windows Mobile 5, but with much better stability.

Along with the announcement of Office Mobile 6.1[30] with support for Office 2007 document formats (pptx, docx, xlsx); OneNote Mobile, a companion to Microsoft Office OneNote was added to the already installed version. In addition to the newly included programs with Office Mobile improvements were made to existing applications. Such as HTML email support in Outlook Mobile. A large number of Windows Mobile users are enterprise users business environments were targeted. With Server Search on Microsoft Exchange 2007, Out of Office Replies with Microsoft Exchange 2007, and search ability for contacts in an Exchange Server Address Book being implemented. To aid development for programmers, .NET Compact Framework v2 SP2 is now preinstalled with the OS. Developers and users also have access to Microsoft SQL Server 2005 Compact Edition for storage and retrieval of information. AJAX, JavaScript, and XMLDOM support were added to Internet Explorer Mobile along with improved devicewide Internet Sharing. Communication abilities were further enhanced with a new Microsoft Bluetooth Stack and VoIP (Internet calling) support with acoustic echo cancellation and MSRT audio codec.

To improve security Microsoft added Storage Card Encryption so that encryption keys are lost if device is cold-booted. Further updates both, security and feature, can now also be provided using Operating System Live Update.[31]

Among other improvements:[32] 320×320 and 800×480 (WVGA) screen resolution support (The S01SH or "Em One" by Sharp was the first and only device to have an 800×480 screen on WM5),[33] Improved Remote Desktop access[34] (available for only certain Pocket PCs),[35] Customer Feedback option,[36] Smartfilter for searching within programs and Unlicensed Mobile Access (UMA) support for select operators.

Windows Mobile 6.1 edit

 
Windows Mobile 6.1 Today screen

Windows Mobile 6.1 was announced April 1, 2008, and was based on the Windows CE 5.x kernel.

It is a minor upgrade to the Windows Mobile 6 platform with various performance enhancements and a redesigned Home screen featuring horizontal tiles that expand on clicking to display more information, although this new home screen is featured only on Windows Mobile Standard edition. This was not supported in the Professional edition.[37] Several other changes such as threaded SMS, full page zooming in Internet Explorer and 'Domain Enroll' were also added, along with a "mobile" version of the Microsoft OneNote program and an interactive "Getting Started" wizard. Domain Enroll is functionality to connect the device to System Center Mobile Device Manager 2008, a product to manage mobile devices.[38] Windows Mobile 6.1 also had improved bandwidth efficiency in its push-email protocol ActiveSync up to 40%;[39] this considerably improved battery life in many devices.

Aside from the visual and feature distinctions, the underlying CE versions can be used to differentiate WM 6.0 from WM 6.1. The version of Windows CE in WM 6.0 is 5.2.*, where the third and final number being a four-digit build ID (e.g. 5.2.1622 on HTC Wing). In WM 6.1, the CE version is 5.2.* with a five-digit build number (e.g. 5.2.19216 on Palm Treo 800w).

Windows Mobile 6.5 edit

 
Windows Mobile 6.5 Today screen

Windows Mobile 6.5 is a stopgap update to Windows Mobile 6.1, based on the Windows CE 5.x kernel, intended to bridge the gap between version 6.1 and the then yet-to-be released Windows Mobile 7 (Later canceled in favor of Windows Phone 7), that arrived in 2010. It was never part of Microsoft's mobile phone roadmap, and has been described by its chief executive, Steve Ballmer, as "not the full release Microsoft wanted" until the multi-touch-enabled Windows Mobile 7 (now replaced by Windows Phone) arrived in 2010.[40] Ballmer also indicated that the company "screwed up with Windows Mobile", he lamented that Windows Mobile 7 was not yet available and that the Windows Mobile team needed to try to recoup losses.[41] Microsoft unveiled this version at the 2009 Mobile World Congress in February,[42] and several devices were supplied with it.[43] It was released to manufacturers on May 11, 2009; the first devices running the operating system appeared in late October 2009.[44] Several phones that officially shipped with Windows Mobile 6.1 can be officially updated to Windows Mobile 6.5.[45] This update includes some significant new added features, such as a revamped GUI, a new Today screen resembling that of Microsoft's Zune player with vertically scrollable labels (called 'Titanium') in terms of functionality with a styling similar to that of Windows 7.[46] WM 6.5 also includes the new Internet Explorer Mobile 6 browser, with improved interface.[47]

Along with Windows Mobile 6.5, Microsoft announced several cloud computing services codenamed "SkyBox", "SkyLine", "SkyMarket".[48] "SkyBox" has been confirmed as My Phone,[49] while "SkyMarket" has been confirmed as Windows Marketplace for Mobile.[50] This version was designed mainly for easier finger usage.[51] Some reviewers have noted interface inconsistencies, with some applications having small buttons making them harder to operate using only a finger.[52] Whilst this version of Windows Mobile does not natively support capacitive screens, mobile manufacturers have been able to use them on their devices.[53]

In the months following this release, development shifted from Windows Mobile to its successor Windows Phone. As such no major upgrades were planned or released, although three minor updates; 6.5.1, 6.5.3 and 6.5.5; were made to satisfy consumers during the transition period. 6.5.1 brings larger user interface elements,[54] including icon based soft buttons (rather than text based),[55] an updated contacts app,[56] native support for A-GPS,[54] improved threaded text messaging,[57] and performance improvements.[58] It was unofficially ported to several Windows Mobile phones.[59]

The second minor update was announced on February 2, 2010, along with the Sony Ericsson Aspen which was the first phone to use this version.[60] 6.5.3 continues the trend of attempting to provide a more finger-friendly user interface with several new usability features such as native support for multitouch; although device maker HTC Corporation created proprietary work-arounds to allow multi-touch to work on some applications it installed on its HD2 handset (However, Microsoft applications on this handset, such as the Internet Explorer web browser, did not support multi-touch.[61]) and drag-and-drop start menu icons. Touchable tiles replaced soft keys."[62] Internet Explorer Mobile 6 has also received some major updates including decreased page load time, improved memory management and gesture smoothing.[63] As with other updates it was unofficially ported to some other devices. Additional features include threaded email and Office Mobile 2010.[64]

The last minor update and the last released version is 6.5.5. It first leaked in January 2010, and was unofficially ported to some Windows Mobile phones.[65] The name Windows Mobile 6.5.5 has been applied to these newer builds, although this name remained unconfirmed by Microsoft.

