Omnia 7 On PAYG WIth Three At £449.99

UK network Three sell most of their phones on PAYG as well as contract options which is great for anyone who likes the benefits of a sim only package but buy a phone of your choice.

On passing a nearby Three store today I spotted that the Samsung Omnia 7 is also on offer costing £449.99 (as was the HTC Desire HD) which does sound a lot for a phone but when you consider at the moment most Windows Phone 7 devices are contract only with the HTC HD7 being the only other PAYG offering on O2 it is not actually that bad.

Three does not offer this handset on PAYG online yet and you might find some stores try to hold onto stock for a full contract but the pricing is there and the handset is available if you can find a store to sell one to you.

So now who would consider a 12 month sim only ‘One Plan’ for only £25 a month and buying one of these handsets outright?

Link:  Three PAYG



Read on and add your comments. Follow us on twitter too.


Omnia 7 On PAYG WIth Three At £449.99

UK network Three sell most of their phones on PAYG as well as contract options which is great for anyone who likes the benefits of a sim only package but buy a phone of your choice.

On passing a nearby Three store today I spotted that the Samsung Omnia 7 is also on offer costing £449.99 (as was the HTC Desire HD) which does sound a lot for a phone but when you consider at the moment most Windows Phone 7 devices are contract only with the HTC HD7 being the only other PAYG offering on O2 it is not actually that bad.

Three does not offer this handset on PAYG online yet and you might find some stores try to hold onto stock for a full contract but the pricing is there and the handset is available if you can find a store to sell one to you.

So now who would consider a 12 month sim only ‘One Plan’ for only £25 a month and buying one of these handsets outright?

Link:  Three PAYG



Read on and add your comments. Follow us on twitter too.


Omnia 7 On PAYG WIth Three At £449.99

UK network Three sell most of their phones on PAYG as well as contract options which is great for anyone who likes the benefits of a sim only package but buy a phone of your choice.

On passing a nearby Three store today I spotted that the Samsung Omnia 7 is also on offer costing £449.99 (as was the HTC Desire HD) which does sound a lot for a phone but when you consider at the moment most Windows Phone 7 devices are contract only with the HTC HD7 being the only other PAYG offering on O2 it is not actually that bad.

Three does not offer this handset on PAYG online yet and you might find some stores try to hold onto stock for a full contract but the pricing is there and the handset is available if you can find a store to sell one to you.

So now who would consider a 12 month sim only ‘One Plan’ for only £25 a month and buying one of these handsets outright?

Link:  Three PAYG



Read on and add your comments. Follow us on twitter too.


Omnia 7 On PAYG WIth Three At £449.99

UK network Three sell most of their phones on PAYG as well as contract options which is great for anyone who likes the benefits of a sim only package but buy a phone of your choice.

On passing a nearby Three store today I spotted that the Samsung Omnia 7 is also on offer costing £449.99 (as was the HTC Desire HD) which does sound a lot for a phone but when you consider at the moment most Windows Phone 7 devices are contract only with the HTC HD7 being the only other PAYG offering on O2 it is not actually that bad.

Three does not offer this handset on PAYG online yet and you might find some stores try to hold onto stock for a full contract but the pricing is there and the handset is available if you can find a store to sell one to you.

So now who would consider a 12 month sim only ‘One Plan’ for only £25 a month and buying one of these handsets outright?

Link:  Three PAYG



Read on and add your comments. Follow us on twitter too.


HTC Android and Windows Phone arrivals

A number of phones have appeared recently so we’d just like to bring you up to speed on availability. Firstly, the HTC 7 Mozart is now available to buy on the Orange online store. It’s the new Windows Phone 7 device from Orange we’ll be reviewing, plus you can now get the HTC HD7 we have from o2.


In the Android camp there’s news that the HTC Desire HD is now available unlocked on Devicewire and also on Three. It’s selling on the network for £40 a month on The One Plan with 2000 any network minutes, 5000 Three-to-Three minutes, 5000 texts and 1GB data. On Pay As You Go the HTC Desire HD is £449.99 and includes a £10 Top Up.




Links – HTC 7 Mozart (o2) – HTC HD7 (Orange)

Links – HTC Desire HD (DevicewireThree)
Credit – John Wilson

Read on and add your comments. Follow us on twitter too.


HTC Android and Windows Phone arrivals

A number of phones have appeared recently so we’d just like to bring you up to speed on availability. Firstly, the HTC 7 Mozart is now available to buy on the Orange online store. It’s the new Windows Phone 7 device from Orange we’ll be reviewing, plus you can now get the HTC HD7 we have from o2.


In the Android camp there’s news that the HTC Desire HD is now available unlocked on Devicewire and also on Three. It’s selling on the network for £40 a month on The One Plan with 2000 any network minutes, 5000 Three-to-Three minutes, 5000 texts and 1GB data. On Pay As You Go the HTC Desire HD is £449.99 and includes a £10 Top Up.




Links – HTC 7 Mozart (o2) – HTC HD7 (Orange)

Links – HTC Desire HD (DevicewireThree)
Credit – John Wilson

Read on and add your comments. Follow us on twitter too.


