Hi All, just found this forum. After a few searches I'm unable to find answer to these queries.
I'm thinking of buying a 'HTC HD2, to replace my mobile 6 phone & sony ereader. After a bit of research this seems to fit the bill, with its reasonably large screen..
I basically need it for a pda, texting, bluetooth to car, occasional phone calls/web browsing with 3G & ereader.
I use windows Outlook 2000 on my PC & this syncs with my old phone, (when it see's it!) am I right in thinking the HD will sync to Outlook, & will all the features work?
I especially need the calender reminders, birthdays & re-occurring appointments etc.
I've got over 10 years of calender appointments, & numerous contacts with details, such as child's birth & house moving etc.
I would hate to have to type them all in again, or lose them completely.
Also are you able to read 'epub' & text files?
Finally would it be better to go for the newer HD7 & windows mobile 7?
TIA
Hi,
First of all Windows Mobile 7 may not be locally synchronized via ActiveSync with Outlook, only through an Exchange server.
Thus, the HD2 is already the better choice unless you have an exchange account.
Most Stockrom's do not have the eReader, but some have implemented a Costumrom's.
But you can also for example Freda install, it is freeware and very useful.
for what you are looking for, the HD2 is the clear choice. It will Sync with Outlook, it is a full PDA with Windows Mobile on it nut I do suggest you flash a custom ROM as the stock ROMs are not so smooth and like to freeze a lot or get real sluggish. The Windows Phone 7 is no PDA at all, it is geared toward social networking and gaming with the built in X-Box Live tile. It has no multitasking ability so you can only do one thing at a time with it. Go with the HD2
Thanks for your thought guys.
I'd more or less decided on the HD2, but even though they will soon be replaced by the HD7 they are not getting any cheaper.
Is flashing the custom Rom easy to do, I'm not very tech savvy?
Thanks again.
tarq said:
Thanks for your thought guys.
I'd more or less decided on the HD2, but even though they will soon be replaced by the HD7 they are not getting any cheaper.
Is flashing the custom Rom easy to do, I'm not very tech savvy?
Thanks again.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yes flashing custom ROM is easy, the only deference between flashing a custom ROM and a official ROM is you have to flash HSPL first then flash the ROM, well at least as far as how you flash them that is. Here is the two seperat guides that senior member MSkip put together on how to flash a custom ROM. This guide is for international HD2s, and this guide is for T-Mobile HD2s. also check out the guide I wrote in my sig it will help you understand a lot.
Shut-down of Windows Marketplace for Mobile Web Site and My Phone Service Notification
Microsoft will be discontinuing the My Phone service for Windows Mobile 6.x. We will also be discontinuing the Windows Marketplace for Mobile web site. Because you may be affected, please review the details below:
Windows Marketplace for Mobile Web Site To Be Discontinued
The Windows Marketplace for Mobile web site at http://marketplace.windowsphone.com will no longer be available starting on July 15, 2011. After July 15, 2011, you will no longer be able to browse, buy or download applications for Windows Mobile 6.x phones via the Windows Marketplace for Mobile web site.
The Windows Marketplace for Mobile service will continue to be available on your phone, however. You will continue to be able to browse, buy and download applications for Windows Mobile 6.x on your phone.
My Phone To Be Discontinued
On August 7, 2011, the My Phone service will stop saving content from phones to the My Phone service. If you rely on the My Phone service to back-up the content on your Windows Mobile 6.x phone, you will be affected.
Starting on August 7, 2011, Microsoft will begin moving your My Phone content to Windows Live SkyDrive. SkyDrive is Microsoft's free online storage service that helps you access and share your files such as photos and Microsoft Office documents. Contacts, calendar entries, text messages and photos will be moved to SkyDrive for you. Once moved, you will be able to access this content by logging into SkyDrive using the Windows Live ID that you used to register for the My Phone service.
Other content types, including videos, music, documents and favorites will not be moved from My Phone to SkyDrive for you. If you want this content, you must save it from the My Phone service to your local PC.
On October 6, 2011, the My Phone web site at http://www.microsoft.com/myphone will no longer be available. On this date, you will no longer be able to log in to the My Phone service to access your content stored to the My Phone service. Microsoft will continue to store your My Phone content for one (1) year. Physical copies of your content can be shipped to you upon request until October 5, 2012.
Take Action
To learn more about the My Phone service shut-down, including information about your content moving to Windows Live SkyDrive and how to save other content to your local PC, please visit this web site:
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/2557520
So its now between the mighty android and the iPhone.
