Posted on 10/15/2010 7:52:17 AM PDT by SmokingJoe
Microsofts music, Microsoft's GPS, Microsoft's navigation, Microsoft's phone software -- and only Microsoft's -- gets to do this. The issue is what third-party software is allowed to do. You yourself said all third-party software gets paused. The iPhone allows certain necessary functions to continue.
Again, you show you don’t understand. Twitter - the Twitter-created program - multitasks in the background. Microsoft will check to make sure it’s stable and not a CPU hog, then allow that program to multitask.
Flat out - you’re wrong. Quit spreading FUD.
You yourself, and your source, said apps get paused. They also can receive notifications and be woken up, like Twitter. That is not the same as multitasking, which means actually running in the background, like apps can do in Android, and can now do to some extent on the iPhone.
Audio at the bottom here
[MS rep] "...music will play in the background, video..."
[interviewer] "Third party music services?"
[MS Rep] "No, Zune music service..."
[interviewer] "So only first party."
[MS Rep] "Right."
Only Microsoft apps get to run in the background. Everything else gets paused and has to rely on notifications. Also,
We do not allow third-party applications running on the phone to execute in the background, said Charlie Kindel, manager of Microsofts Windows Phone App Platform and Developer Experience program, in a phone interview with Wired.com. Were poised to support it eventually, but in order to support great battery life and great end-user experience, were focusing on the integrated experiences first.No FUD, the exact capabilities of WP7, which are behind the competition out of the gate.
I for one welcome our Microsoft overlords.
Hey, if you want to redefine terms like multitasking to mean different things on different platforms, go ahead. The fact remains: any “multitasking” you can do on the iPhone, you can do on WP7. Your protestations to the contrary notwithstanding.
I’m done, you’re just being argumentative for argument’s sake. If you want to actually LEARN, let’s open up the WP7 SDK and we can start talking. Otherwise, go away...
I have never changed definitions. Right here I said no free multitasking like Android, which means Android fans will have a problem with it. On another thread I said it's behind the iPhone's more managed multitasking, and it is (as in not allowing it at all for third-party software). You are the one who, to my amazement, compared WP7 "multitasking" to cooperative multitasking, showing a complete lack of understanding of the different models of multitasking.
The fact remains: any multitasking you can do on the iPhone, you can do on WP7.
Absolutely not. I've given you the words straight from Microsoft sources. Only Microsoft apps get to multitask, period. That is not true for Android or iOS.
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