The Glow is Wearing Off: Good and Bad about Windows Phone 7, Part One

Now that I’ve had a few days to spend with the Windows Phone 7 prototype device, I’m personally having some of the WP7 “glow” wear off – that happens with every new gadget though, and I’m glad it does, because it allows me to be more objective about what works well and what doesn’t.

Something I’ve noticed today after making and receiving about 10 calls in total: I really miss having a hardware button for the phone. With every single Windows Mobile/Windows Phone I’ve had over the years, there’s been a physical button to end the call, and a physical button to start a call. That speed of access has been important, especially when it comes to ending a call. When a call ends, I’d immediately take the phone away from my face, press the call end button, and put it in my pocket in one motion. When a call ends on Windows Phone 7, I take it away from my face, wait about 1.5 seconds for the screen to go from off to one, then tap the End Call button. It’s not a very big button, and the fact that I have to wait for the screen to turn on is irritating.

This isn’t a deal breaker, and maybe for one-button phone users (iPhone, etc.) this is normal, but for me it seems sub-optimal. I thought initially that there must be a better way – surely one of those three buttons re-maps to perform another function when the phone is in call mode – but, nope, all three buttons hold their original function. That’s probably a good thing overall, but it does make ending a call more of a process than it should be – it doesn’t feel fast or fluid.

Another thing I’m not fond of is how the reminder snooze function works – my reminders trigger 30 minutes in advance by default (that’s something you can configure in Outlook), but often I don’t need to leave until 15 minutes before some appointments. Ideally I want to snooze the reminder for 10 or 15 minutes, or even five minutes before the start of the appointment if it’s a conference call. The snooze function is hard-coded to five minutes though, so every five minutes I have to snooze the reminder. The current system is too binary and simplistic – I’d like to see, at minimum “5 Minutes before Start” added as an option that would be remembered.

On the plus side, the integrated Bing search is just killer. I was downtown today, and wanted to stop at a local store called The Camera Store. I pressed the search button, typed in “camera store”, two seconds later the results showed up (I was already on the Local view), I tapped on the first result, then tapped the phone number. That’s stupid easy and incredibly fast. That level of integration is superb and shows off what happens when a company that owns a search engine and a mobile OS think hard about how they should work together.

Also worth noting: the integration of multiple sources of information for a contact (Facebook, Windows Live, Outlook) is very slick. When you look at the contact details, underneath some pieces of info – such as birthday – it tells you what the source of that info is. It’s smart enough to handle duplications as well – somehow I was one day off for my wife’s birthday in Outlook, but the info was correct in Facebook – so it shows me both. Nice!

That’s it for now – more later…there’s some ugliness with the Zune music client that needs some explaining.

Jason Dunn owns and operates Thoughts Media Inc., a company dedicated to creating the best in online communities. He enjoys photography, mobile devices, blogging, digital media content creation/editing, and pretty much all technology. He lives in Calgary, Alberta, Canada with his lovely wife, his wonderful son Logan, and his sometimes obedient dog. He’s thankful his MVP lead worked hard to get him a loaner Windows Phone 7 device for a week.

Do you enjoy using new hardware, software and accessories, then sharing your experience with others? Then join us on the Thoughts Media Review Team! We’re looking for individuals who find it fun to test new gear and give their honest opinions about the experience. It’s a volunteer role with some great perks. Interested? Then click here for more information.


The Glow is Wearing Off: Good and Bad about Windows Phone 7, Part One

Now that I’ve had a few days to spend with the Windows Phone 7 prototype device, I’m personally having some of the WP7 “glow” wear off – that happens with every new gadget though, and I’m glad it does, because it allows me to be more objective about what works well and what doesn’t.

Something I’ve noticed today after making and receiving about 10 calls in total: I really miss having a hardware button for the phone. With every single Windows Mobile/Windows Phone I’ve had over the years, there’s been a physical button to end the call, and a physical button to start a call. That speed of access has been important, especially when it comes to ending a call. When a call ends, I’d immediately take the phone away from my face, press the call end button, and put it in my pocket in one motion. When a call ends on Windows Phone 7, I take it away from my face, wait about 1.5 seconds for the screen to go from off to one, then tap the End Call button. It’s not a very big button, and the fact that I have to wait for the screen to turn on is irritating.

This isn’t a deal breaker, and maybe for one-button phone users (iPhone, etc.) this is normal, but for me it seems sub-optimal. I thought initially that there must be a better way – surely one of those three buttons re-maps to perform another function when the phone is in call mode – but, nope, all three buttons hold their original function. That’s probably a good thing overall, but it does make ending a call more of a process than it should be – it doesn’t feel fast or fluid.

Another thing I’m not fond of is how the reminder snooze function works – my reminders trigger 30 minutes in advance by default (that’s something you can configure in Outlook), but often I don’t need to leave until 15 minutes before some appointments. Ideally I want to snooze the reminder for 10 or 15 minutes, or even five minutes before the start of the appointment if it’s a conference call. The snooze function is hard-coded to five minutes though, so every five minutes I have to snooze the reminder. The current system is too binary and simplistic – I’d like to see, at minimum “5 Minutes before Start” added as an option that would be remembered.

