Windows 7.5 review


Windows 7.5 [Mango] is the latest update for the so called windows based smart phones [which are not so smart indeed]. It’s completely transformed from the previous version. Now it looks more like an OS made for cell phones and not a compact XP.
If you are not a smart phone user but wish to feel the smartness than you can give this a try. Mango won’t put your head on fire with plenty of useless options. If you are one who finds it difficult to locate the call log of a smart phone than this is just for you. In short, a non-geek can get his hands dirty without a user’s manual.
Let’s put some flash on its unique features. Mango threads e-mail messages and text messages, so separate pieces of the same conversation wind up in a single place. So it gets a lot easier to be in touch.
Windows market place is not much flooded with apps [just 18000 to be precise] but will keep you entertained!
Bing vision is yet another impressive option. Scans barcodes of any kind, books, dvds, etc, and gets you the results with location awareness turned ON. Very impressive. Quite similar to the one in google.
Microsoft's Zune integration is one of the Windows Phone's strongest assets, and it only gets better with Mango. A new feature called Smart DJ works like Pandora and others to create a playlist from your collection based on the artist, song, or album you're currently playing. Zune Pass subscribers get another boost, since Smart DJ will also include Marketplace songs that when creating a playlist.
Xbox Live is integrated with the OS perfectly to give users a full-fledged gaming experience.
Windows flagship online storage-SkyDrive-is the most preferred online storage. So users can access data from anywhere across the globe over internet.
Is Mango a good release? As an update that brings scores of new features to Windows Phone, absolutely. The version 7.5 software update makes the OS a more powerful place to be, and enhances the many things there are to like about the platform--the bold, uncluttered visuals of the Metro UI, the dynamic live tiles, the "card" metaphor found in the hubs, the sensible camera app, and the accurate virtual keyboard.

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