Windows phone 7.5 ocr




















Thanks Nikolay. You are right. I tried to convert NeuronDotNet but among other issues, it looks like ISerializable interface is not supported in silverlight for wp.

The Overflow Blog. Podcast Making Agile work for data science. Stack Gives Back Featured on Meta. New post summary designs on greatest hits now, everywhere else eventually. Linked 3. Related 4. Hot Network Questions. Stack Overflow works best with JavaScript enabled. I'm typing quite fast though. With the Lumia , I don't have that problem. New things, the new emoticones, see by yourself picture below :.

They are not all available for texting but, on Twitter for example, they work well and it's nice to have them :. On the list of thing that has been upgraded, the Internet Explorer has been made better. With WP7 for example, accessing touch. Hopefully that's no more So I've made an html5 test to see numbers Internet Explorer was indeed improved, I have forgot to do a browser comparison and now the phone is gone but keep in mind that IE wasn't that bad on WP7 ;. Automatic upload to SkyDrive of pictures now became just useful now.

Photos are not downsized anymore exit lame pictures as they are now uploaded at their full resolution. Wonder why Microsoft didn't do that in the begining. Anyway, this is great as I always forgot to copy them from phone to laptop. There's a part I didn't like on the Lumia , the camera app: it is poor.

Only lenses and the video option are available and the setting had not much things. If there's something I'm recommanding when it comes to the camera, it's SophieLens. It's THE lens to use, I just love it. Sad WP7 doesn't have it. There's another annoying thing, a missing feature that Windows Phone is lacking since WP7: the ability to share a music.

With that app, you can share pictures and songs.. See picture below, you can see on the left, the option to share and on the right, when I tap on it, the only possibilities Windows Phone 8 is a lot better but Mango was a decent mobile OS. November 5, For me, it's the best mobile OS out there. Love it. All it lacks is dev support, but that should come if people start opening their eyes. HTC 8X. October 14, The best in its category.

We highly recommend it. September 21, September 7, September 3, Its amazing i am keeping this phone. August 16, July 19, The sexiest smartphone OS yet. June 28, June 6, May 27, Have you seen Windows 8? Or the new Xbox Dashboard? Windows Phone was the future of Microsoft in many ways, we just didn't know yet.

When it launched a year ago, it wasn't finished, by any stretch of the definition. No multitasking. No copy and paste. No threaded conversations in email. No Twitter. No lots of things. No custom ringtones, even. It's more or less a complete thing now. A real boy. Or whatever. And frankly, it's about time for another major phone platform, one that actually feels like it's in the same class as iOS. It's still Windows Phone.

Superflat and swooshy and quick and overly designed and well, very nice. Just more well-rounded. Like, you can finally have one inbox for multiple accounts and email threads are organized like real threads, the way you'd expect from a modern email client. What's different from iOS and Android, and more so in 7.

Yes, it seems kind of silly that a phone in wouldn't have Facebook and Twitter fully and thoroughly integrated, since social networking is about as integral to the modern phone experience as it gets, but it's a step beyond that. Why use Yelp? There's Local Scout. Or Fandango or Shazam or another visual search app? There's Bing, which more or less replaces all of those though Bing will point you to an app, if it thinks it's helpful.

Facebook messaging? Built-in too. Microsoft has more or less succeeded in replacing apps for the core things you do with a phone, like looking at Facebook or Twitter streams or friends' pictures, bringing them all together in the ooey, gooey center of Windows Phone.

The big thing that strikes you while you're using it, though? It doesn't feel like anything's really missing, like before. The Windows Phone interface still feels fresh and new and different and fast, and I'm kind of amazed I'm not tired of it after a year. It still feels like a preview something that's coming next, not that's already here.

Perhaps because it's missing the feeling of simple inevitability, like iOS. Live Tiles, which are starting to live up to their promise. I know at a glance if someone's mentioned me on Twitter with the new Me tile, but it's not in my face, demanding immediate attention like it would on iOS.

Which, the true Twitter integration is pretty excellent if occasionally half-baked-seeming, particularly since you can actually filter streams and contacts by social network now in the People hub. The People Hub with Groups, and messaging. It works the best of any phone's social stuff because it's altogether, not simply siloed.

Oh, and the voice-to-text feature is awesome and reasonably accurate, around 80 percent or so. I could tell the phone, "Text Kyle Wagner," dictate to it "Shut up, Wagner," tell it "send," and seconds later Wagner would know he should shut up. The thing I like most about Windows Phone, really, is that it's the only phone besides the iPhone that feels like it's got its shit together, from the interface to the core apps to the overall experience.

May 20, A gadget unicorn - Engadget. May 17, I used this for several months when I won a Windows Phone through work. The whole time I was underwhelmed, it made me envious for a real smartphone. I had decided to move to this from my BlackBerry because it had Netflix, and that's it. Every other app was a pain to use. You have two options Scroll or Tiles. The Tiles in apps work okay but when you need more info and your app is forced into the scroll style the experience fails, with the motion of your finger it often flips to the next set of info, and when you flip back it's back at the top of the info list you wanted and you scroll down again, and repeat.

With all the apps looking one of two ways the experience leaves you wanting, little menu buttons at the bottom of the screen often don't make much sense and send you flying into random screens when hit.

The whole experience feels thrown together, with apps like the Internet Explorer being just a small horizontal rectangle for the url and a large vertical rectangle for the websites, if you want to search, you have to hit a capacitive search button on the bottom, you're thrown into a different window, with small strange buttons on the bottom of the screen, and if you use it to search you're still not in a web page, you're in the dreaded scroll style setup filled with extra info you don't want or will ever use, if you mange to find and click on a link you might finally get the horrible two rectangle slow choppy iE again.

Xbox Live Mobile and Office almost seem like a joke when compared to Apples mobile counterpart, with Live having no online multiplayer and Office being anything but usable. All making for a long undesirable experience, it's this the whole time, if you want a smartphone Windows Phone 7.

May 7, Out of all the platforms i've tried, WP7 is by far the best. Having deep social networking, Office and Xbox Live support simply cannot be ignored. May 5, Windows Phone is a wonderful OS. So wonderful, in fact, that I've made some apps for it - Kyo's Rock - play it at kyosrock. Great OS. Although the lack of good free apps might be a downer but i expect Redomnd will push in the extra bucks to start covering on tha major hole April 25,



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