So, what's the verdict? It's like, but it's not love. This is not going to be my next smartphone.
(Credit:
CNET)
I also wish it were easier to handle playlists on the actual device. When you search for a song, you can long-press the selection and add it to "Now Playing," but not to a specific playlist, as you can on Android. In fact,
Apple MacBook Air Summer 2009, there's no way,
JVC GS-TD1BUS, that I can tell, to add a song to an existing playlist on the device--you can only create new ones via the "Now Playing" list,
Canon Wide Angle EF 35mm f/1.4L USM Autofocus Lens, make a Smart DJ mix,
Apple MacBook Pro MB471LL/A, or make an individual song its own playlist. That latter option is so unhelpful I hope it disappears by the time Mango comes to the masses. It's possibly I'm the last great control-freak playlist maker,
Apple MacBook Pro 2007 Edition, but I don't think so. (On the plus side, I love that I can pin a playlist to the start page for superquick access.)
Look, I recognize that no phone is perfect,
Panasonic AG HVX200A, no mobile OS is perfect, no technology is perfect,
Sony F137FX/B, I'm not perfect, all of that. And Mango is, by and large, a good effort. But at this stage in the game, it's got to be on point if Microsoft has any hope of convincing people to turn their adoring eyes from iPhone or pull them away from the massive marketing machine of Android. Mango is good. A lot of people could use it every day and be totally happy with it. But it's not great.
It's the end of my second week of life with
Windows Phone 7 Mango,
HP EliteBook 8740w, and it's time to render a verdict. I should say at the outset that two weeks doesn't sound a lot of time to live with an entirely new platform, and I might have lasted longer but for serious problems with the HTC Trophy I've been using (one-day record for spontaneous reboots: 15, including three in 15 minutes). That said, since my smartphone is a device I'm using almost constantly, I feel like I got to know the thing pretty well.
(Credit:
CNET)
And then there were three?
I did find a third-party app called SkyDrive Player that will supposedly let you stream your music from your "cloud" storage, but I didn't really want to give it my cloud storage credentials--or I wouldn't if I were using SkyDrive for storing documents any more valuable than music files.
Even a year ago, and Windows Phone 7 Mango would have been a powerful contender. Android was even more of a fragmented mess than it is today. Plus, the iPhone hadn't yet moved to Verizon, and non-AT&T users were begging for more options. On top of that, Windows Phone 7's interface is more intuitive than Android,
CANON EOS 5D MARK II 24-105MM LENS, in many ways, and it's easy on the eyes,
Alienware M14x, iOS style; it integrates smoothly into the Microsoft universe; and services like Skydrive and Zune Pass would have hit just at the bleeding edge of cloud integration and the rising interest in music subscription services.
Fast forward to today, though, and you have all the above benefits: an intuitive and attractive UI, feature-matching (for the most part) with Android and iOS, and a powerful multimedia smartphone experience...but no significant differentiating factor,
HP EliteBook 8440P XT918UT, and a betalike new platform feel that's hard to pick over the mature Android and iOS options. Yes, I know the version of Mango I'm using is,
Sony HDR-XR520V, in fact, a beta, but Microsoft is in the awkward position of having to promise things like future app support and future location-specific database improvements, because this OS is still downy like a newborn.
That brings me to SkyDrive. In theory, I could upload all my music to my SkyDrive online storage account (25GB of free storage) and then maybe sync or download it to my phone. But there's no integrated option within the Zune/Music+Video menu options to do that, and although Mango does add music streaming from SkyDrive,
HP Envy 17 3D, the only Microsoft-enabled way to access SkyDrive on the phone is through the browser. No, seriously. There's not a SkyDrive app for WP7. That just flabbergasted me. Also, when I tried the music streaming, I got a player, but an error that said, "Sorry, we can't play this file on your phone."
