User Experience of Windows Phone 8, Lumia 920.

A windows phone 8 user, Ghislain, shares with us his experience using Lumia 920. Ghislain d’Adesky has been working in the mobile industry for the past 12 years. Ghislan has a strong multicultural background and is currently works at a multinational Chinese telecommunications equipment and services company as a Business Consultant. His specialties include competitive intelligence, international project coordination and networking. He holds a Master Degree in Management from SKEMA Business School (Lille, France) where he graduated in 2001. Here’s what he has to say: I have to admit, I am a bit of a smartphone addict. My first smartphone in 2003 was the Sony Ericsson P800 and it didn’t come out of the blue but rather as replacement for the Palms I had in the 90s. My next smartphones were T-Mobile branded HTC devices running on Windows Mobile (2003 SE, 5 and 6). In 2008 I moved on due to a mix of curiosity, peer pressure and availability issues of Windows Mobile devices in Bahrain, where I had moved. I became a Blackberry user for 3 years and I was quite happy with them. Nonetheless, I felt nostalgic after a while so I bought a Sony Ericsson Xperia X2 (Windows Mobile 6.5) to try it out at the beginning of 2010. The performance of this device and its size were disappointing and inconvenient. BBM also proved to be way too addictive so I ended up putting the device into a drawer and gave it away to a friend and that was probably not among the nicest gifts I ever made. At the beginning of 2011 I gave in and I bought the device I had sworn I would never acquire or even keep if offered: the iPhone (iPhone 4). After getting over the loss of a keyboard and BBM, I reluctantly had to admit that it was the most advanced smartphone I had ever used/owned. Being a frequent traveler I always need a second device and that I had the opportunity to discover Google’s Android, however the fact that these are mostly entry level devices that had their limitations i.e.: in terms of storage capacities or processing power, I couldn’t say that I had given Android a fair chance in comparison to iOS (since then I acquired a 7’’ tablet running on Android 4.0 and it changed my perspective of that OS). My iPhone didn’t age well e.g.: the pictures taken with it were all blurry after less than one year apparently because of too many scratches on the lens. With the release of Mango/Windows Phone 7.5 and the eye catching Nokia Lumia 800, I started to follow again what Microsoft was doing on the handset field. As I was starting to get bored with my iPhone and had already passed a first replacement opportunity: the iPhone 4S (couldn’t see how to justify an upgrade from the 4 to the 4S). Then Windows Phone 8 was announced. Microsoft’s new mobile OS looked nice, and despite wishing them success with it, I was waiting for the iPhone 5 to come out. I had grown accustomed to iOS but it was no longer a love match, habits/convenience had set in. However the iPhone 5 once again turned out to be a disappointment: only incremental changes and apparently made of shoddy material (I am thinking Scuffgate here). It made it at best uninteresting or unexciting as a replacement and at worst look like a rip off in any case it seemed Apple was taking its customers for granted. I didn’t like that so I decided that I would ditch the iPhone and move on to something new: the renewed version of the mobile OS I had been familiar with a couple of years before: Windows Phone 8. At first I was hesitating between the Samsung Ativ S and the Nokia Lumia 920. But the reviews, the partnership between Nokia and Microsoft and ultimately the availability made me choose the Lumia, my first Nokia ever. I ordered a black one in November, not my first choice: wanted a matt one but the gray seemed to exist only on pictures and the blue one exclusively sold in the US. However a delivery issue meant that I had to leave for weeks to Indonesia on a business without my new smartphone which was frustrating. It’s only shortly before the holidays that I could finally lay my hands on my Lumia 920 and it felt like Christmas came (several days) early! First impressions of WP8 Finally something fresh, it’s a mobile OS that is very user friendly and intuitive yet still exciting to discover and to use also for long time smartphone users. I instantly liked to “look and feel” of the OS, even the fonts look great, special attention to details had obviously been given. If you choose Bing as a lock screen, you will get a beautiful daily updated background picture. And every day I eager to see what it will be. The “Live Tiles” interface is absolutely brilliant. It is a smart and original way to combine icons and widgets and it makes every one’s Windows Phone unique. Yet personalization didn’t come at the expense of aesthetics and ease of use. Kudos Microsoft ! I noticed that even die-hard fans of competing mobile platforms are impressed or even jealous when they see WP8’s home screen. It is also the first time I get to experience the benefits of the ”Cloud” on a mobile. Skydrive enable eamless synchronization with my PC, my Android tablet or even my old iPhone. My pictures are automatically uploaded/shared, same thing goes for the notes taken with OneNote, or with the documents I wish to place on it. On my PC, Skydrive is actually a drive of its own right, appearing on Windows Explorer just as clearly as the local drives (C: D: ect.). It is a great experience, it’s very convenient and I told that this is just the beginning, that Microsoft is working hard a developing a fully integrated ecosystem Admittedly, Apple has the iCloud, tried to use it and couldn’t see the benefit of it. Teething problems with WP8 that will need to be addressed: ...