On the plus side, the integrated Bing search is just killer. I was downtown today, and wanted to stop at a local store called The Camera Store. I pressed the search button, typed in “camera store”, two seconds later the results showed up (I was already on the Local view), I tapped on the first result, then tapped the phone number. That’s stupid easy and incredibly fast. That level of integration is superb and shows off what happens when a company that owns a search engine and a mobile OS think hard about how they should work together.

Also worth noting: the integration of multiple sources of information for a contact (Facebook, Windows Live, Outlook) is very slick. When you look at the contact details, underneath some pieces of info – such as birthday – it tells you what the source of that info is. It’s smart enough to handle duplications as well – somehow I was one day off for my wife’s birthday in Outlook, but the info was correct in Facebook – so it shows me both. Nice!

That’s it for now – more later…there’s some ugliness with the Zune music client that needs some explaining.

Jason Dunn owns and operates Thoughts Media Inc., a company dedicated to creating the best in online communities. He enjoys photography, mobile devices, blogging, digital media content creation/editing, and pretty much all technology. He lives in Calgary, Alberta, Canada with his lovely wife, his wonderful son Logan, and his sometimes obedient dog. He’s thankful his MVP lead worked hard to get him a loaner Windows Phone 7 device for a week.

Do you enjoy using new hardware, software and accessories, then sharing your experience with others? Then join us on the Thoughts Media Review Team! We’re looking for individuals who find it fun to test new gear and give their honest opinions about the experience. It’s a volunteer role with some great perks. Interested? Then click here for more information.


The Glow is Wearing Off: Good and Bad about Windows Phone 7, Part One

Now that I’ve had a few days to spend with the Windows Phone 7 prototype device, I’m personally having some of the WP7 “glow” wear off – that happens with every new gadget though, and I’m glad it does, because it allows me to be more objective about what works well and what doesn’t.

Something I’ve noticed today after making and receiving about 10 calls in total: I really miss having a hardware button for the phone. With every single Windows Mobile/Windows Phone I’ve had over the years, there’s been a physical button to end the call, and a physical button to start a call. That speed of access has been important, especially when it comes to ending a call. When a call ends, I’d immediately take the phone away from my face, press the call end button, and put it in my pocket in one motion. When a call ends on Windows Phone 7, I take it away from my face, wait about 1.5 seconds for the screen to go from off to one, then tap the End Call button. It’s not a very big button, and the fact that I have to wait for the screen to turn on is irritating.

This isn’t a deal breaker, and maybe for one-button phone users (iPhone, etc.) this is normal, but for me it seems sub-optimal. I thought initially that there must be a better way – surely one of those three buttons re-maps to perform another function when the phone is in call mode – but, nope, all three buttons hold their original function. That’s probably a good thing overall, but it does make ending a call more of a process than it should be – it doesn’t feel fast or fluid.

Another thing I’m not fond of is how the reminder snooze function works – my reminders trigger 30 minutes in advance by default (that’s something you can configure in Outlook), but often I don’t need to leave until 15 minutes before some appointments. Ideally I want to snooze the reminder for 10 or 15 minutes, or even five minutes before the start of the appointment if it’s a conference call. The snooze function is hard-coded to five minutes though, so every five minutes I have to snooze the reminder. The current system is too binary and simplistic – I’d like to see, at minimum “5 Minutes before Start” added as an option that would be remembered.

On the plus side, the integrated Bing search is just killer. I was downtown today, and wanted to stop at a local store called The Camera Store. I pressed the search button, typed in “camera store”, two seconds later the results showed up (I was already on the Local view), I tapped on the first result, then tapped the phone number. That’s stupid easy and incredibly fast. That level of integration is superb and shows off what happens when a company that owns a search engine and a mobile OS think hard about how they should work together.

Also worth noting: the integration of multiple sources of information for a contact (Facebook, Windows Live, Outlook) is very slick. When you look at the contact details, underneath some pieces of info – such as birthday – it tells you what the source of that info is. It’s smart enough to handle duplications as well – somehow I was one day off for my wife’s birthday in Outlook, but the info was correct in Facebook – so it shows me both. Nice!

That’s it for now – more later…there’s some ugliness with the Zune music client that needs some explaining.

Jason Dunn owns and operates Thoughts Media Inc., a company dedicated to creating the best in online communities. He enjoys photography, mobile devices, blogging, digital media content creation/editing, and pretty much all technology. He lives in Calgary, Alberta, Canada with his lovely wife, his wonderful son Logan, and his sometimes obedient dog. He’s thankful his MVP lead worked hard to get him a loaner Windows Phone 7 device for a week.

Do you enjoy using new hardware, software and accessories, then sharing your experience with others? Then join us on the Thoughts Media Review Team! We’re looking for individuals who find it fun to test new gear and give their honest opinions about the experience. It’s a volunteer role with some great perks. Interested? Then click here for more information.