Hardware edit

There are three main versions of Windows Mobile for various hardware devices.[66] Windows Mobile Professional, which runs on smartphones with touchscreens; Windows Mobile Standard, which runs on mobile phones without touchscreens; and Windows Mobile Classic, which runs on personal digital assistant or Pocket PCs. Windows Mobile for Automotive and Windows Mobile software for Portable Media Centers are among some specialty versions of the platform.

Microsoft had over 50 handset partners,[67] when Windows Mobile was still being shipped on new devices. 80% of the 50 million Windows Mobile devices that were made from launch to February 2009 were built by one contract manufacturing group, HTC, which makes handsets for several major companies under their brands, and under its own brand.[68]

Embedded Handheld edit

On January 10, 2011, Microsoft announced Windows Embedded Handheld 6.5. The operating system has compatibility with Windows Mobile 6.5 and is presented as an enterprise handheld device, targeting retailers, delivery companies, and other companies that rely on handheld computing. Unlike Windows Phone, Windows Embedded Handheld retains backward compatibility with legacy Windows Mobile applications.[69]

Pocket PCs edit

Pocket PCs and personal digital assistants were originally the intended platform for Windows Mobile. These were grouped into two main categories: devices that lacked mobile phone capabilities, and those that included it. Beginning with version 6 devices with this functionality ran "Windows Mobile 6 Professional" and those that lacked it ran "Windows Mobile 6 Classic". Microsoft had described these devices as "a handheld device that enables you to store and retrieve e-mail, contacts, appointments, play multimedia files, games, exchange text messages with MSN Messenger, browse the Web, and more".[70] From a technical standpoint Microsoft also specified various hardware and software requirements such as the inclusion of a touchscreen and a directional pad or touchpad.

Smartphones edit

Smartphones were the second hardware platform after Pocket PC to run Windows Mobile, and debuted with the release of Pocket PC 2002. Although in the broad sense of the term "Smartphone", both Pocket PC phones and Microsoft branded Smartphones each fit into this category. Microsoft's use of the term "Smartphone" includes only more specific hardware devices that differ from Pocket PC phones. Such Smartphones were originally designed without touchscreens, intended to be operated more efficiently with only one hand, and typically had lower display resolution than Pocket PCs. Microsoft's focus for the Smartphone platform was to create a device that functioned well as a phone and data device in a more integrated manner.[71]

Naming conventions for each version
Pocket PC 2000 Pocket PC 2002 Windows Mobile 2003 Windows Mobile 2003 SE Windows Mobile 5.0 Windows Mobile 6 Windows Mobile 6.1 Windows Mobile 6.5
Pocket PC (without Mobile Phone) Pocket PC 2000 Pocket PC 2002 Windows Mobile 2003 for Pocket PC Windows Mobile 2003 for Pocket PC SE Windows Mobile 5.0 for Pocket PC Windows Mobile 6 Classic Windows Mobile 6.1 Classic N/A
Pocket PC (with Mobile Phone) Pocket PC 2000 Phone Edition Pocket PC 2002 Phone Edition Windows Mobile 2003 for Pocket PC Phone Edition Windows Mobile 2003 SE for Pocket PC Phone Edition Windows Mobile 5.0 for Pocket PC Phone Edition Windows Mobile 6 Professional Windows Mobile 6.1 Professional Windows Mobile 6.5 Professional
Smartphone (without touch screen) N/A Smartphone 2002 Windows Mobile 2003 for Smartphone Windows Mobile 2003 SE for Smartphone Windows Mobile 5.0 for Smartphone Windows Mobile 6 Standard Windows Mobile 6.1 Standard Windows Mobile 6.5 Standard

Market share edit

Windows Mobile market share
Year U.S. marketshare
2004 11.3%[72]
2005 17%[72]
2006 37%[73]
2007 42%[73]
2008 27%[73]
2009 15%[73]
2010 7%[73]
2011 3%[73]
present <0.1%

Windows Mobile's share of the smartphone market grew from its inception while new devices were being released. After peaking in 2007,[73] it saw decline year-on-year.

In Q1 2003, Windows Mobile was the third largest operating system in the smart handheld market, behind Symbian and Palm OS.[74]

In Q1 2004, Windows Mobile accounted for 23% of worldwide smartphone sales.[75] Windows Mobile was projected in 2005 to overtake Symbian to become the leading mobile OS by 2010.[76] In Q3 2004, Windows Mobile (CE) surpassed Palm OS to become the largest PDA operating system.[77]

In Q4 2005 Microsoft shipped 2.2 million PDAs, which increased to 3.5 million in the same quarter the following year.[78] Windows Mobile saw year over year growth between 2005 and 2006 of 38.8% which according to Gartner "helped Windows Mobile to solidify its stronghold on the market".[78]

But by 2008, its share had dropped to 14%.[79] Microsoft licensed Windows Mobile to four out of the world's five largest mobile phone manufacturers, with Nokia being the exception.[80]

Gartner research data showed that while the total smartphone industry grew 27% between 2008 and 2009, Windows Mobile's share of the smartphone market fell 2.7% in that same period.[81] It also[81] decreased by 20% in Q3 2009.[82] At one time Windows Mobile was the most popular handset for business use,[citation needed] but by 2009 this was no longer the case; 24% of planned business deployments of mobile application in the United States were for Windows Mobile, putting it in 3rd place, behind BlackBerry (61%) and iPhone OS (27%);[83]

In February 2009, Microsoft signed a deal with the third largest mobile phone maker, LG Electronics, to license Windows Mobile OS on 50 upcoming LG smartphone models.[84] But in September 2009, Palm, Inc. announced it would drop Windows Mobile from its smartphone line-up.[85] Gartner estimated that by the third quarter of 2009 Windows Mobile's share of worldwide smartphone sales was 7.9%.[82] By August 2010, it was the least popular smartphone operating system, with a 5% share of the worldwide smartphone market (after Symbian, BlackBerry OS, Android and iOS).[86] An October 2009 report in DigiTimes said that Acer would shift its focus from Windows Mobile to Google Android.[87] The New York Times reported in 2009 that Windows Mobile "[was] foundering", as cellphone makers desert it in favor of Google's Android phone platform.[88] It cited the difficulties in Microsoft's business model, which involves charging handset manufacturers up to $25 for each copy of Windows Mobile, while rival Google gives away Android for free.[89] From late 2009 analysts and media reports began to express concerns about the future viability of the Windows Mobile platform, and whether Microsoft would keep supporting it into the future.[90][91][92] Samsung announced in November 2009 that it would phase out the Windows Mobile platform,[93] to concentrate on its own Bada operating system, Google's Android, and Microsoft's Windows Phone.[94]

 
A Ford Territory with Windows Mobile advertising seen in Auckland, New Zealand, in 2008