Is it the begining of the end for WM?
plapic said:
Shut-down of Windows Marketplace for Mobile Web Site and My Phone Service Notification
Microsoft will be discontinuing the My Phone service for Windows Mobile 6.x. We will also be discontinuing the Windows Marketplace for Mobile web site. Because you may be affected, please review the details below:
Windows Marketplace for Mobile Web Site To Be Discontinued
The Windows Marketplace for Mobile web site at http://marketplace.windowsphone.com will no longer be available starting on July 15, 2011. After July 15, 2011, you will no longer be able to browse, buy or download applications for Windows Mobile 6.x phones via the Windows Marketplace for Mobile web site.
The Windows Marketplace for Mobile service will continue to be available on your phone, however. You will continue to be able to browse, buy and download applications for Windows Mobile 6.x on your phone.
My Phone To Be Discontinued
On August 7, 2011, the My Phone service will stop saving content from phones to the My Phone service. If you rely on the My Phone service to back-up the content on your Windows Mobile 6.x phone, you will be affected.
Starting on August 7, 2011, Microsoft will begin moving your My Phone content to Windows Live SkyDrive. SkyDrive is Microsoft's free online storage service that helps you access and share your files such as photos and Microsoft Office documents. Contacts, calendar entries, text messages and photos will be moved to SkyDrive for you. Once moved, you will be able to access this content by logging into SkyDrive using the Windows Live ID that you used to register for the My Phone service.
Other content types, including videos, music, documents and favorites will not be moved from My Phone to SkyDrive for you. If you want this content, you must save it from the My Phone service to your local PC.
On October 6, 2011, the My Phone web site at http://www.microsoft.com/myphone will no longer be available. On this date, you will no longer be able to log in to the My Phone service to access your content stored to the My Phone service. Microsoft will continue to store your My Phone content for one (1) year. Physical copies of your content can be shipped to you upon request until October 5, 2012.
Take Action
To learn more about the My Phone service shut-down, including information about your content moving to Windows Live SkyDrive and how to save other content to your local PC, please visit this web site:
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/2557520
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Hello,
Those who have purchased applications Marketplace, we continue to be able to download them again from the mobile device if you have any problems with them?. We paid for these applications, and can not obtain otherwise than by means of Marketplace ...
Greetings and thanks
i got an email about it today, very very disappointing that m$ are killing off wm6.x like this so soon.
im wondering what happens now with apps that have been paid for and updates to apps i use, it says its still going to be availiable on our phones but will there ever be any updates to apps or new ones anymore ?
its just far too soon to do this, in 2 or 3 years from now maybe.
time for a new phone i guess
woody21 said:
i got an email about it today, very very disappointing that m$ are killing off wm6.x like this so soon.
im wondering what happens now with apps that have been paid for and updates to apps i use, it says its still going to be availiable on our phones but will there ever be any updates to apps or new ones anymore ?
its just far too soon to do this, in 2 or 3 years from now maybe.
time for a new phone i guess
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Hello,
I find it unfortunate position of Microsoft to kill Windows Mobile without considering that we are still many users who are happy with this operating system. This position makes me think that never migraré the new Microsoft operating system, when I will have to switch to another platform other than Microsoft.
Regards,
You guys did not read carefully enough. They are going to shut down the Market Place website. If you read the notification again you will find out that access from your device will still be possible after the closing date.
Concerning My Phone this is no biggie for me. I was never really happy to deliberately give MS my personal data. I prefer a classic backup solution like SPB Backup.
According to recent market data from Gartner,Windows Mobile 6.x phones sales outpaced Microsoft’s Windows Phone 7 sales in the first calendar quarter of 2011. That must be driving Microsoft crazy.
Oh my God
So sad
Let's go Adr
awalt said:
According to recent market data from Gartner,Windows Mobile 6.x phones sales outpaced Microsoft’s Windows Phone 7 sales in the first calendar quarter of 2011. That must be driving Microsoft crazy.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I don't know if this is really true but it does not matter. WP7 is simply useless to me. From a device of the year 2011 I expect:
- full multitasking (not some sort of multitasking like thing)
- all the other basic things like adding ringtones etc that even the dumbest phones could do years ago (I know MS will maybe introduce that with Mango but come on)
- full featured office solutions and not some functionality reduced Word, Excel and Powerpoint apps that MS thinks are sufficient for us
- let's not even talk about copy & paste
...
The list could go on forever. WP7 is simply a bad IOS copy and not worth one $. I will stick with my Xperia X1 and as soon as it dies I will get an Android device. MS just committed suicide with the introduction of WP7.
cuonganhstyle said:
Oh my God
So sad
Let's go Adr
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
yep...DEF MOVE to Android. Thanks Microsoft!