The Glow is Wearing Off: Good and Bad about Windows Phone 7, Part One

Now that I’ve had a few days to spend with the Windows Phone 7 prototype device, I’m personally having some of the WP7 “glow” wear off – that happens with every new gadget though, and I’m glad it does, because it allows me to be more objective about what works well and what doesn’t.

Something I’ve noticed today after making and receiving about 10 calls in total: I really miss having a hardware button for the phone. With every single Windows Mobile/Windows Phone I’ve had over the years, there’s been a physical button to end the call, and a physical button to start a call. That speed of access has been important, especially when it comes to ending a call. When a call ends, I’d immediately take the phone away from my face, press the call end button, and put it in my pocket in one motion. When a call ends on Windows Phone 7, I take it away from my face, wait about 1.5 seconds for the screen to go from off to one, then tap the End Call button. It’s not a very big button, and the fact that I have to wait for the screen to turn on is irritating.

This isn’t a deal breaker, and maybe for one-button phone users (iPhone, etc.) this is normal, but for me it seems sub-optimal. I thought initially that there must be a better way – surely one of those three buttons re-maps to perform another function when the phone is in call mode – but, nope, all three buttons hold their original function. That’s probably a good thing overall, but it does make ending a call more of a process than it should be – it doesn’t feel fast or fluid.

Another thing I’m not fond of is how the reminder snooze function works – my reminders trigger 30 minutes in advance by default (that’s something you can configure in Outlook), but often I don’t need to leave until 15 minutes before some appointments. Ideally I want to snooze the reminder for 10 or 15 minutes, or even five minutes before the start of the appointment if it’s a conference call. The snooze function is hard-coded to five minutes though, so every five minutes I have to snooze the reminder. The current system is too binary and simplistic – I’d like to see, at minimum “5 Minutes before Start” added as an option that would be remembered.

On the plus side, the integrated Bing search is just killer. I was downtown today, and wanted to stop at a local store called The Camera Store. I pressed the search button, typed in “camera store”, two seconds later the results showed up (I was already on the Local view), I tapped on the first result, then tapped the phone number. That’s stupid easy and incredibly fast. That level of integration is superb and shows off what happens when a company that owns a search engine and a mobile OS think hard about how they should work together.

Also worth noting: the integration of multiple sources of information for a contact (Facebook, Windows Live, Outlook) is very slick. When you look at the contact details, underneath some pieces of info – such as birthday – it tells you what the source of that info is. It’s smart enough to handle duplications as well – somehow I was one day off for my wife’s birthday in Outlook, but the info was correct in Facebook – so it shows me both. Nice!

That’s it for now – more later…there’s some ugliness with the Zune music client that needs some explaining.

Jason Dunn owns and operates Thoughts Media Inc., a company dedicated to creating the best in online communities. He enjoys photography, mobile devices, blogging, digital media content creation/editing, and pretty much all technology. He lives in Calgary, Alberta, Canada with his lovely wife, his wonderful son Logan, and his sometimes obedient dog. He’s thankful his MVP lead worked hard to get him a loaner Windows Phone 7 device for a week.

Do you enjoy using new hardware, software and accessories, then sharing your experience with others? Then join us on the Thoughts Media Review Team! We’re looking for individuals who find it fun to test new gear and give their honest opinions about the experience. It’s a volunteer role with some great perks. Interested? Then click here for more information.


The Glow is Wearing Off: Good and Bad about Windows Phone 7, Part One

Now that I’ve had a few days to spend with the Windows Phone 7 prototype device, I’m personally having some of the WP7 “glow” wear off – that happens with every new gadget though, and I’m glad it does, because it allows me to be more objective about what works well and what doesn’t.

Something I’ve noticed today after making and receiving about 10 calls in total: I really miss having a hardware button for the phone. With every single Windows Mobile/Windows Phone I’ve had over the years, there’s been a physical button to end the call, and a physical button to start a call. That speed of access has been important, especially when it comes to ending a call. When a call ends, I’d immediately take the phone away from my face, press the call end button, and put it in my pocket in one motion. When a call ends on Windows Phone 7, I take it away from my face, wait about 1.5 seconds for the screen to go from off to one, then tap the End Call button. It’s not a very big button, and the fact that I have to wait for the screen to turn on is irritating.

This isn’t a deal breaker, and maybe for one-button phone users (iPhone, etc.) this is normal, but for me it seems sub-optimal. I thought initially that there must be a better way – surely one of those three buttons re-maps to perform another function when the phone is in call mode – but, nope, all three buttons hold their original function. That’s probably a good thing overall, but it does make ending a call more of a process than it should be – it doesn’t feel fast or fluid.

Another thing I’m not fond of is how the reminder snooze function works – my reminders trigger 30 minutes in advance by default (that’s something you can configure in Outlook), but often I don’t need to leave until 15 minutes before some appointments. Ideally I want to snooze the reminder for 10 or 15 minutes, or even five minutes before the start of the appointment if it’s a conference call. The snooze function is hard-coded to five minutes though, so every five minutes I have to snooze the reminder. The current system is too binary and simplistic – I’d like to see, at minimum “5 Minutes before Start” added as an option that would be remembered.