Software development edit

Software could be developed by third parties for the Windows Mobile operating system. Developers had several options for deploying mobile applications. These included writing native code with Visual C++, managed code that worked with the .NET Compact Framework, writing code in Tcl-Tk with eTcl,[95] GCC using CeGCC,[96] Python using PythonCE or server-side code that could be deployed using Internet Explorer Mobile or a mobile client on a user's device. The .NET Compact Framework was a subset of the .NET Framework and hence shared many components with software development on desktop clients, application servers, and web servers which had the .NET Framework installed, thus integrating networked computing space.[97]

To aid developers Microsoft released software development kits (SDKs) that worked in conjunction with their Visual Studio development environment. These SDKs included emulator images for developers to test and debug their applications while writing them. Software could be tested on a client machine directly or be downloaded to a device. Microsoft also distributed Visual Studio 2008 / 2005 Professional Editions, and server/database counterparts to students as downloads free of charge via its DreamSpark program.[98] Third party integrated development environments could also be used to write software such as Lazarus, Resco MobileForms Toolkit,[99] Lexico, NS Basic and Basic4ppc. Some third party development environments allowed coding to be done on the device itself without the need for a computer.[100]

Developer communities have used the SDK to port later versions of Windows Mobile OS to older devices and making the OS images available for free, thus providing the devices with newer feature sets. Microsoft had tolerated this procedure for some time but decided in February 2007 to ask developers to take their OS images off the net, which in turn raised discussions.[101] At the same time Microsoft offered upgrades to Windows Mobile 6 versions to manufacturers for free.[102]

On July 5, 2009, Microsoft opened a third-party application distribution service called Windows Marketplace for Mobile.[103] In 2011, Windows Marketplace for Mobile stopped accepting new admissions.[104] and then fully closed on May 9, 2012.[2]

Connectivity edit

In the early years of Windows Mobile devices were able to be managed and synced from a remote computer using ActiveSync; a data synchronization technology and protocol developed by Microsoft, originally released in 1996. This allowed servers running Microsoft Exchange Server, or other third party variants, to act as a personal information manager and share information such as email, calendar appointments, contacts or internet favorites.

With the release of Windows Vista, ActiveSync was replaced with Windows Mobile Device Center. Device Center is included with Vista and Windows 7 and provides many front end enhancements, allowing a home user to sync PIM information with Microsoft Outlook 2003 and later, photos from Windows Photo Gallery, videos or music from Windows Media Player and favorites with Internet Explorer; without the need for a server back end. Devices at this time also included a base driver compatible with Mobile Device Center so a user can connect to a computer without a need for any configuration.

See also edit

References edit

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External links edit

  • at the Wayback Machine (archived September 23, 2010)
  • Windows Mobile Team Blog

