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My Windows Phone 7

Sid's Windows Phone 7

I’ve used Windows Mobile phones ever since we formed Moose Logic v2. My first one was a rather clunky (by today’s standards) Pocket PC version. Then I moved to Windows Mobile 5.x. When that phone finally died, I switched to an AT&T Tilt running Windows Mobile 6.0. Then, a year or so ago, I got my wife a Tilt 2 with WinMobile 6.5, and started suffering a little bit of device envy. I was eligible for an upgrade, and I thought about going to the Tilt 2, but I knew that Windows Phone 7 was coming, so I held off.

Last fall, I actually went as far as jailbreaking my Tilt, and installing a third-party ROM that would let me run 6.5. It wasn’t bad – in fact it was better than 6.0 – but 6.5 was designed for a screen a little bit bigger than I had on my Tilt, so some things were a little clunky.

Several of my colleagues here at the Moose have gone down the iPhone road – but I’m used to having a slide-out keyboard, and I didn’t want to give that up…plus there were a few things I was reading about WinPhone7 that I found really attractive. So I waited until the LG model, with its slide-out keyboard, was available.

I’ve had my LG for a couple of months now, and I’ve got to say that I really like it. The negative things I’ve read about WinPhone7 don’t bother me at all. No slot for an SD expansion card? Come on! It’s got 16 Gb of flash built in – which is 8 times as much as I had before. I don’t spend time downloading movies to watch on my phone, so I doubt very seriously whether I’m going to run out of memory before the phone reaches the end of its useful life. No cut/paste from the apps? Yawn. How often do you really need to use that in the real world? If you consider that a must-have, so be it…but I don’t know that I’ve ever used it, and don’t miss having it.

The app store isn’t as big as Apple’s, but it’s big enough that I was able to find everything that I needed. The only app that I’d really like to see that isn’t available yet is a Citrix Receiver app – and that’s not Microsoft’s fault (I don’t think…).

So what, you may ask, do I like so much about it?

First, I found the interface to be intuitive and easy to learn.

Home Screen and App List

The tiles on the home screen are large and easy to use. Flick to the left, and you can view the list of all of the apps on the phone. Any app in that list can be pinned as a tile on the home screen if you wish, and the tiles can be re-ordered at will.

Notice the two Outlook instances circled in the picture? That’s one of the things I really like about the phone – it can synchronize with more than one Exchange Server. I run a Windows 2003 Small Business Server at home, at the heart of my home network, and it hosts my personal email domain. We run Exchange 2010 here in Moose Land. My phone syncs with both accounts, yet allows me to access them individually, so I can easily choose which account I’m sending from when I compose a message. You can’t see it in the picture, but there’s a tile for my gmail account, too – I just have to scroll down a bit to get to it.

Social media is built in, and well integrated. That tile in the upper right of the home screen is the “People” tile, and takes me to a screen where I can easily switch between my contact list and my Facebook feed. The contact list is integrated – it pulls from both of my Outlook accounts and my Facebook account, and for contacts who are also Facebook friends, it automatically pulls their Facebook profile pic and associates it with their contact record.

I’ve found the GPS to be more sensitive and reliable than the GPS in my old Tilt. It seems to have no problem at all syncing up with satellites in locations where the Tilt would take minutes on end, and sometimes fail with the annoying “move to another location and try again” message. I’m looking forward to trying it out this summer on backcountry hikes, using the “Outdoor Trekker” app that I found. This app will display your actual latitude and longitude, allow you to set waypoints that it can then help you find your way back to, and keep track of your total mileage covered and both your total elapsed time and the time you spent actually moving. If it can see enough satellites, it will even keep track of your altitude, which will be really useful when I’m gasping for breath and wondering how much higher I have to go before I finally get to the top of Mt. Dickerman (which is definitely on the hiking schedule for this summer).

Since there was a free Kindle reader app available, I tried it out. It was very readable, and easy to use – and being the insatiable reader that I am, I expect that I’ll use that app a lot.

Don’t get me wrong – if the iPhone had a slide-out keyboard option, I would have been sorely tempted to join my colleagues on the iPhone bandwagon. I also know several people who love their Android phones (mostly very technical people who love the myriad ways you can customize it). I also know some not-quite-so-technical business people who get frustrated because it takes so many steps on their Android to do something that should be way easier to do, and because of issues like having a completely separate contact database for the “Nitro” Exchange sync client.