On the plus side, the integrated Bing search is just killer. I was downtown today, and wanted to stop at a local store called The Camera Store. I pressed the search button, typed in “camera store”, two seconds later the results showed up (I was already on the Local view), I tapped on the first result, then tapped the phone number. That’s stupid easy and incredibly fast. That level of integration is superb and shows off what happens when a company that owns a search engine and a mobile OS think hard about how they should work together.

Also worth noting: the integration of multiple sources of information for a contact (Facebook, Windows Live, Outlook) is very slick. When you look at the contact details, underneath some pieces of info – such as birthday – it tells you what the source of that info is. It’s smart enough to handle duplications as well – somehow I was one day off for my wife’s birthday in Outlook, but the info was correct in Facebook – so it shows me both. Nice!

That’s it for now – more later…there’s some ugliness with the Zune music client that needs some explaining.

Jason Dunn owns and operates Thoughts Media Inc., a company dedicated to creating the best in online communities. He enjoys photography, mobile devices, blogging, digital media content creation/editing, and pretty much all technology. He lives in Calgary, Alberta, Canada with his lovely wife, his wonderful son Logan, and his sometimes obedient dog. He’s thankful his MVP lead worked hard to get him a loaner Windows Phone 7 device for a week.

Do you enjoy using new hardware, software and accessories, then sharing your experience with others? Then join us on the Thoughts Media Review Team! We’re looking for individuals who find it fun to test new gear and give their honest opinions about the experience. It’s a volunteer role with some great perks. Interested? Then click here for more information.


The Glow is Wearing Off: Good and Bad about Windows Phone 7, Part One

Now that I’ve had a few days to spend with the Windows Phone 7 prototype device, I’m personally having some of the WP7 “glow” wear off – that happens with every new gadget though, and I’m glad it does, because it allows me to be more objective about what works well and what doesn’t.

Something I’ve noticed today after making and receiving about 10 calls in total: I really miss having a hardware button for the phone. With every single Windows Mobile/Windows Phone I’ve had over the years, there’s been a physical button to end the call, and a physical button to start a call. That speed of access has been important, especially when it comes to ending a call. When a call ends, I’d immediately take the phone away from my face, press the call end button, and put it in my pocket in one motion. When a call ends on Windows Phone 7, I take it away from my face, wait about 1.5 seconds for the screen to go from off to one, then tap the End Call button. It’s not a very big button, and the fact that I have to wait for the screen to turn on is irritating.

This isn’t a deal breaker, and maybe for one-button phone users (iPhone, etc.) this is normal, but for me it seems sub-optimal. I thought initially that there must be a better way – surely one of those three buttons re-maps to perform another function when the phone is in call mode – but, nope, all three buttons hold their original function. That’s probably a good thing overall, but it does make ending a call more of a process than it should be – it doesn’t feel fast or fluid.

Another thing I’m not fond of is how the reminder snooze function works – my reminders trigger 30 minutes in advance by default (that’s something you can configure in Outlook), but often I don’t need to leave until 15 minutes before some appointments. Ideally I want to snooze the reminder for 10 or 15 minutes, or even five minutes before the start of the appointment if it’s a conference call. The snooze function is hard-coded to five minutes though, so every five minutes I have to snooze the reminder. The current system is too binary and simplistic – I’d like to see, at minimum “5 Minutes before Start” added as an option that would be remembered.

On the plus side, the integrated Bing search is just killer. I was downtown today, and wanted to stop at a local store called The Camera Store. I pressed the search button, typed in “camera store”, two seconds later the results showed up (I was already on the Local view), I tapped on the first result, then tapped the phone number. That’s stupid easy and incredibly fast. That level of integration is superb and shows off what happens when a company that owns a search engine and a mobile OS think hard about how they should work together.

Also worth noting: the integration of multiple sources of information for a contact (Facebook, Windows Live, Outlook) is very slick. When you look at the contact details, underneath some pieces of info – such as birthday – it tells you what the source of that info is. It’s smart enough to handle duplications as well – somehow I was one day off for my wife’s birthday in Outlook, but the info was correct in Facebook – so it shows me both. Nice!

That’s it for now – more later…there’s some ugliness with the Zune music client that needs some explaining.

Jason Dunn owns and operates Thoughts Media Inc., a company dedicated to creating the best in online communities. He enjoys photography, mobile devices, blogging, digital media content creation/editing, and pretty much all technology. He lives in Calgary, Alberta, Canada with his lovely wife, his wonderful son Logan, and his sometimes obedient dog. He’s thankful his MVP lead worked hard to get him a loaner Windows Phone 7 device for a week.

Do you enjoy using new hardware, software and accessories, then sharing your experience with others? Then join us on the Thoughts Media Review Team! We’re looking for individuals who find it fun to test new gear and give their honest opinions about the experience. It’s a volunteer role with some great perks. Interested? Then click here for more information.