windows, mobile, this, article, about, mobile, phone, platform, from, 2000, 2013, confused, with, windows, mobile, windows, phone, microsoft, mobile, discontinued, mobile, operating, system, developed, microsoft, smartphones, personal, digital, assistants, scr. This article is about the mobile phone platform from 2000 to 2013 It is not to be confused with Windows 10 Mobile Windows Phone or Microsoft Mobile Windows Mobile is a discontinued mobile operating system developed by Microsoft for smartphones and personal digital assistants 1 Windows MobileWindows Mobile 6 5 3 screenshot showing the Today screenDeveloperMicrosoftWorking stateSucceeded by Windows PhoneInitial release 2000 04 19 2013 01 08 April 19 2000 January 8 2013 12 years 8 months 2 weeks and 6 days Final release6 5 3 February 2 2010 14 years ago 2010 02 02 Final preview6 5 5Marketing targetMobile devicesUpdate methodAdaptation kit upgradeKernel typeHybridDefaultuser interfaceGraphicalLicenseProprietary software licensed to OEMsSucceeded byWindows PhoneOfficial websitehttps www microsoft com windowsmobile default mspxSupport statusUnsupported Its origin dated back to Windows CE in 1996 though Windows Mobile itself first appeared in 2000 as Pocket PC 2000 which ran on Pocket PC PDAs It was renamed Windows Mobile in 2003 at which point it came in several versions similar to the desktop versions of Windows and was aimed at business and enterprise consumers When initially released in the mid 2000s it was to be the portable equivalent of what Windows desktop OS was a major force in the then emerging mobile portable areas Following the rise of newer smartphone OSs iOS and Android Windows Mobile never equalled the success and faded rapidly in the following years By February 2010 Microsoft announced the more modern and consumer focused Windows Phone to supersede Windows Mobile As a result Windows Mobile has been deprecated since existing devices and software are incompatible with Windows Phone 2 3 4 The last version of Windows Mobile released after the announcement of Windows Phone was 6 5 5 After this Microsoft ceased development on Windows Mobile in order to concentrate on Windows Phone Microsoft released a similarly named Windows 10 Mobile in 2015 which was part of the Windows Phone series and it is unrelated to the retired Windows Mobile operating systems Contents 1 Features 2 History 2 1 Windows CE 2 2 Pocket PC 2000 2 3 Pocket PC 2002 2 4 Windows Mobile 2003 2 5 Windows Mobile 2003 SE 2 6 Windows Mobile 5 2 7 Windows Mobile 6 2 8 Windows Mobile 6 1 2 9 Windows Mobile 6 5 3 Hardware 3 1 Embedded Handheld 3 2 Pocket PCs 3 3 Smartphones 4 Market share 5 Software development 6 Connectivity 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksFeatures editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2024 Learn how and when to remove this message Most versions of Windows Mobile have a standard set of features such as multitasking and the ability to navigate a file system similar to that of Windows 9x and Windows NT including support for many of the same file types Similarly to its desktop counterpart it comes bundled with a set of applications that perform basic tasks Internet Explorer Mobile is the default web browser and Windows Media Player is the default media player used for playing digital media The mobile version of Microsoft Office is the default office suite citation needed Internet Connection Sharing supported on compatible devices allows the phone to share its Internet connection with computers via USB and Bluetooth Windows Mobile supports virtual private networking over PPTP protocol Most devices with mobile connectivity also have a Radio Interface Layer The Radio Interface Layer provides the system interface between the Cell Core layer within the Windows Mobile OS and the radio protocol stack used by the wireless modem hardware This allows OEMs to integrate a variety of modems into their equipment 5 The user interface changed dramatically between versions only retaining similar functionality The Today Screen later called the Home Screen shows the current date owner information upcoming appointments e mails and tasks The taskbar displays the current time as well as the volume level Devices with a cellular radio also show the signal strength on said taskbar citation needed History edit nbsp An Alpha build of WinPad in the early days of development showing off stylus compatibility Windows Mobile is based on the Windows CE kernel and first appeared as the Pocket PC 2000 operating system It includes a suite of basic applications developed with the Microsoft Windows API and is designed to have features and appearance somewhat similar to desktop versions of Windows It allowed third party developers to develop software for Windows Mobile with no restrictions imposed by Microsoft Software applications were purchasable from Windows Marketplace for Mobile during the service s lifespan citation needed Most early Windows Mobile devices came with a stylus which can be used to enter commands by tapping it on the screen 6 The primary touch input technology behind most devices were resistive touchscreens which often required a stylus for input Later devices used capacitive sensing which does not require a stylus Along with touchscreens a large variety of form factors existed for the platform Some devices featured slideout keyboards while others featured minimal face buttons citation needed Windows CE edit Main article Windows CE Microsoft s work on handheld portable devices began with research projects in 1990 with the work on Windows CE beginning in 1992 7 Initially the OS and the user interface were developed separately With Windows CE being based on Windows 95 code and a separate team handing the user interface which was codenamed WinPad later Microsoft At Work for Handhelds 7 Windows 95 had strong pen support making porting easy with some saying At this time Windows 95 offers outstanding pen support It is treating pens right for the first time 8 WinPad was delayed due to price and performance issues 9 before being scrapped in early 1995 due to touchscreen driver problems relating to WriteTouch technology made by NCR Microelectronic Products 8 Although WinPad was never released as a consumer product Alpha builds were released showcasing many interface elements 10 During development of WinPad a separate team worked on a project called Pulsar designed to be a mobile communications version of WinPad described as a pager on Steroids 7 This project was also canceled around the same time as WinPad The two disbanded groups would form the Pegasus project in 1995 Pegasus would work on the hardware side of the Windows CE OS attempting to create a form factor similar to a PC esque PDA like WinPad with communications functionality like Pulsar Under the name Handheld PC a hardware reference guide was created and devices began shipping in 1996 although most of these device bore little resemblance to the goal of a pen based touchscreen handheld device 11 A specification for a smaller form factor under the name Palm size PC was released in 1998 11 Pocket PC 2000 edit nbsp Pocket PC 2000 Today screen Main article Pocket PC 2000 Pocket PC 2000 originally codenamed Rapier 12 was released on April 19 2000 and was based on the Windows CE 3 0 kernel citation needed Pocket PC 2000 was the debut of what was later to become the Windows Mobile operating system and was meant to be a successor to the operating system aboard Palm size PCs Backwards compatibility was retained with such Palm size PC applications citation needed Pocket PC 2000 was intended mainly for Pocket PC devices however several Palm size PC devices had the ability to be updated also Furthermore several Pocket PC 2000 phones were released under the name Handheld PC 2000 however at this time Microsoft s Smartphone hardware platform had not yet been created citation needed At this time Pocket PC devices had not been standardized with a specific CPU architecture As a result Pocket PC 2000 was released on multiple CPU architectures such as SH 3 MIPS and ARM The only resolution supported by this release was 240 x 320 QVGA Removable storage card formats that were supported were CompactFlash and MultiMediaCard Infrared IR File beaming