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It's partly the (lack of) apps...
Windows Mobile was quite widely derided, and only tolerated because the alternatives were worse or nonexistent... The interface was extremely clunky to use (trying to put a start bar on a phone..), and the os would crash and need rebooting regularly..
Also although it had apps, actually finding them was a pain in the ass.. There was no central repository, no centralised updating etc. Trying to hunt around websites looking for an installer is bad enough, but doing so on a small screen with the crude browser provided on windows mobile was just terrible.
Windows phone shouldn't be called windows, the association with windows gives people false impressions....
Some people assume that because its "windows", it will have the same problems associated with the desktop version, namely crashing and malware.
Others remember windows mobile, didn't like it so have no reason to think this new version will be any better. Others who remember windows mobile don't like the fact that their existing apps won't run.
The association with windows also makes people think they are the same product, and thus able to run the same apps, cue disappointment when they realise this isn't the case.




Member since:
2008-09-21
You assume that the reason Windows Phone performed so bad are the applications. Then why did Android succeed even when it was born from scratch completely out of nowhere whereas the ancestor of Windows Phone 7, that is Windows Mobile/CE, was a pure success-story and long time the only alternate to Symbian and from a technical pov even miles ahead?
Windows Phone has a bad stand cause it is Windows without the freedom to run everything and the backward-compatibility till MSDos. Bringing the huge Windows Vista/Seven code onto phones and removing all those advantages while adding all the problems rather then understanding the reason for success of CE, Android and iPhone isn't going to improve the situation.
Edited 2012-05-01 07:00 UTC