The Glow is Wearing Off: Good and Bad about Windows Phone 7, Part One

Now that I’ve had a few days to spend with the Windows Phone 7 prototype device, I’m personally having some of the WP7 “glow” wear off – that happens with every new gadget though, and I’m glad it does, because it allows me to be more objective about what works well and what doesn’t.

Something I’ve noticed today after making and receiving about 10 calls in total: I really miss having a hardware button for the phone. With every single Windows Mobile/Windows Phone I’ve had over the years, there’s been a physical button to end the call, and a physical button to start a call. That speed of access has been important, especially when it comes to ending a call. When a call ends, I’d immediately take the phone away from my face, press the call end button, and put it in my pocket in one motion. When a call ends on Windows Phone 7, I take it away from my face, wait about 1.5 seconds for the screen to go from off to one, then tap the End Call button. It’s not a very big button, and the fact that I have to wait for the screen to turn on is irritating.

This isn’t a deal breaker, and maybe for one-button phone users (iPhone, etc.) this is normal, but for me it seems sub-optimal. I thought initially that there must be a better way – surely one of those three buttons re-maps to perform another function when the phone is in call mode – but, nope, all three buttons hold their original function. That’s probably a good thing overall, but it does make ending a call more of a process than it should be – it doesn’t feel fast or fluid.

Another thing I’m not fond of is how the reminder snooze function works – my reminders trigger 30 minutes in advance by default (that’s something you can configure in Outlook), but often I don’t need to leave until 15 minutes before some appointments. Ideally I want to snooze the reminder for 10 or 15 minutes, or even five minutes before the start of the appointment if it’s a conference call. The snooze function is hard-coded to five minutes though, so every five minutes I have to snooze the reminder. The current system is too binary and simplistic – I’d like to see, at minimum “5 Minutes before Start” added as an option that would be remembered.

On the plus side, the integrated Bing search is just killer. I was downtown today, and wanted to stop at a local store called The Camera Store. I pressed the search button, typed in “camera store”, two seconds later the results showed up (I was already on the Local view), I tapped on the first result, then tapped the phone number. That’s stupid easy and incredibly fast. That level of integration is superb and shows off what happens when a company that owns a search engine and a mobile OS think hard about how they should work together.

Also worth noting: the integration of multiple sources of information for a contact (Facebook, Windows Live, Outlook) is very slick. When you look at the contact details, underneath some pieces of info – such as birthday – it tells you what the source of that info is. It’s smart enough to handle duplications as well – somehow I was one day off for my wife’s birthday in Outlook, but the info was correct in Facebook – so it shows me both. Nice!

That’s it for now – more later…there’s some ugliness with the Zune music client that needs some explaining.

Jason Dunn owns and operates Thoughts Media Inc., a company dedicated to creating the best in online communities. He enjoys photography, mobile devices, blogging, digital media content creation/editing, and pretty much all technology. He lives in Calgary, Alberta, Canada with his lovely wife, his wonderful son Logan, and his sometimes obedient dog. He’s thankful his MVP lead worked hard to get him a loaner Windows Phone 7 device for a week.

Do you enjoy using new hardware, software and accessories, then sharing your experience with others? Then join us on the Thoughts Media Review Team! We’re looking for individuals who find it fun to test new gear and give their honest opinions about the experience. It’s a volunteer role with some great perks. Interested? Then click here for more information.


The Glow is Wearing Off: Good and Bad about Windows Phone 7, Part One

Now that I’ve had a few days to spend with the Windows Phone 7 prototype device, I’m personally having some of the WP7 “glow” wear off – that happens with every new gadget though, and I’m glad it does, because it allows me to be more objective about what works well and what doesn’t.

Something I’ve noticed today after making and receiving about 10 calls in total: I really miss having a hardware button for the phone. With every single Windows Mobile/Windows Phone I’ve had over the years, there’s been a physical button to end the call, and a physical button to start a call. That speed of access has been important, especially when it comes to ending a call. When a call ends, I’d immediately take the phone away from my face, press the call end button, and put it in my pocket in one motion. When a call ends on Windows Phone 7, I take it away from my face, wait about 1.5 seconds for the screen to go from off to one, then tap the End Call button. It’s not a very big button, and the fact that I have to wait for the screen to turn on is irritating.

This isn’t a deal breaker, and maybe for one-button phone users (iPhone, etc.) this is normal, but for me it seems sub-optimal. I thought initially that there must be a better way – surely one of those three buttons re-maps to perform another function when the phone is in call mode – but, nope, all three buttons hold their original function. That’s probably a good thing overall, but it does make ending a call more of a process than it should be – it doesn’t feel fast or fluid.

Another thing I’m not fond of is how the reminder snooze function works – my reminders trigger 30 minutes in advance by default (that’s something you can configure in Outlook), but often I don’t need to leave until 15 minutes before some appointments. Ideally I want to snooze the reminder for 10 or 15 minutes, or even five minutes before the start of the appointment if it’s a conference call. The snooze function is hard-coded to five minutes though, so every five minutes I have to snooze the reminder. The current system is too binary and simplistic – I’d like to see, at minimum “5 Minutes before Start” added as an option that would be remembered.

