MWC 2015: Monday Recap for 02 March 2015

On the first official day of Mobile World Congress 2015 in Barcelona things got off to an early, very early or late start depending on where you live.

Richard Hay, Senior Content Producer

March 2, 2015

4 Min Read
MWC 2015: Monday Recap for 02 March 2015

Monday opened up with Microsoft’s annual MWC press conference to talk about mobile offerings from the Redmond company.  It was led by Stephen Elop and included demos of Windows 10 on phones, universal apps, Office apps Outlook and Excel on Windows 10, Cortana and Surface Hub. Unfortunately, there were no surprise announcements to rock everyone’s socks off.

We did learn the Lumia 640 and 640 XL, which were leaked early Sunday morning by accident, were officially the newest handsets getting ready to join the Windows Phone ecosystem. A few hours later AT&T ponied up an announcement to confirm the handsets would be carried by them in the US but no real details on their cost or availability.

We also found out that there will be another update to Windows Phone 8.1 called Update 2.  This was discovered while reading the system requirements for the freshly announced Universal Foldable Keyboard which happens to need Windows Phone 8.1 Update 2 to work properly with Windows Phones.

The big announcement for today may have been the briefing that was giving in Barcelona to developers about Microsoft’s Universal App platform

The briefing by Kevin Gallo, who has been blogging about Universal Apps and app development in the Building Apps for Windows Blog, focused on three platform goals.

Driving scale through reach across device types with mobile experience

As we built the universal app platform, we set out to ensure that all Windows developers would equally benefit from this one core. The platform enables a new class of Windows universal apps – apps that are truly written once, with one set of business logic and one UI. Apps that are delivered to one Store within one package. Apps that are able to reach every Windows 10 device the developer wants to reach. Apps that feel consistent and familiar to the customer on all devices, while also contextually appropriate to each device’s input model and screen size. The new universal app platform completes our developer platform convergence by providing you with the ability to finally create one app that can run on mobile, desktop, console, holographic, and even IoT devices.

Delivering unique and personal experiences

The universal app platform is designed to help you quickly build these new mobile experiences that are both consistent yet flexible, enabling you to deliver a unique, highly-personalized experience to delight and engage your customers across each device family you target.

These universal apps use elements such as:

- Adaptive UX for screen layout and user controls
- Natural user inputs such as touch, speech, inking, gestures and a users gaze
- Cloud-based services such as Windows Notification Services, Windows roaming data and Windows Credential Locker. With Windows 10 developers will have access to Cortana AI, OneDrive and Application Insights plus the Azure Mobile Services and Azure Notification Hub.

Maximizing investments in your app and web code

We’ve designed Windows 10 to continue to support existing Windows apps and desktop applications on the devices for which they were developed. And we’re working to make it as easy as possible for you to bring those investments forward to the new universal app platform.

For HTML developers these new enhancements in Windows 10 will help them move to full universal apps:

- The new rendering engine means no more platform specific effort to build a consistent mobile experience
- Project Spartan web browser will be updated through the Windows Store to keep it as up to date as possible
- Windows 10 makes it easy to create web apps for your sites and services

I know that devs are taking in every detail of today’s briefing but this was really just a teaser leading up to Microsoft’s BUILD conference which will be held 29 April to 01 May in San Francisco. It is at that event that we are expected to see Microsoft dive deep into these new technologies and help bring developers onboard with the universal app process.  Something tells me there is a lot of interest as this year’s BUILD conference sold out in one hour.

Stay tuned each day as we recap all the big Windows and Microsoft related announcements during MWC 2015.

 

About the Author

Richard Hay

Senior Content Producer, IT Pro Today (Informa Tech)

I served for 29 plus years in the U.S. Navy and retired as a Master Chief Petty Officer in November 2011. My work background in the Navy was telecommunications related so my hobby of computers fit well with what I did for the Navy. I consider myself a tech geek and enjoy most things in that arena.

My first website – AnotherWin95.com – came online in 1995. Back then I used GeoCities Web Hosting for it and WindowsObserver.com is the result of the work I have done on that site since 1995.

In January 2010 my community contributions were recognized by Microsoft when I received my first Most Valuable Professional (MVP) Award for the Windows Operating System. Since then I have been renewed as a Microsoft MVP each subsequent year since that initial award. I am also a member of the inaugural group of Windows Insider MVPs which began in 2016.

I previously hosted the Observed Tech PODCAST for 10 years and 317 episodes and now host a new podcast called Faith, Tech, and Space. 

I began contributing to Penton Technology websites in January 2015 and in April 2017 I was hired as the Senior Content Producer for Penton Technology which is now Informa Tech. In that role, I contribute to ITPro Today and cover operating systems, enterprise technology, and productivity.

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