I am not sure the mobile operating system folks over at Apple or Google are losing any sleep about it, but Microsoft's latest upgrade on its mobile OS, Windows Phone 7.5, has made a decent mobile business tool even a bit better.  
Redmond's mobile OS struggles are hardly deep dark, J. Edgar Hoover-like
 secrets. These are the facts: Even though Microsoft controls something 
on the order of a half-billion desktop computers on Earth, it 
essentially controls none of the mobile computers.
Which, rightly, should terrify Steve Ballmer and company.
 
And Redmond is clearly busting it to try crack the mobile market.
 To wit, Microsoft recently rolled out a major upgrade to its Windows 
Phone OS, called 7.5 -- and dubbed rather idiotically "Mango." Handset 
manufacturers such as Samsung, HTC and, yes, good old Nokia, have actually cozied up to the code. Major cell operators including Verizon, AT&T, Sprint and T-Mobile now all offer reasonably business-useful Window Phone phones.
I have spent the past month or so tinkering with this upgrade. 
Here is what you need to know about Microsoft's improving mobile 
business fortunes. 
(Full disclosure: My firm does business with an unrelated unit at Microsoft.)
1. Dirt-cheap business phones.
Microsoft may not be shy about charging up the you-know-what for its
 desktop tools, but in the mobile world the company is like a trip to 
Goodwill. None other than Verizon now sells the perfectly business-ready
 HTC Trophy for just $30 with a two-year contract. And the HTC Arrive from Sprint -- which sports a surprisingly effective keyboard for us recovering BlackBerry) addicts -- can be had for a decent $99. That's cheap, and they both work.
2. Social media you can ... gasp! actually control.
Here's a clever idea: A business-ready group communication function 
that can be tightly managed. Called Groups in Windows Phone world, they 
are essentially multiperson chat or email threads that happen in one 
place on your phone. Sure, any chat module from, say, Google Talk or 
even Facebook does the same thing, but to these paranoid eyes, a Windows
 Group is much easier to control. Factor in the Windows Phone's overall 
improved security and don't be shocked if you find these phones easier 
and safer to be social with than even an iPhone.
3. The best mobile Microsoft Office experience, period.
Without question, the biggest news with Windows Phones 7.5 is 
improved support for Outlook and document types such as Word, Excel and 
PowerPoint for just about any business user. As I have reported, the 
integration of Windows Phone with Microsoft's Web-based software tools 
called Office 365 is excellent. But here in Windows 7.5, really any 
business can take its copy of Office out of the office. An app called 
Office Hub not only offers a reasonable mobile facsimile of say, Word, 
but users can also store and share content on Microsoft's Web storage
 tools such as SkyDrive. (Be warned: SkyDrive is primitive by Google 
Apps, Box.net or even Apple iCloud standards. But for basic file sharing
 and swapping, Windows Phone works. And you don't need the hideously 
expensive SharePoint servers to do it.)
Source is
http://www.thestreet.com/story/11317403/1/yes-it-might-be-time-for-windows-75-phone.html

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