Neil
I'm a Program Manager in the Visual Studio for Devices team, and formerly a Lead PM in the Mobile Devices Group.
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Ori Amiga - Tour of mobile devices with Visual Studio for Devices team
Sep 25, 2004 at 7:09 PMNo, it doesn't, but it's still a sweet device
Neil
Neil Enns - What's cool about his SmartPhone (or, how he keeps from looking like a dork in an airpla
Jun 04, 2004 at 7:40 PMTrue, but that assumes that my wife has her phone on, and that we get cellphone coverage at our house (we don't!). It's much easier for her, as well, to chat with a full keyboard on the PC than to send from her handset.
I do realise, however, that this is a very U.S. way of approaching it
Neil
Neil Enns - What do developers need to think about when building applications for the SmartPhone?
May 25, 2004 at 9:11 PMOur developer site is at www.microsoft.com/windowsmobile/developer/. You can get all the SDKs and emulators and whatnot from there.
You can also try the MSDN Mobility center at http://msdn.microsoft.com/mobility/. There are a ton of whitepapers and samples and such there.
Our team blog is at http://blogs.msdn.com/windowsmobile/
Happy developing!
Neil
Neil Enns - What is Microsoft's SmartPhone pitch to developers?
May 23, 2004 at 6:16 PMI can't really comment on features in future releases. The PR guys would have my fingers
Neil
Neil Enns - Why would anyone want a cell phone with a camera on it?
May 22, 2004 at 10:31 PMAlan,
Try visiting MSDN's Mobility section, as well as the Windows Mobile Developer pages.
Neil
Neil Enns - What is Microsoft's SmartPhone pitch to developers?
May 22, 2004 at 5:34 PMIn your case you'd have to get the update from Motorola. As with Pocket PCs, all updates have to come from either the operator or the manufacturer.
Reagarding our next release I don't believe we've made any specific announcements around UMTS functionality yet.
Good question on the Whidbey release, I'm not sure. Ori's at TechEd, but I'll ask some of the other VSD guys and see if I can find out.
Neil
Neil Enns - What is Microsoft's SmartPhone pitch to developers?
May 22, 2004 at 2:18 PMThere's no update available at the moment. AT&T did flash some phones for MDC attendees, but that's not something we have access to. The updates have to come from the mobile operator.
Neil
Neil Enns - What is Microsoft's SmartPhone pitch to developers?
May 22, 2004 at 12:28 PMUnfortunately not that I'm aware of. Ori and I did an MSDN TV spot though where we showed how to do webservices from a Smartphone. You can watch it at http://msdn.microsoft.com/msdntv/episode.aspx?xml=episodes/en/20030808NETCompactFxOA/manifest.xml.
In general with mobile operators, you can use your SIM card in any cellphone. The SIM card itself does not have a lock, and your mobile operator really doesn't care what phone you use. All they care about is that you use their minutes.
What does happen frequently, including in Europe, is that the phone itself will be locked to a particular network. This is because the mobile operator has actually paid a portion of the cost of the phone for you, and they would prefer that you use their minutes with that phone.
You can buy 'unlocked' phones on the web, even Smartphones, but they always cost more than the locked versions. That's because there's no mobile operator involved to help offset the cost.
Also, there are some countries in Europe where the subsidy of a handset purchase is prohibited by law. I believe in those countries locked phones are rare.
Neil
Neil Enns - What is Microsoft's SmartPhone pitch to developers?
May 22, 2004 at 12:21 PMIt's called .NET Framework Standard Library Annotated Reference, Volume 1: Base Class Library and Extended Numerics Library. The ISBN is 0321154894.
You can check out a sample chapter at http://www.awprofessional.com/title/0321154894. It's a great read! Brad and a bunch of the other members of the CLR crew talk about the different design decisions made for each of the classes. The best part is reading all the places where they don't think they did a good job.
Neil
Neil Enns - Isn't Microsoft at a cultural disadvantage in the cell phone market?
May 21, 2004 at 12:22 PMFor what it's worth, Americans think the notion of paying per minute for land-line local calls is wacky
Neil
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