First, the on-phone multimedia app isn't very intuitive. Hit the Music+Video live tile and you get a Zune-branded menu of music, videos, podcasts, radio, and Marketplace. Choose music, and you'll get a blank menu that says only, "it's lonely in here" and advises you to tether your phone to a computer to load up some tunes. At this point, I went back to the home screen and hit the "search" soft button on the phone's menu options--in Android, this lets me conduct a search in any app I'm in. But nope, it launches Bing search. My bad. Back to the Zune menu, and I hit Marketplace instead. Now there's a menu for HTC Apps that lists apps, games,
Apple MacBook Pro 2009, music, and podcasts. I hit music again; now I get a dedicated search icon on the onscreen menu, and can start searching for music. Clunky.
This is Microsoft's cloud solution? I can't drag a folder in here...and I'm using IE!?
If Mango had come out two years ago, this challenge would be a slam dunk.
Android was still nascent (the first killer Android device, the original Droid, appeared in November 2009), the then
iPhone OS didn't yet have copy and paste or MMS (both would come in June 2009), and Apple was still holding the line on features like multitasking. Mango would have killed it.
I spent this past week getting to know WP7 a bit better, trying out the Zune Pass subscription music service, unifying my inboxes (which I quickly undid--turns out I get way too much spam to unify three inboxes anywhere), uploading photos to SkyDrive, and using the built-in voice commands to compose texts, conducts searches, and launch phone calls. You can get my detailed thoughts on the speech-to-text integration here (along with my rant on WP7's turn-by-turn directions), but here's some quick feedback on the other services.
Finally,
Panasonic AG HVX205A, I really wanted to see Zune Pass offer some kind of untethered cloud experience. Both Amazon and Google let you upload music to the cloud and then sync it with devices; Apple is promising to at least scan and match your iTunes library and stream it back to your device; and even Spotify lets you find and manipulate music either on your computer or on your device and sync it up wirelessly. Zune Pass stands alone in the now ancient-feeling request to "connect your phone to your computer" to load up music.
Smart DJ: cool. Save this song as a playlist? Why?
Does this absolve Android of all the problems I detailed in my first post on this challenge? Absolutely not. The buggy Gingerbread update my Droid X received was inexcusable; the fragmentation on that platform has got to stop,
Dell Alienware M15x, and it's got to stop now, and I almost certainly won't buy another Android phone that isn't a pure Android Nexus-branded phone. All that said, though, my next phone will almost certainly be an Android phone,
Canon XF100, and not a Mango phone. Sorry, Microsoft. (And sorry, HTC, you've got some 'splainin' to do about this Trophy before I'm convinced about you guys, too.)
(Credit:
Windows Phone Secrets)
So, as far as the challenge goes...hey, Brandon Watson, can we call this one a push? I do like it, you did your job there. But I'm not switching. So, how about we split the difference. You donate $500 to the Alameda County Community Food Bank, I'll tell everyone who asks me what smartphone they should buy that Windows Phone 7 is, at a minimum,
Canon Vixia HV30, worth a serious look, and we'll call it a day. Sound good?
The Zune Pass subscription service is pretty good--although, at $14.99 a month, it's expensive. Unlike, say, Spotify, it integrates the benefits of a subscription music service with a music discovery service, like Pandora. Go to the Marketplace, search for a song, and once you find it,
Sony Z133GX/B, you can long press the specific song and choose "play Smart DJ mix." Zune Pass will find similar songs from the Marketplace, and unlike Pandora, you can actually see what songs are coming up next, and then choose to save the whole shebang as a playlist. Nice. Plus, you can download and keep 10 songs a month. If you have an Xbox Live account, you can stream music through your Xbox, as well. Zune Pass is, no question, a good subscription service--with a few good-size drawbacks.
So, although many of you exhorted me to try SkyDrive as a benefit of WP7,
Lenovo ThinkPad T410 2518-C4U, I'm afraid I can't consider it much of a feature. Sure, you can upload any pictures you take to SkyDrive directly from the phone,
Canon Optura Xi, but to what,
Sony HVR-Z7E, an online file system? I'd much rather upload them to, say, Picasa or Google Plus. And the SkyDrive Web interface is a disaster--I had to install Silverlight and switch to Internet Explorer to drag and drop files for storage, and even then, you can't upload an entire folder (say, a music or photo album), just individual files. No, thank you.
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