capability was among the original hardware features citation needed Aesthetically the original Pocket PC operating system was similar in design to the then current Windows 98 Windows 2000 and the yet to be released Windows Me desktop operating systems Crucially the Pocket PC had a less cluttered interface more suitable for a mobile device unlike the interface on predeceasing Palm size PCs 11 Mainstream support for Pocket PC 2000 ended on September 30 2005 and extended support ended on October 9 2007 citation needed This initial release had multiple built in applications 13 many of them similarly branded to match their desktop counterparts such as Microsoft Reader Microsoft Money Pocket Internet Explorer and Windows Media Player A version of Microsoft Office called Pocket Office was also bundled and included Pocket Word Pocket Excel and Pocket Outlook Notes a note taking app saw its first release and would be supported by most later versions of Windows Mobile Intelligent character recognition support allowed Notes to distinguish styles of handwriting to be learned by the OS during processing to improve accuracy and recognition levels citation needed Pocket PC 2002 edit nbsp Pocket PC 2002 Today screen Main article Pocket PC 2002 Pocket PC 2002 originally codenamed Merlin 12 was released in October 4 2001 and was based on the Windows CE 3 0 kernel like with Pocket PC 2000 citation needed Although targeted mainly for 240 320 QVGA Pocket PC devices Pocket PC 2002 was also used for Pocket PC phones Pocket PC 2002 Phone Edition and for the first time smartphones Smartphone 2002 14 These Pocket PC 2002 Smartphones were mainly GSM devices With future releases the Pocket PC and Smartphone lines would increasingly collide as the licensing terms were relaxed allowing OEMs to take advantage of more innovative individual design ideas citation needed Aesthetically Pocket PC 2002 was meant to be similar in design to the then newly released Windows XP Newly added or updated programs include 15 16 17 18 Windows Media Player 8 with streaming capability MSN Messenger and Microsoft Reader 2 with Digital rights management support Upgrades to the bundled version of Office Mobile include a spell checker and word count tool in Pocket Word and improved Pocket Outlook Connectivity was improved with file beaming on non Microsoft devices such as Palm OS the inclusion of Terminal Services and Virtual private networking support and the ability to synchronize folders Other upgrades include an enhanced UI with theme support and savable downloads and WAP in Pocket Internet Explorer citation needed Windows Mobile 2003 edit nbsp Windows Mobile 2003 for Pocket PC Today screen Main article Windows Mobile 2003 Windows Mobile 2003 initially named as Pocket PC 2003 and originally codenamed Ozone 12 was the first release under the Windows Mobile banner released on June 23 2003 based on the Windows CE 4 x kernel citation needed It came in four editions Windows Mobile 2003 for Pocket PC Premium Edition Windows Mobile 2003 for Pocket PC Professional Edition Windows Mobile 2003 for Smartphone and Windows Mobile 2003 for Pocket PC Phone Edition The last was designed especially for Pocket PCs which include phone functionalities The Professional Edition was used in Pocket PC budget models It lacked a number of features that were in the Premium Edition such as a client for L2TP IPsec VPNs All versions of Windows Mobile 2003 were powered by Windows CE 4 20 citation needed Communications interface were enhanced with Bluetooth device management which allowed for Bluetooth file beaming support Bluetooth headset support and support for Bluetooth add on keyboards A pictures application with viewing cropping e mail and beaming support was added Multimedia improvements included MIDI file support as ringtones in Phone Edition and Windows Media Player 9 0 with streaming optimization A puzzle game titled Jawbreaker is among the preinstalled programs GAPI was included with this release to facilitate the development of games for the platform 19 Other features built in applications included the following 20 enhanced Pocket Outlook with vCard and vCal support improved Pocket Internet Explorer and SMS reply options for Phone Edition citation needed Windows Mobile 2003 SE edit Windows Mobile 2003 Second Edition also known as Windows Mobile 2003 SE was released on March 24 2004 and first offered on the Dell Axim x30 It was based on the Windows CE 4 x kernel This was the last version which allowed users to back up and restore an entire device through ActiveSync This upgrade allows users to switch between portrait and landscape modes and introduces a single column layout in Pocket Internet Explorer It includes support for Wi Fi Protected Access WPA and new screen resolutions 640 480 VGA 240 240 and 480 480 It was powered by the same OS as with Windows Mobile 2003 which was Windows CE 4 20 Windows Mobile 5 edit nbsp Windows Mobile 5 0 Today screen Main article Windows Mobile 5 0 Windows Mobile 5 0 originally codenamed Magneto 12 was released at Microsoft s Mobile and Embedded Developers Conference 2005 in Las Vegas May 9 12 2005 and was based on the Windows CE 5 0 kernel Microsoft offered mainstream support for Windows Mobile 5 through October 12 2010 and extended support through October 13 2015 21 It was first offered on the Dell Axim x51 It used the NET Compact Framework 1 0 SP3 an environment for programs based on NET Windows Mobile 5 0 included Microsoft Exchange Server push functionality improvements that worked with Exchange 2003 SP2 22 The push functionality also required vendor device support 23 With AKU2 software upgrades all WM 5 0 devices supported DirectPush Other features included an enhanced battery saving capability called persistent storage capability Previously up to 50 enough for 72 hours of storage of battery power was reserved just to maintain data in volatile RAM This continued the trend of Windows based devices moving from using RAM as their primary storage medium to the use of a combination of RAM and flash memory in use no distinction between the two is obvious to users Programs and frequently accessed data run in RAM while most storage is in the flash memory The OS seamlessly moves data between the two as needed Everything is backed up in the flash memory so unlike prior devices WM5 devices lose no data if power is lost New to 5 0 OS updates were released as adaptation kit upgrades with AKU 3 5 being the final released Windows Mobile 5 comes with Microsoft Office Mobile which includes PowerPoint Mobile Excel Mobile with graphing capability and Word Mobile with the ability to insert tables and graphics Media management and playback was enhanced with Picture and Video package which converged the management of videos and pictures and Windows Media Player 10 Mobile Among new hardware features were enhanced Bluetooth support default QWERTY keyboard support and a management interface for Global Positioning System GPS Improvements were made to ActiveSync 4 2 with 15 increased synchronization speed Business customers benefited from a new error reporting facility similar to that present in desktop and server Windows systems Caller ID now supports photos so a user can apply an image to each contact to show when a call is received DirectShow was also natively added This release was the first to include DirectDraw with hardware acceleration replacing the deprecated graphics component of GAPI 19 Windows Mobile 5 0 requires at least 64 MB of ROM it s advisable to have 64 MB of RAM and the device must run an ARM compatible processor such as the Intel XScale or the Samsung and Texas Instruments ARM compatibles 24 Windows Mobile 6 edit Main article Windows Mobile 6 0 Windows Mobile 6 formerly codenamed Crossbow 12 was released on February 12 2007 25 at the 3GSM World Congress 2007 and was based on the Windows CE 5 2 kernel It comes in three different versions Windows Mobile 6 Standard for Smartphones phones without touchscreens Windows Mobile 6 Professional for Pocket PCs with phone functionality and Windows Mobile 6 Classic for Pocket PCs without cellular radios 26 Windows Mobile 6 is powered by Windows CE 5 0 version 5 2 and is strongly linked to the then newly introduced Windows Live 