On the plus side, the integrated Bing search is just killer. I was downtown today, and wanted to stop at a local store called The Camera Store. I pressed the search button, typed in “camera store”, two seconds later the results showed up (I was already on the Local view), I tapped on the first result, then tapped the phone number. That’s stupid easy and incredibly fast. That level of integration is superb and shows off what happens when a company that owns a search engine and a mobile OS think hard about how they should work together.

Also worth noting: the integration of multiple sources of information for a contact (Facebook, Windows Live, Outlook) is very slick. When you look at the contact details, underneath some pieces of info – such as birthday – it tells you what the source of that info is. It’s smart enough to handle duplications as well – somehow I was one day off for my wife’s birthday in Outlook, but the info was correct in Facebook – so it shows me both. Nice!

That’s it for now – more later…there’s some ugliness with the Zune music client that needs some explaining.

Jason Dunn owns and operates Thoughts Media Inc., a company dedicated to creating the best in online communities. He enjoys photography, mobile devices, blogging, digital media content creation/editing, and pretty much all technology. He lives in Calgary, Alberta, Canada with his lovely wife, his wonderful son Logan, and his sometimes obedient dog. He’s thankful his MVP lead worked hard to get him a loaner Windows Phone 7 device for a week.

Do you enjoy using new hardware, software and accessories, then sharing your experience with others? Then join us on the Thoughts Media Review Team! We’re looking for individuals who find it fun to test new gear and give their honest opinions about the experience. It’s a volunteer role with some great perks. Interested? Then click here for more information.


The Glow is Wearing Off: Good and Bad about Windows Phone 7, Part One

Now that I’ve had a few days to spend with the Windows Phone 7 prototype device, I’m personally having some of the WP7 “glow” wear off – that happens with every new gadget though, and I’m glad it does, because it allows me to be more objective about what works well and what doesn’t.

Something I’ve noticed today after making and receiving about 10 calls in total: I really miss having a hardware button for the phone. With every single Windows Mobile/Windows Phone I’ve had over the years, there’s been a physical button to end the call, and a physical button to start a call. That speed of access has been important, especially when it comes to ending a call. When a call ends, I’d immediately take the phone away from my face, press the call end button, and put it in my pocket in one motion. When a call ends on Windows Phone 7, I take it away from my face, wait about 1.5 seconds for the screen to go from off to one, then tap the End Call button. It’s not a very big button, and the fact that I have to wait for the screen to turn on is irritating.

This isn’t a deal breaker, and maybe for one-button phone users (iPhone, etc.) this is normal, but for me it seems sub-optimal. I thought initially that there must be a better way – surely one of those three buttons re-maps to perform another function when the phone is in call mode – but, nope, all three buttons hold their original function. That’s probably a good thing overall, but it does make ending a call more of a process than it should be – it doesn’t feel fast or fluid.

Another thing I’m not fond of is how the reminder snooze function works – my reminders trigger 30 minutes in advance by default (that’s something you can configure in Outlook), but often I don’t need to leave until 15 minutes before some appointments. Ideally I want to snooze the reminder for 10 or 15 minutes, or even five minutes before the start of the appointment if it’s a conference call. The snooze function is hard-coded to five minutes though, so every five minutes I have to snooze the reminder. The current system is too binary and simplistic – I’d like to see, at minimum “5 Minutes before Start” added as an option that would be remembered.

On the plus side, the integrated Bing search is just killer. I was downtown today, and wanted to stop at a local store called The Camera Store. I pressed the search button, typed in “camera store”, two seconds later the results showed up (I was already on the Local view), I tapped on the first result, then tapped the phone number. That’s stupid easy and incredibly fast. That level of integration is superb and shows off what happens when a company that owns a search engine and a mobile OS think hard about how they should work together.

Also worth noting: the integration of multiple sources of information for a contact (Facebook, Windows Live, Outlook) is very slick. When you look at the contact details, underneath some pieces of info – such as birthday – it tells you what the source of that info is. It’s smart enough to handle duplications as well – somehow I was one day off for my wife’s birthday in Outlook, but the info was correct in Facebook – so it shows me both. Nice!

That’s it for now – more later…there’s some ugliness with the Zune music client that needs some explaining.

Jason Dunn owns and operates Thoughts Media Inc., a company dedicated to creating the best in online communities. He enjoys photography, mobile devices, blogging, digital media content creation/editing, and pretty much all technology. He lives in Calgary, Alberta, Canada with his lovely wife, his wonderful son Logan, and his sometimes obedient dog. He’s thankful his MVP lead worked hard to get him a loaner Windows Phone 7 device for a week.

Do you enjoy using new hardware, software and accessories, then sharing your experience with others? Then join us on the Thoughts Media Review Team! We’re looking for individuals who find it fun to test new gear and give their honest opinions about the experience. It’s a volunteer role with some great perks. Interested? Then click here for more information.


The Glow is Wearing Off: Good and Bad about Windows Phone 7, Part One

Now that I’ve had a few days to spend with the Windows Phone 7 prototype device, I’m personally having some of the WP7 “glow” wear off – that happens with every new gadget though, and I’m glad it does, because it allows me to be more objective about what works well and what doesn’t.