I guess I’m just a Windows Phone guy at heart. My LG does everything I need it to do, and does it very well. I’d really like to see a Citrix Receiver for it, but let’s face it, actually accessing a remote desktop or application on a tiny smart phone screen is not something anyone is going to want to spend a lot of time doing.

I welcome your comments and questions…just be nice to one another, please.

I recently discovered a video on “Citrix TV” that does as good a job as I’ve ever seen in presenting the big picture of desktop and application virtualization using XenApp and XenDesktop (which, as we’ve said before, includes XenApp now). The entire video is just over 17 minutes long, which is longer than most videos we’ve posted here (I prefer to keep them under 5 minutes or so), but in that 17 minutes, you’re going to see:

  • How easy it is for a user to install the Citrix Receiver
  • Self-service application delivery
  • Smooth roaming (from a PC to a MacBook)
  • Application streaming for off-line use
  • A XenDesktop virtual desktop following the user from an HP Thin Client…
    • …to an iPad…
    • …as the iPad switches to 3G operation aboard a commuter train…
    • …to a Mac in the home office…
    • …to a Windows multi-touch PC in the kitchen…
    • …to an iPhone on the golf course.
  • And a demo of XenClient to wrap things up.

I remember, a few years ago, sitting through the keynote address at a Citrix conference and watching a similar video on where the technology was headed. But this isn’t smoke and mirrors, and it isn’t a presentation of some future, yet-to-be-released technology. All of this functionality is available now, and it’s all included in a single license model. The future is here. Now.

I think you’ll find that it’s 17 minutes that are well-spent:

I just read an interesting blog post over on ZDnet, entitled The Changing Face of IT: Five Trends to Watch. As I read through the article, I was struck by how Citrix solutions can enable IT organizations to deal with these trends. Consider:

  1. The consumerization of IT – “Workers are bringing their own laptops and smartphones into the office and connecting them to corporate systems. More people than ever are telecommuting or working from home for a day or two a week. And, the number of Web-based tools has increased dramatically…”

    Yep. In fact many companies are instituting “BYOPC” (Bring Your Own PC) policies, because in the long run it can be less expensive to give employees a fixed allowance and allow them to buy whatever they want than it is to issue – and maintain – a company-owned laptop. Citrix themselves instituted this policy a few years ago.

    If you’re using XenApp or XenDesktop to provide access to your key line-of-business applications, you don’t care what the endpoint is. If your employee prefers a MacBook, fine. Want to use an iPad? No problem. Connecting in from your home PC because your kids are sick? We’ve got that covered, too. Just install the Citrix Receiver and you’re good to go.

  2. The borderless network – “…today’s IT security model is more about risk management than network protection. Companies have to identify their most important data and then make sure it’s protected no matter who’s accessing it and from wherever and whatever device they’re accessing it from.”

    Citrix likes to say that their products are “Secure by Design,” meaning that security is built into them from the ground up. First of all, when you’re accessing your virtual desktop remotely, or running a published application from a XenApp server, the data never leaves the data center. The remote endpoint (whatever it is) is just sending keystrokes and mouse movements to the data center and getting back pixel updates. On top of that, we can encrypt that data connection using the Citrix Access Gateway.

    Citrix also gives you very granular control over whether files can be copied between client and server, and/or whether print jobs can be directed to a client-attached printer. In fact, using Advanced Access Control policies, those controls can be context-sensitive, i.e., you might allow files to be copied to the client device if the client device is a company-owned laptop, but not if it is a home PC; or you might allow client-attached printing if the client is connecting from a branch office, but not if the same user, using the same client device, is connecting from home, or from a hotel.

  3. The cloudy data center – Let me go on record as saying that the most cloudy thing about the cloud is trying to understand what someone means when they say the word. Not unlike the word “portal” a few years ago, the first question that usually needs to be asked in any discussion about cloud computing is: “When you say ‘cloud,’ what exactly do you mean?”

    But the point to remember is that when you’re delivering applications via Citrix, users don’t know and don’t care where the data center is or where the applications are being executed. It doesn’t matter. Want to move your entire infrastructure to a co-lo? Fine. Want to have multiple data centers with automatic failover from one to the other? We can do that, too. By some definitions of the term, we’ve been building “private clouds” since the release of WinFrame back in the mid-90s.

  4. The state of outsourcing – “Outsourcing is thriving in many different forms, and it’s reasonable to expect that it will accelerate.”

