Sony Ericsson unveils Windows Mobile 6.5.3 device

By Kevin McLaughlin
Feb 3, 2010 12:31 PM
Tags: mobile | windows | aspen | device | ericsson | microsoft

Sony Ericsson has launched the first Windows Mobile 6.5.3 smartphone.

Sony Ericsson on Tuesday took the wraps off Aspen, a new business-oriented smartphone that becomes the first Windows Mobile 6.5.3 mobile device to hit the marketplace.

Windows Mobile 6.5.3 is one of the shadowy leaked builds that have popped up since Windows Mobile 6.5 devices began arriving in October. Adding support for capacitive touch, multi-touch and a variety of user interface improvements that replace legacy menu and navigation elements, Windows Mobile 6.5.3 is believed to be Microsoft's attempt to improve on the lackluster 6.5 release while it readies Windows Mobile 7.

Aspen is part of Sony Ericsson's GreenHeart line of environmentally friendly smartphones, which are built from recycled plastics and use water-based paints. For this reason, the company describes Aspen as a "business phone with a conscience," although it's unclear whether the device is actually sentient and able to discern between right and wrong.

For business users, Aspen features a QWERTY keyboard and offers users the ability to "view and edit office files easily and comfortably," according to Sony Ericsson. Microsoft's MyPhone service, which remotely wipes data from devices when they're lost or stolen, is also part of the package.

Windows Mobile 6.5.3 has been hidden under the same shroud of secrecy that has obscured all of Microsoft's mobile plans in recent months. Microsoft has been dropping hints about upcoming mobile related news at Mobile World Congress later this month and at MIX10 next month, but it's anyone's guess as to whether these will involve Windows Mobile 7.

One theory gaining steam in the Microsoft channel is that the software giant will make Silverlight 4 the platform for building native applications in Windows Mobile 7 and future generations of Windows Phones. This makes sense because developers could reuse the .Net code they create for desktop applications to build applications for mobile devices and the Web.

Given the precarious position Microsoft is facing in the mobile space, the company is going to have to shake things up and come up with a new approach. Windows Mobile developers will be watching the MWC and MIX10 events to see what Microsoft has been concocting behind the scenes.

See original article on CRN.com

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Sony Ericsson unveils Windows Mobile 6.5.3 device
 

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