Something I’ve noticed today after making and receiving about 10 calls in total: I really miss having a hardware button for the phone. With every single Windows Mobile/Windows Phone I’ve had over the years, there’s been a physical button to end the call, and a physical button to start a call. That speed of access has been important, especially when it comes to ending a call. When a call ends, I’d immediately take the phone away from my face, press the call end button, and put it in my pocket in one motion. When a call ends on Windows Phone 7, I take it away from my face, wait about 1.5 seconds for the screen to go from off to one, then tap the End Call button. It’s not a very big button, and the fact that I have to wait for the screen to turn on is irritating.

This isn’t a deal breaker, and maybe for one-button phone users (iPhone, etc.) this is normal, but for me it seems sub-optimal. I thought initially that there must be a better way – surely one of those three buttons re-maps to perform another function when the phone is in call mode – but, nope, all three buttons hold their original function. That’s probably a good thing overall, but it does make ending a call more of a process than it should be – it doesn’t feel fast or fluid.

Another thing I’m not fond of is how the reminder snooze function works – my reminders trigger 30 minutes in advance by default (that’s something you can configure in Outlook), but often I don’t need to leave until 15 minutes before some appointments. Ideally I want to snooze the reminder for 10 or 15 minutes, or even five minutes before the start of the appointment if it’s a conference call. The snooze function is hard-coded to five minutes though, so every five minutes I have to snooze the reminder. The current system is too binary and simplistic – I’d like to see, at minimum “5 Minutes before Start” added as an option that would be remembered.

On the plus side, the integrated Bing search is just killer. I was downtown today, and wanted to stop at a local store called The Camera Store. I pressed the search button, typed in “camera store”, two seconds later the results showed up (I was already on the Local view), I tapped on the first result, then tapped the phone number. That’s stupid easy and incredibly fast. That level of integration is superb and shows off what happens when a company that owns a search engine and a mobile OS think hard about how they should work together.

Also worth noting: the integration of multiple sources of information for a contact (Facebook, Windows Live, Outlook) is very slick. When you look at the contact details, underneath some pieces of info – such as birthday – it tells you what the source of that info is. It’s smart enough to handle duplications as well – somehow I was one day off for my wife’s birthday in Outlook, but the info was correct in Facebook – so it shows me both. Nice!

That’s it for now – more later…there’s some ugliness with the Zune music client that needs some explaining.

Jason Dunn owns and operates Thoughts Media Inc., a company dedicated to creating the best in online communities. He enjoys photography, mobile devices, blogging, digital media content creation/editing, and pretty much all technology. He lives in Calgary, Alberta, Canada with his lovely wife, his wonderful son Logan, and his sometimes obedient dog. He’s thankful his MVP lead worked hard to get him a loaner Windows Phone 7 device for a week.

Do you enjoy using new hardware, software and accessories, then sharing your experience with others? Then join us on the Thoughts Media Review Team! We’re looking for individuals who find it fun to test new gear and give their honest opinions about the experience. It’s a volunteer role with some great perks. Interested? Then click here for more information.


Pre Order Mozart At Orange Stores

On passing the local Orange store today there was some window advertising for the HTC 7 Mozart inviting people into the store to pre order the new device which will launch on Thursday 21st.

No news on pricing in store yet, that should be available for the launch day so not long to wait now!.

The Mozart has some key features over other WP7 devices and that is the 8 megapixel camera with Xenon flash and also being made from a block of aluminium so has a unibody design to it



Read on and add your comments. Follow us on twitter too.


Spotify for Windows Mobile 6 & Windows Phone 7

Spotify have released a mobile app for their Premium service for Windows Mobile 6.x phones AND announced that their will be a Windows Phone 7 app coming as well! 

There aren’t many WP7 apps out there yet, so its great to hear someone like Spotify are supporting the platform. It’s also an interesting one, given that one of the features of the Zune store is a streaming package that undercuts Spotify Premium by £1 a month. That said, there’s a lot more artists on Spotify than Zune’s streaming service at present. 

That also makes it easy for those with multiple devices and OS to port their listening to their other devices – compile a playlist on your Android phone or tablet, and it will be available straight away on your Windows Phone, PC, Mac and iPhone. 

No word on timing though – but make it soon Spotify  :) 

 

Link - Spotify blog



Read on and add your comments. Follow us on twitter too.


Review: Bookworm

screenshot16012Feed Lex the Worm’s endless appetite by joining letters on the library wall! Use up burning letters before they reach the bottom and set the library on fire! Special bonus tiles boost your score if used to make a word.

Bookworm is a superb word game for beginners and experts alike and allows you to test or increase your word power in a fun and enjoyable way!

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Review: SBSH GoNews Touch (on sale till Jun 22)

GoNews Touch is a news reader application that aggregates the latest news from across the internet directly to your smartphone, downloading only headlines of your interest based on your personal configuration. With GoNews you can easily read the daily headlines even when offline. Featuring innovative touch-design so that you can browse through all headlines at the touch of a finger!

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