Despite a reportedly healthy level of interest from developers, Microsoft's Windows Phone 7 debut appears to have flopped with consumers, leaving developers cautious about investing in the platform.
Windows Phone 7 may not be able to run hundreds of thousands of apps like iOS or Google Android, but as the new kid on the smartphone the third party ecosystem around the platform is growing quickly.
Microsoft is considering a possible decision on allowing developers access to native code on its Windows Phone platform, which could potentially open the doors to better gaming, more variety of apps ...
The 2014 year is about to end, and so much has happened in the past several months when it comes to the software giant. The company introduced the latest Windows Phone 8.1 operating system which ...
Microsoft is completely shaking up its development platform with Windows Phone 7, which means that apps that were designed to run on earlier versions of Windows Mobile won’t work on WP7 when it’s ...
Just two months after delivering a tool to help developers port iPhone apps to Windows Phone 7, Microsoft is adding Android support to it. On June 9, Microsoft announced it is adding Android support ...
HERE’s transport database isn’t as comprehensive as Google’s (for example, businesses are occasionally placed blocks from where they really are on the map and entire bus routes are missing) but it is ...
Microsoft started accepting on Wednesday requests for access to the Windows Phone SDK 8.0 Developer Preview program, the company said in a blog post. To apply, developers can go to the Microsoft ...