February 27, 2013 · 8 min ·  Spiffy

Microsoft Releases "My Server" for Windows 8

Microsoft has released the “My Server” app for Windows 8 and Windows RT, which enables users to check on their Windows Server 2012. Description: My Server for Windows 8 is an application designed to help you keep seamlessly connected to your server resources through devices running Windows 8. With My Server, you can manage users, devices, alerts, and access shared files in Windows Server 2012 Essentials. In addition, files that you have recently accessed with My Server files continue to be available to you even when offline. Features: ...

Tabletop Datacenter - Surface Pro Meets Hyper-V

This is a total geek experiment done by few Microsoft Redmond guys. They got 4 Surface Pro devices and built a server farm in about one hour. After that, they were just having fun and moving VM across the 4 Surface Pro devices. The key feature in Windows Server 2012 is Share Nothing Live Migration, which allows you to live migrate VMs without Cluster or share storage. If you want to try it out, here is the configuration guide. This is CRAZY, so sit back and enjoy the cool video! [youtube]http://youtu.be/4Uw7EDt86ss[/youtube]

System Center Universe 2013 Summary

Thank you for those who attended System Center Universe on January 31st. We had a full house! This is the first time that System Center Universe was hosted in Singapore and streamed to few countries in South East Asia. It was a fantastic day of technical presentations and demos. Topics covered including: Using System Center Operations Manager for Deep Application Monitoring and Diagnostics Choosing Network Options in the new Hyper-V 2012 and SCVMM Service Pack 1 is HERE! What can I use? Enabling Hosted and Shared Private Cloud using System Center 2012 SP1 Service Provider Framework Using SCCM 2012 to perform More Efficient Patch and Compliance Management How to lighten your IT workload footprint with System Center 2012 and Software Center We also launched the System Center User Group APAC. Join the group now to learn from community of experts on System Center: https://www.facebook.com/groups/31495111417/ if you missed out the session, you can access the speaker presentations and event photos from the link below: http://sdrv.ms/Y73uwD More importantly download and try System Center 2012 SP1: http://aka.ms/SC2012_SP1eval

Checking on your Windows 8 App's Reviews

App Reviews are essential to every developer to see how their app is faring in the Store. It tells developers what issues users face when using the app, suggestions on what to implement next, and even compliments on what they’re doing right. If you have created an app for Windows 8, you would have noticed that the current Windows 8 Developer Dashboard doesn’t report ratings in a very efficient manner, grouping it by country and requiring developers to scroll through an entire list to see the ratings for each country. They’ve noted that they are considering consolidating all the reviews so that you can see every country at once, but in the meantime here’s how to see all your app’s ratings. There’s a site called Windows 8 Review that has a service which scans through the Windows 8 Store and reports on app popularity and ratings. The ratings are pulled from every country and not just one, letting you see what users think about your app in a neat list. The site even includes an RSS Feed for your app reviews, so you can check on them easily if you’re using a feed reader such as Feedburner. ...

Get your Chinese New Year shopping done with App of the Week DBS Shopper and Indulge

App of the week is a weekly showcase of an awesome app developed on Windows 8 or Windows Phone. Got an app you love that you want us to talk about? Leave us a comment and tell us which app and why you love it! Ok, this might be a little early, but Happy Chinese New Year to everyone! As you may know, Chinese New Year is a time for young and old alike to stuff their faces, enjoy some family time, give or take some ang paos (red packets) and more importantly… buy new stuff!It’s times like these that make you glad that you’ve gotten yourself that credit or debit card that DBS offered you. There’s no better way to maximise that now than with our app of the week, DBS Shopper and Indulge. ...

Windows Phone 7.8 SDK Released

On the 22nd of January, the Windows Phone 7.8 SDK was released. The SDK update adds Windows Phone 7.8 emulator images, and adds Live Tile options for Windows Phone 7.8. Your app’s primary tile can have a customized small tile, support wide tiles, and also take advantage of the Flip tile template. Secondary tiles can be enabled to take advantage of all three of the new tile templates (Flip, Iconic, and Cycle). These new tile templates will allow Windows Phone 7.8 applications to look as beautiful as those on Windows Phone 8, therefore bridging the gap in terms of Start Screen experience. This can be tested on the new emulator images, which will enable one to see how their Windows Phone 7 app works on the new Start Screen, especially with the new ability to make the app’s tile smaller. With Windows Phone 7.8 about to roll out for older devices, and more and more devices coming out with Windows Phone 7.8, it is important to refresh your app to be ready for users who would no doubt love a great Start Screen experience, which could very well be the difference between pinning your app to the Start Screen and not. You can get the Windows Phone 7.8 SDK Update here. If you are having to maintain a WP7 and WP8 version of your app, it might be difficult to have different coding for the Start Screen. Fortunately, Rudy Huyn, creator of the famous Wikipedia and 9Gag apps on Windows Phone, has created a solution. Mangopollo introduces classes and launches that mimic WP8 functionality on WP7, therefore having no need to have different coding between versions. You can check out the project on CodePlex here.