That's... wrong. If I bought last big WM device like HD or HD Mini in late 2009 or early 2010, I wouldn't even have 2 years of fully functional phone . Shutting down MyPhone is a bad move. It' like they officially killed WM. A very good OS, still better then WP7. I think MS chose a wrong way with their OS, but... that doesn't matter to me now. I jumped off the WM ship and now I'm rocking Android, thanks to HD2 versatility.
altae said:
Concerning My Phone this is no biggie for me. I was never really happy to deliberately give MS my personal data..
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I was totaly relied on My Phone services
dont know what to do now
raven_raven said:
That's... wrong. If I bought last big WM device like HD or HD Mini in late 2009 or early 2010, I wouldn't even have 2 years of fully functional phone . Shutting down MyPhone is a bad move. It' like they officially killed WM. A very good OS, still better then WP7. I think MS chose a wrong way with their OS, but... that doesn't matter to me now. I jumped off the WM ship and now I'm rocking Android, thanks to HD2 versatility.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Hello,
What Microsoft has made with these dirty tricks is that when you have to change my device (while work will continue with é, I love the WM 6.1) I switch to another operating system, but Windows never Phone 7.
Regards,
netant said:
I was totaly relied on My Phone services
dont know what to do now
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Hello,
What Microsoft has made with these dirty tricks is that when you have to change my device (while work will continue with é, I love the WM 6.1) I switch to another operating system, but Windows never Phone 7.
PIMbackup recommend you use to backup the PIM, works very well.
Regards,
Yeah move to android.
Window will die soon. Never care of their old friends.
Android = A+
Iphone = B
Window = ****... never buy window phone again.
chrisyong said:
Yeah move to android.
Window will die soon. Never care of their old friends.
Android = A+
Iphone = B
Window = ****... never buy window phone again.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
It all depends on how you use the phone. Android, from the limited exposure to it that I had, is great for some things and sucks in others.
I use my phone for both home and work. I have many excel spreadsheets and word documents with tons of data in them that I use weekly. With Android, I would have to either migrate them to Google Docs, or buy applications that somehow work with Office. I couldn't even find a decent free RTF editor for my wife's Android phone, and RTF is an open format that's been a standard for ages.
With my WM phone I can create and send meeting minutes, action lists, and excel spreadsheets to my coworkers, when needed. No such thing with Android unless I buy 3rd party. (I can not use Google Docs for sharing work files).
I can use my phone offline with Wifi or Bluetooth for pretty much anything, including GPS (with a bluetooth receiver). With Android, who knows. I have a feeling that if I ever was without cell signal, the Android phone functionality would be severely limited. My WM phone can still be used as a full-blown PDA.
The biggest thing is, though, the Android phone is just too intergrated into Google services. If anyone stole an Android phone they could get immediate access to all of your email, Docs etc. With a Windows phone, they only access a dozen or so emails dowloaded since last time, and if you're smart all sensitive docs are hidden inside an encrypted container. The thief wouldn't be able to break into your Google accounts and read online documents. (Of course you would have to enter the password in browser each time you want to access Google from your phone but that's a small price to pay). I don't know if Android phone could be set up that way, but this would take away a huge part of what makes Android a unique experience.
Not saying that WM >>>> Android, just that it's not a platform to write off just yet. Personally I will strongly consider the both the WM7 and Android when it is time to upgrade my phone the next year.
Looks like WM has lost against ANdroid and iPhone
But to be honest, i never really used the Microsoft MyPhone Service and the Marketplace as there are lots of (also free) alternatives when you search the web.
Yeah i know...it has always been a little bit more tricky to find good software on the web, but i was always satified.
I only used the MyPhone for backing up my SMS. Therefor i now use Cloud SMS backup which is very useful.
well that is so bad from microsoft. they realy have a micro brain. cant thinks abt us who are with ms from so many years . they spoiled the os . then committed sucide in frnt of android. that too is thier mistake only. they paid the developers. then why would any one go for ms.
now **** even they cant see us living with dead os.
i will never buy a ms again
Ummagumma said:
I can use my phone offline with Wifi or Bluetooth for pretty much anything, including GPS (with a bluetooth receiver). With Android, who knows. I have a feeling that if I ever was without cell signal, the Android phone functionality would be severely limited. My WM phone can still be used as a full-blown PDA.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
That's quite a point you're making there. I went to Austria in winter with my HD2 and Android installed on it. Of course I had to switch off data because of ridiculous prices of traffic in roaming. And then my phone simply became... useless. I couldn't even open up few what you can think offline apps, cause they wanted to check license (of course by using internet connection)! Android is really data-needing.
I ended up by flashing WM (I had my laptop) ASAP. And guess what. It was more functional than Android.
That's why I have never been very fond of those Android devices. It starts with the activation of the device after you bought it. It's just ridiculous, a device that costs several 100 $ does not work decently without a google account. My WM device belongs to me without MS telling me what I can do and what I don't. Sad they have chosen the same way as google and Apple with WP7.