27 and Exchange 2007 products Windows Mobile 6 Standard was first offered on the Orange s SPV E650 28 while Windows Mobile 6 Professional was first offered on the O2 s Xda Terra 29 Aesthetically Windows Mobile 6 was meant to be similar in design to the then newly released Windows Vista Functionally it works much like Windows Mobile 5 but with much better stability Along with the announcement of Office Mobile 6 1 30 with support for Office 2007 document formats pptx docx xlsx OneNote Mobile a companion to Microsoft Office OneNote was added to the already installed version In addition to the newly included programs with Office Mobile improvements were made to existing applications Such as HTML email support in Outlook Mobile A large number of Windows Mobile users are enterprise users business environments were targeted With Server Search on Microsoft Exchange 2007 Out of Office Replies with Microsoft Exchange 2007 and search ability for contacts in an Exchange Server Address Book being implemented To aid development for programmers NET Compact Framework v2 SP2 is now preinstalled with the OS Developers and users also have access to Microsoft SQL Server 2005 Compact Edition for storage and retrieval of information AJAX JavaScript and XMLDOM support were added to Internet Explorer Mobile along with improved devicewide Internet Sharing Communication abilities were further enhanced with a new Microsoft Bluetooth Stack and VoIP Internet calling support with acoustic echo cancellation and MSRT audio codec To improve security Microsoft added Storage Card Encryption so that encryption keys are lost if device is cold booted Further updates both security and feature can now also be provided using Operating System Live Update 31 Among other improvements 32 320 320 and 800 480 WVGA screen resolution support The S01SH or Em One by Sharp was the first and only device to have an 800 480 screen on WM5 33 Improved Remote Desktop access 34 available for only certain Pocket PCs 35 Customer Feedback option 36 Smartfilter for searching within programs and Unlicensed Mobile Access UMA support for select operators Windows Mobile 6 1 edit nbsp Windows Mobile 6 1 Today screen Main article Windows Mobile 6 1 Windows Mobile 6 1 was announced April 1 2008 and was based on the Windows CE 5 x kernel It is a minor upgrade to the Windows Mobile 6 platform with various performance enhancements and a redesigned Home screen featuring horizontal tiles that expand on clicking to display more information although this new home screen is featured only on Windows Mobile Standard edition This was not supported in the Professional edition 37 Several other changes such as threaded SMS full page zooming in Internet Explorer and Domain Enroll were also added along with a mobile version of the Microsoft OneNote program and an interactive Getting Started wizard Domain Enroll is functionality to connect the device to System Center Mobile Device Manager 2008 a product to manage mobile devices 38 Windows Mobile 6 1 also had improved bandwidth efficiency in its push email protocol ActiveSync up to 40 39 this considerably improved battery life in many devices Aside from the visual and feature distinctions the underlying CE versions can be used to differentiate WM 6 0 from WM 6 1 The version of Windows CE in WM 6 0 is 5 2 where the third and final number being a four digit build ID e g 5 2 1622 on HTC Wing In WM 6 1 the CE version is 5 2 with a five digit build number e g 5 2 19216 on Palm Treo 800w Windows Mobile 6 5 edit nbsp Windows Mobile 6 5 Today screen Main article Windows Mobile 6 5 Windows Mobile 6 5 is a stopgap update to Windows Mobile 6 1 based on the Windows CE 5 x kernel intended to bridge the gap between version 6 1 and the then yet to be released Windows Mobile 7 Later canceled in favor of Windows Phone 7 that arrived in 2010 It was never part of Microsoft s mobile phone roadmap and has been described by its chief executive Steve Ballmer as not the full release Microsoft wanted until the multi touch enabled Windows Mobile 7 now replaced by Windows Phone arrived in 2010 40 Ballmer also indicated that the company screwed up with Windows Mobile he lamented that Windows Mobile 7 was not yet available and that the Windows Mobile team needed to try to recoup losses 41 Microsoft unveiled this version at the 2009 Mobile World Congress in February 42 and several devices were supplied with it 43 It was released to manufacturers on May 11 2009 the first devices running the operating system appeared in late October 2009 44 Several phones that officially shipped with Windows Mobile 6 1 can be officially updated to Windows Mobile 6 5 45 This update includes some significant new added features such as a revamped GUI a new Today screen resembling that of Microsoft s Zune player with vertically scrollable labels called Titanium in terms of functionality with a styling similar to that of Windows 7 46 WM 6 5 also includes the new Internet Explorer Mobile 6 browser with improved interface 47 Along with Windows Mobile 6 5 Microsoft announced several cloud computing services codenamed SkyBox SkyLine SkyMarket 48 SkyBox has been confirmed as My Phone 49 while SkyMarket has been confirmed as Windows Marketplace for Mobile 50 This version was designed mainly for easier finger usage 51 Some reviewers have noted interface inconsistencies with some applications having small buttons making them harder to operate using only a finger 52 Whilst this version of Windows Mobile does not natively support capacitive screens mobile manufacturers have been able to use them on their devices 53 In the months following this release development shifted from Windows Mobile to its successor Windows Phone As such no major upgrades were planned or released although three minor updates 6 5 1 6 5 3 and 6 5 5 were made to satisfy consumers during the transition period 6 5 1 brings larger user interface elements 54 including icon based soft buttons rather than text based 55 an updated contacts app 56 native support for A GPS 54 improved threaded text messaging 57 and performance improvements 58 It was unofficially ported to several Windows Mobile phones 59 The second minor update was announced on February 2 2010 along with the Sony Ericsson Aspen which was the first phone to use this version 60 6 5 3 continues the trend of attempting to provide a more finger friendly user interface with several new usability features such as native support for multitouch although device maker HTC Corporation created proprietary work arounds to allow multi touch to work on some applications it installed on its HD2 handset However Microsoft applications on this handset such as the Internet Explorer web browser did not support multi touch 61 and drag and drop start menu icons Touchable tiles replaced soft keys 62 Internet Explorer Mobile 6 has also received some major updates including decreased page load time improved memory management and gesture smoothing 63 As with other updates it was unofficially ported to some other devices Additional features include threaded email and Office Mobile 2010 64 The last minor update and the last released version is 6 5 5 It first leaked in January 2010 and was unofficially ported to some Windows Mobile phones 65 The name Windows Mobile 6 5 5 has been applied to these newer builds although this name remained unconfirmed by Microsoft Hardware editSee also List of Windows Mobile devices There are three main versions of Windows Mobile for various hardware devices 66 Windows Mobile Professional which runs on smartphones with touchscreens Windows Mobile Standard which runs on mobile phones without touchscreens and Windows Mobile Classic which runs on personal digital assistant or Pocket PCs Windows Mobile for Automotive and Windows Mobile software for Portable Media Centers are among some specialty versions of the platform Microsoft had over 50 handset partners 67 when Windows Mobile was still being shipped on new devices 80 of the 50 million Windows Mobile devices that were made from launch to February 2009 were built by one contract manufacturing group HTC which makes handsets for several major companies under their brands and under its own brand 68 Embedded Handheld edit See also Windows IoT Embedded