
"Windows Phone is fighting an uphill battle. Microsoft still has work to do in terms of user experience and the big hardware partners like HTC and Samsung are starting to lose interest and putting in only token efforts. But Nokia is keeping the platform in the conversation. We're not willing to consign Windows Phone to the same level of hopelessness as the open-source webOS or the out-to-pasture BB OS precisely
because Nokia is too big and too active a partner." Having a big partner is by no means a guarantee. Microsoft is doing whatever it can - both legal and should-not-be-legal - to get people to buy Windows Phone, and it isn't working. A brand only gets you so far - you need a compelling product, too, and as much as I like Windows Phone, it's just
not there yet compared to iOS and Android.
Member since:
2005-11-10
IIS? Yes, very much in biz environments. By the way, don't see anything wrong with it, especially with 7/7.5. Next version (Server 8) is even better, many new features for true throttling and large scale sites.
IE? You may want to check browser market share.
It's not that I use it (I use Firefox), but others do. I have to test my web pages in IE too. And in Safari, etc. Every important browser is available on Windows.
Yeah, right..
Edited 2012-04-10 03:02 UTC