Modern.IE: Testing made easier in Internet Explorer

Sick and tired of testing your web apps on multiple versions of Internet Explorer? Modern.IE is here to save the day! Modern.IE is a new resource for web developers that offers tools to help optimize their sites for modern browsers like IE10. A new code detection wizard to detect common coding issues Developers start by entering a webpage URL that they want to test: In a few seconds, modern.IE reports the webpage results in the below three categories, and includes recommendations on how to update the site: ...

Imagine Cup 2013 Singapore Round 1 Result

Congratulations to the team who made it into Round 2! Your epic journey starts now! Team Name School GMINI Republic Polytechnic DICE - Dissemination of Information through Community Engagement Nanyang Polytechnic HalvedSense Temasek Polytechnic HeartGuru Nanyang Technological University i-eyescan Temasek Polytechnic Education Delivery, Entrée Singapore Polytechnic Perceptive Emotive Cognitive Therapy System Nanyang Polytechnic Application for Phonological and Phonemic Awareness (APPA) Temasek Polytechnic Ground TechBreaker(Liveliness), location based Singapore University of Technology & Design ...

January 30, 2013 · 1 min ·  Yizhe

Automate SCOM 2012 SP1 Prerequisites Installation with PowerShell

System Center 2012 SP1 is now available for public download. I am actually refreshing few demo labs I have. System Center Operation Manager is one those components in System Center actually has quite few prerequisites. Configuring these prerequisites can be frustrating, especially if you are doing it for the first time. There is a way to actually simply this by using PowerShell, which is pretty much the coolest tool for efficiency. The real credit of this goes to Ke****vin Greene, a system center MVP, who posted a details blog post on this. Here are the two scripts that I often use for Combined Management server deployment of SCOM2012 SP1. Windows Server 2008 - Combined Management Server, Operations Console and Web Console Roles PreReq Script #This section will install all the Windows Server 2008 Roles and Feature Prereqs for the Web Console Role# import-module servermanager Add-WindowsFeature NET-Framework-Core,Web-Static-Content,Web-Default-Doc,Web-Dir-Browsing,Web-Http-Errors,Web-Http-Logging,Web-Request-Monitor,Web-Filtering,Web-Stat-Compression,AS-Web-Support,Web-Metabase,Web-Asp-Net,Web-Windows-Auth,AS-HTTP-Activation –restart #This section will download the Report Viewer Distributable Prereq for the SCOM 2012 SP1 Operations Console role on Windows Server 2008 to a folder on the C:\ drive called SCOM2012SP1Prereqs and will then install it automatically # $dwnld = “C:\SCOM2012SP1Prereqs” if (!(Test-Path -path $dwnld)) { New-Item $dwnld -type directory } $object = New-Object Net.WebClient $RPTurl = ‘http://download.microsoft.com/download/E/A/1/EA1BF9E8-D164-4354-8959-F96843DD8F46/ReportViewer.exe' $object.DownloadFile($RPTurl, “$dwnld\ReportViewer.exe”) Start-Process -FilePath “$dwnld\ReportViewer.exe” -ArgumentList /q -Wait #This section will download the .NET Framework 4.0 Redistributable Prereq for Windows Server 2008 to a folder on the C:\ drive called SCOM2012SP1Prereqs and will then install it automatically# $dwnld = “C:\SCOM2012SP1Prereqs” if (!(Test-Path -path $dwnld)) { New-Item $dwnld -type directory } $object = New-Object Net.WebClient $RPTurl = ‘http://download.microsoft.com/download/9/5/A/95A9616B-7A37-4AF6-BC36-D6EA96C8DAAE/dotNetFx40_Full_x86_x64.exe’ $object.DownloadFile($RPTurl, “$dwnld\dotNetFx40_Full_x86_x64.exe”) Start-Process -FilePath “$dwnld\dotNetFx40_Full_x86_x64.exe” -ArgumentList /q -Wait #This section will enable the ISAPI and CGI extensions for IIS and .NET 4.0 once the .NET 4.0 redistributable has been installed# c:\windows\system32\inetsrv\appcmd set config /section:isapiCgiRestriction /[path=`‘C:\Windows\Microsoft.NET\Framework64\v4.0.30319\aspnet_isapi.dll`’].allowed:True Click here to download this PowerShell script as a .PS1 file ...