    We made the point above that users don’t know and don’t care where the data center is. The fact is, for about 90% of what they need to do, neither do the administrators. Virtualization in general, and Citrix products in particular, make it very easy to administer, troubleshoot, and repair issues remotely. We built the entire Evans Fruit Company infrastructure without ever having our engineer set foot on site. In fact, actually dispatching an engineer to a customer location is now the exception rather than the rule.

  5. The mobilization paradigm – “While PCs still make sense on the desks of knowledge workers, for all of these other workers who regularly move around as part of their daily job, the stationary PC often changes the natural flow of their routine because they have to stop at a system to enter data or complete a task. That’s about to change. Mobile computers in the form of smartphones and touchscreen tablets (like the iPad) have taken a big leap forward in the past four years. They are instant-on, easy to learn because of the touchscreen, and they have a whole new ecosystem of applications designed for the touch experience…”

    Very true…but these same users are going to still need to access your traditional line-of-business applications, which will not be transformed overnight into touchscreen enabled apps. It is axiomatic that, in IT, nothing ever actually goes away – instead, new technology just gets layered over the top of old technology…which is why you’ll still find applications running on big mainframes in a lot of enterprises. So how do you manage that transition?

    Once again, Citrix comes through. There’s a Citrix Receiver for the iPhone, one for the iPad, one for Windows Mobile phones, one for the Android, and just a couple of months ago, Citrix released a version of the Receiver for BlackBerry devices. And, of course, Receivers for Windows, Mac, and Linux PCs have long been available. I don’t know of any other product or technology that offers this kind of flexibility in delivering applications to users regardless of location, connection, or endpoint device.

  6. So a big “Thank you!” to Jason Hiner for an excellent post. You’ve just described, in a nutshell, why Moose Logic is still excited to be a Citrix partner after all these years. Just remember, as you work to adapt to all of these trends that are indeed changing the IT landscape, we’ve got your back.

I read an interesting post over on ZDnet today that cites a Forrester Research report that predicts that tablets will begin to outsell netbooks in 2012. by 2014, they predict, more people will be using tablets than netbooks, and by 2015, tablets will constitute 23% of PC unit sales.

We can probably thank the iPad for most of the buzz that’s building around the tablet format lately, although tablets have been around for several years now. I’m on my second Motion Computing tablet, and had one of the original Compaq tablets before that, so I’ve used a tablet as my primary business computing device for the last seven or eight years, and I love them…although the way I use them has changed over the years.

When I first started using the tablet format, I thought it was very cool to carry it into a client meeting, fire up OneNote, and use the stylus to take my meeting notes. Over time, though, the “coolness” factor has worn off, and I’ve gone back to using pen and paper – mostly because I don’t have to wait for my pen and paper to boot up, and I never have to worry about battery life.

These days, I love it just for its portability. I’ve got a docking station in my office, and one at home, with external monitors in the two locations. It’s a snap moving back and forth between the two locations, and Win7 does a beautiful job of remembering the monitor settings. For several complicated reasons, the docking station is to the right of my external monitor in my office, and to the left of my monitor at home. I, of course, want to spread my desktop across both the external monitor and the tablet screen, and I also want, in both cases, to have the external monitor set as my primary monitor (because it’s bigger). When I was running Vista, I always had to open the display settings and drag the monitors back and forth when I moved between the two locations – Windows 7 always remembers.

When I travel, I snap on the removable keyboard, fire the tablet up in my hotel room, and just keep it there for the duration of my stay. I no longer need it for email when I’m out and about, because I have my AT&T Tilt (Windows Mobile) phone, and my Celio “REDFLY,” which connects to my Windows Mobile phone via bluetooth, for those times when I need a larger screen and/or keyboard to make reading and replying to email a bit easier.

Side note: Battery life is better as well. With a full charge, I can use my REDFLY and Windows Mobile phone to take notes all day in a training class using the version of Word that came with my phone. My tablet battery won’t last that long. The REDFLY has a substantial battery, plus it extends my phone’s run-time because it doesn’t have to power the phone’s display screen when I’m using the REDFLY. In fact, I can even hook it to the REDFLY with a USB cable instead of using bluetooth, and recharge it from the REDFLY…but I digress.

Personally, I’m intrigued by the iPad, and think it would make a great plaything, but don’t see enough business value compared to my Motion Tablet to make it a compelling purchase. I’m more interested in getting one just so I can demonstrate the Citrix Receiver for iPad to clients.

How about you? Have you ever used a tablet? Do you have one now? Is it an iPad? Have you ever used (or are you now using) one as your primary computing device? Do you have plans to acquire one and/or to support them on your business network? Inquiring minds want to know.