Handheld On January 10 2011 Microsoft announced Windows Embedded Handheld 6 5 The operating system has compatibility with Windows Mobile 6 5 and is presented as an enterprise handheld device targeting retailers delivery companies and other companies that rely on handheld computing Unlike Windows Phone Windows Embedded Handheld retains backward compatibility with legacy Windows Mobile applications 69 Pocket PCs edit Main article Pocket PC Pocket PCs and personal digital assistants were originally the intended platform for Windows Mobile These were grouped into two main categories devices that lacked mobile phone capabilities and those that included it Beginning with version 6 devices with this functionality ran Windows Mobile 6 Professional and those that lacked it ran Windows Mobile 6 Classic Microsoft had described these devices as a handheld device that enables you to store and retrieve e mail contacts appointments play multimedia files games exchange text messages with MSN Messenger browse the Web and more 70 From a technical standpoint Microsoft also specified various hardware and software requirements such as the inclusion of a touchscreen and a directional pad or touchpad Smartphones edit Main article Windows Mobile Smartphone Smartphones were the second hardware platform after Pocket PC to run Windows Mobile and debuted with the release of Pocket PC 2002 Although in the broad sense of the term Smartphone both Pocket PC phones and Microsoft branded Smartphones each fit into this category Microsoft s use of the term Smartphone includes only more specific hardware devices that differ from Pocket PC phones Such Smartphones were originally designed without touchscreens intended to be operated more efficiently with only one hand and typically had lower display resolution than Pocket PCs Microsoft s focus for the Smartphone platform was to create a device that functioned well as a phone and data device in a more integrated manner 71 Naming conventions for each version Pocket PC 2000 Pocket PC 2002 Windows Mobile 2003 Windows Mobile 2003 SE Windows Mobile 5 0 Windows Mobile 6 Windows Mobile 6 1 Windows Mobile 6 5 Pocket PC without Mobile Phone Pocket PC 2000 Pocket PC 2002 Windows Mobile 2003 for Pocket PC Windows Mobile 2003 for Pocket PC SE Windows Mobile 5 0 for Pocket PC Windows Mobile 6 Classic Windows Mobile 6 1 Classic N A Pocket PC with Mobile Phone Pocket PC 2000 Phone Edition Pocket PC 2002 Phone Edition Windows Mobile 2003 for Pocket PC Phone Edition Windows Mobile 2003 SE for Pocket PC Phone Edition Windows Mobile 5 0 for Pocket PC Phone Edition Windows Mobile 6 Professional Windows Mobile 6 1 Professional Windows Mobile 6 5 Professional Smartphone without touch screen N A Smartphone 2002 Windows Mobile 2003 for Smartphone Windows Mobile 2003 SE for Smartphone Windows Mobile 5 0 for Smartphone Windows Mobile 6 Standard Windows Mobile 6 1 Standard Windows Mobile 6 5 StandardMarket share editWindows Mobile market share Year U S marketshare 2004 11 3 72 2005 17 72 2006 37 73 2007 42 73 2008 27 73 2009 15 73 2010 7 73 2011 3 73 present lt 0 1 Windows Mobile s share of the smartphone market grew from its inception while new devices were being released After peaking in 2007 73 it saw decline year on year In Q1 2003 Windows Mobile was the third largest operating system in the smart handheld market behind Symbian and Palm OS 74 In Q1 2004 Windows Mobile accounted for 23 of worldwide smartphone sales 75 Windows Mobile was projected in 2005 to overtake Symbian to become the leading mobile OS by 2010 76 In Q3 2004 Windows Mobile CE surpassed Palm OS to become the largest PDA operating system 77 In Q4 2005 Microsoft shipped 2 2 million PDAs which increased to 3 5 million in the same quarter the following year 78 Windows Mobile saw year over year growth between 2005 and 2006 of 38 8 which according to Gartner helped Windows Mobile to solidify its stronghold on the market 78 But by 2008 its share had dropped to 14 79 Microsoft licensed Windows Mobile to four out of the world s five largest mobile phone manufacturers with Nokia being the exception 80 Gartner research data showed that while the total smartphone industry grew 27 between 2008 and 2009 Windows Mobile s share of the smartphone market fell 2 7 in that same period 81 It also 81 decreased by 20 in Q3 2009 82 At one time Windows Mobile was the most popular handset for business use citation needed but by 2009 this was no longer the case 24 of planned business deployments of mobile application in the United States were for Windows Mobile putting it in 3rd place behind BlackBerry 61 and iPhone OS 27 83 In February 2009 Microsoft signed a deal with the third largest mobile phone maker LG Electronics to license Windows Mobile OS on 50 upcoming LG smartphone models 84 But in September 2009 Palm Inc announced it would drop Windows Mobile from its smartphone line up 85 Gartner estimated that by the third quarter of 2009 Windows Mobile s share of worldwide smartphone sales was 7 9 82 By August 2010 it was the least popular smartphone operating system with a 5 share of the worldwide smartphone market after Symbian BlackBerry OS Android and iOS 86 An October 2009 report in DigiTimes said that Acer would shift its focus from Windows Mobile to Google Android 87 The New York Times reported in 2009 that Windows Mobile was foundering as cellphone makers desert it in favor of Google s Android phone platform 88 It cited the difficulties in Microsoft s business model which involves charging handset manufacturers up to 25 for each copy of Windows Mobile while rival Google gives away Android for free 89 From late 2009 analysts and media reports began to express concerns about the future viability of the Windows Mobile platform and whether Microsoft would keep supporting it into the future 90 91 92 Samsung announced in November 2009 that it would phase out the Windows Mobile platform 93 to concentrate on its own Bada operating system Google s Android and Microsoft s Windows Phone 94 nbsp A Ford Territory with Windows Mobile advertising seen in Auckland New Zealand in 2008Software development editSee also Windows Marketplace for Mobile Software could be developed by third parties for the Windows Mobile operating system Developers had several options for deploying mobile applications These included writing native code with Visual C managed code that worked with the NET Compact Framework writing code in Tcl Tk with eTcl 95 GCC using CeGCC 96 Python using PythonCE or server side code that could be deployed using Internet Explorer Mobile or a mobile client on a user s device The NET Compact Framework was a subset of the NET Framework and hence shared many components with software development on desktop clients application servers and web servers which had the NET Framework installed thus integrating networked computing space 97 To aid developers Microsoft released software development kits SDKs that worked in conjunction with their Visual Studio development environment These SDKs included emulator images for developers to test and debug their applications while writing them Software could be tested on a client machine directly or be downloaded to a device Microsoft also distributed Visual Studio 2008 2005 Professional Editions and server database counterparts to students as downloads free of charge via its DreamSpark program 98 Third party integrated development environments could also be used to write software such as Lazarus Resco MobileForms Toolkit 99 Lexico NS Basic and Basic4ppc Some third party development environments allowed coding to be done on the device itself without the need for a computer 100 Developer communities have used the SDK to port later versions of Windows Mobile OS to older devices and making the OS images available for free thus providing the devices with newer feature sets Microsoft had tolerated this procedure for some time but decided in February 2007 to ask developers to take their OS images off the net which in turn raised discussions 101 At the same time Microsoft offered upgrades to Windows Mobile 6 versions to manufacturers for free 102 On July 5 2009 Microsoft opened a third party application distribution service called Windows Marketplace for Mobile 103 In 2011 