This week, Microsoft began pushing through its long-awaited “NoDo” update for Windows Phone 7, although device owners could have a longer wait before receiving theirs.
The “NoDo” update includes cut-and-paste and improvements to Messaging, Wi-Fi and Outlook. It tweaks the “stability of switching between camera and video modes,” according to information posted on Microsoft’s Windows Phone website, and the experience of syncing Facebook accounts.
The big question is when it’ll arrive on peoples’ smartphones, something Microsoft tried to answer this week with a pair of charts detailing the update status for customers in both the United States and around the world.
Each chart breaks down the update path into three categories:
Microsoft’s February update – designed to help with future updates – stalled a small number of users’ smartphones and led to roughly two days worth of drama on Microsoft’s online help forums. In the wake of that, Microsoft seemed more cautious in how it proceeded with “NoDo,” even pushing the release date back from the first two weeks of March to the latter half of the month.
“After careful consultation with the team and our many partners, we’ve decided to briefly hold the March update in order to ensure the update process meets our standards and that of our customers,” a Microsoft spokesperson wrote in an e-mail to eWEEK on 10 March. “As a result, we will plan to begin delivering the update in the latter half of March.”
Meanwhile, some users associate the update issue with Microsoft having trouble attracting competent employees. “Why are they moving so slowly? I’m ashamed to be an early adopter, having been fooled into thinking Microsoft was serious about mobile this time,” said one user
“Copy/Paste will be the one and only feature Microsoft achieved since WP7 went RTM in Aug 2010, until Mango in 2012. Uncompetitive,” said another.
While that’s not necessarily a representative sample of Windows Phone 7 users, it suggests Microsoft could be on the verge of a perception issue with its newest smartphone platform. Rarely have its rivals encountered such highly publicised problems with updates, although a subset of Android users regularly complain of how their carriers are slow to upgrade their devices to the latest version of Google’s operating system.
If different devices on different carriers push through different software updates at different times, it undermines the perception that Microsoft – and not the carriers and manufacturers – is ultimately the final arbiter of its own software’s roadmap.
That Microsoft executives have spent months pillorying Android for its own fragmentation issues is an irony that will surely be lost on nobody if the Windows Phone 7 family becomes disjointed.
And a problem at this early stage – or the perception of a problem – could have major repercussions for Microsoft as it attempts to claw away market share from those well-entrenched rivals.
Windows Phone 7’s task in its first few quarters of release was to build political capital with consumers and businesses, something achievable largely through pitch-perfect execution.
“To bring the platform rapidly to a level of parity with other major mobile platforms, Microsoft will need to deliver several key features in the first quarter of 2011,” IDC analyst Al Hilwa wrote in a December 2010 research note.
“Down the road, Microsoft’s success will be measured by the speed at which it can broaden its country, carrier and device portfolios, and the pace of delivery of new capabilities in its software.”
For the second half of 2011, Microsoft has scheduled updates for multitasking, Twitter integration, and other vital features. Much depends on the company executing these in a consistent manner.
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