Windows Marketplace for Mobile stopped accepting new admissions 104 and then fully closed on May 9 2012 2 Connectivity editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2024 Learn how and when to remove this message Main articles ActiveSync and Windows Mobile Device Center In the early years of Windows Mobile devices were able to be managed and synced from a remote computer using ActiveSync a data synchronization technology and protocol developed by Microsoft originally released in 1996 This allowed servers running Microsoft Exchange Server or other third party variants to act as a personal information manager and share information such as email calendar appointments contacts or internet favorites With the release of Windows Vista ActiveSync was replaced with Windows Mobile Device Center Device Center is included with Vista and Windows 7 and provides many front end enhancements allowing a home user to sync PIM information with Microsoft Outlook 2003 and later photos from Windows Photo Gallery videos or music from Windows Media Player and favorites with Internet Explorer without the need for a server back end Devices at this time also included a base driver compatible with Mobile Device Center so a user can connect to a computer without a need for any configuration See also editList of defunct consumer brands nbsp Telephones portalReferences edit Evers Joris January 6 2005 Microsoft to phase out Pocket PC Smartphone brands Hardware InfoWorld IDG Retrieved July 14 2011 a b Redmond Channel Partner Microsoft Shuttering Windows Mobile Marketplace in May 9 March 2012 Archived from the original on March 13 2012 Retrieved March 10 2012 Nicholas Kolakowski March 15 2010 Microsoft Explains Windows Phone Lack of Compatibility eWeek Windows Phone A New Kind of Phone 36 47 min in Microsoft June 13 2010 Archived from the original on December 27 2012 Retrieved September 9 2010 CS8601 Notes Mobile Computing pdfcoffee com Retrieved March 4 2024 Charles Arthur October 20 2009 Windows Mobile where s the love And where s the sales figure The Guardian London a b c Tilley Chris The History of Windows CE Humble Beginnings a b NCR Scriptel push cordless digitizer Microsoft Delays Launch Of WinPad PDA Screenshot Gallery a b c The History of Windows CE Windows CE 1 a b c d e De Herrera Chris Windows CE Windows Mobile Versions Archived September 4 2019 at the Wayback Machine pocketpcfaq com Retrieved September 6 2007 De Herrera Chris More Than a PDA Archived August 21 2008 at the Wayback Machine Pocket PC Magazine Retrieved September 14 2007 Morris John Taylor Josh Microsoft jumps in the all in one game ZDNet Archived from the original on December 17 2001 Retrieved May 24 2017 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link zdnet com 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Machine Pocket PC Magazine Retrieved September 14 2007 Microsoft Support Lifecycle Microsoft January 2009 Retrieved January 9 2009 New Mobility Features in Exchange Server 2003 SP2 Microsoft Technet October 2005 Retrieved June 4 2007 Boulton Clint October 19 2005 Microsoft Looks to Mobilize With Exchange SP2 internetnews Retrieved June 4 2007 Lisa Gade An introduction to Windows Mobile 5 0 Archived April 13 2016 at the Wayback Machine Sept 5 2005 Windows Mobile 6 press release Press release Microsoft February 7 2007 Archived from the original on March 10 2007 Retrieved February 18 2007 Langridge Jason Differences between platforms Microsoft MSDN blogs Archived from the original png on February 27 2007 Windows Live Microsoft com Archived from the original on October 15 2007 Retrieved July 14 2011 Langridge Jason April 11 2007 Windows Mobile 6 offered on Orange HTC Vox Microsoft MSDN Hess Arne April 24 2007 Windows Mobile 6 offered on Xda HTC Herald The Unwired Archived from the original on May 29 2007 Retrieved June 4 2007 Office Mobile 2007 to be offered on Q3 2007 CNET CBS Interactive June 6 2007 Archived from the original on June 10 2007 Image Gallery Windows Mobile 6 Professional screenshots Windows Update screen 1 Archived February 14 2007 at the Wayback Machine ZDNet Retrieved October 10 2007 Langridge Jason February 8 2007 Summary of Windows Mobile 6 Specs Microsoft MSDN blogs Sharp EM ONE S01SH Specs Technical Specifications PDAdb net Retrieved April 27 2010 rem1010 Improved Remote Desktop access Content zdnet com Archived from the original on March 17 2010 Retrieved July 14 2011 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link RDP Client is not included in many WM6 devices Theunwired net Archived from the original on November 6 2015 Retrieved July 14 2011 Customer Feedback Option Microsoft com February 1 2009 Retrieved July 14 2011 Experiencing the goodness that is Windows Mobile 6 1 Windowsvistablog com Retrieved July 14 2011 Microsoft Unveils Smartphone Advancements to Improve Ability to Work and Play with One Phone Company demonstrates new version of Internet Explorer Mobile with desktop grade Web browsing introduces updated Windows Mobile operating system Microsoft com Archived from the original on February 3 2009 Retrieved July 14 2011 GerardoDada Windows Mobile 6 1 Key Features Blogs msdn com Retrieved April 27 2010 Ballmer Win Mobile 6 5 an unwanted stopgap Electronista March 5 2009 Archived from the original on March 18 2015 Retrieved October 4 2009 Ballmer We screwed up with Windows Mobile Computerworld September 25 2009 Archived from the original on October 1 2009 Retrieved October 1 2009 Windows Mobile 6 5 walkthrough with Engadget now with video February 16 2009 Browse and Buy Windows Phones Microsoft Windows Mobile What s coming when All about microsoft ZDNet com Archived from the original on March 4 2009 Retrieved February 21 2009 Updating your phone to Windows Mobile 6 5 Microsoft March 4 2010 Retrieved June 20 2010 Windows Mobile 6 5 Arrives Mostly Disappoints October 6 2009 Archived from the original on January 26 2010 Retrieved February 2 2010 IE 6 for Windows phones Interface improved Archived from the original on November 8 2010 Retrieved February 2 2010 Microsoft set to unveil MobileMe competitor next month Archived from the original on January 20 2009 Microsoft My Phone beta Microsoft Microsoft Archived from the original on February 16 2009 Retrieved February 7 2009 Microsoft announces Windows Marketplace and My Phone for Windows Mobile February 16 2009 MWC Your Definitive Windows Mobile 6 5 Post Release Guide Pocketnow January 18 2024 Windows Mobile 6 5 UI a big improvement more work needed Ars Technica February 16 2009 Retrieved September 27 2009 HTC HD2 Review on CNET UK Archived from the original on November 11 2009 Retrieved February 2 2010 a b WMPoweruser com July 20 2009 Windows Phone 6 5 build 21925 in video Wmpoweruser com Retrieved 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2009 Big Cellphone Makers Shifting to Android System The New York Times Saul Hansell October 26 2009 Microsoft Google and the Bear The New York Times Jason Perlow November 8 2009 In Smartphone Wars Darwinism Triumphs Over Intelligent Design ZDNet Archived from the original on November 12 2009 Retrieved November 9 2009 Brooke Crothers November 8 2009 First iPhone now Droid Who needs Windows CNET Archived from the original on July 14 2012 Matt Hamblen October 26 2009 Windows Mobile worries mount as competition heats up Computerworld Samsung to Discard Windows Phone Telecoms Korea November 9 2009 Samsung mobile platform to challenge Google s Android The Korea Herald November 10 2009 eTcl Evolane com Archived from the original on July 10 2011 Retrieved July 14 2011 CeGCC Cross development for Pocket PC SourceForge Dice Holdings Retrieved June 14 2013 Differences Between the NET Compact Framework and the NET Framework MSDN Microsoft June 18 2009 Retrieved July 14 2011 Microsoft Gives 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July 13 2010 Archived from the original on August 8 2011 Retrieved July 14 2011 External links editWindows Mobile website at the Wayback Machine archived September 23 2010 Windows Mobile Team Blog Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Windows Mobile amp oldid 1222121531 Pocket PC 2002, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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