The Mozart is the phone I'm using at present. It's got lots of good features 
and some bad. In rural/poor coverage areas the battery life is terrible; but in 
good coverage areas it is fair to good in terms of battery life. The GPS in it 
seems incredibly flakey at times: last night for example it wasn't able to give 
me a position fix and was showing my last position some 20km away, whilst a 
friends Motorola Defy was working accurately within ten or so metres accuracy 
In terms of screen brightness I find the Mozart at times unreadable in direct 
sunlight. I've seen an iPhone next to my Mozart on a sunny day and the iPhone 
was readable whilst the Mozart wasn't. I believe the Defy is quite good in that 
aspect to. Of course, some of the problem may have been from the screen 
protector.
In terms of OS, WP7 is really good at reading mail and all that stuff. It's 
nice to be able to have a rough look at office documents etc... The other day I 
sent a word document attachment to a friend who didn't even realize because he 
was using droid 2.2 or there about: I just laughed.
The recent WP7 updates really did improve performance. But there's still a lot 
more to come that will make WP7 a lot more compelling. 
If you can wait some months then it's probably wise to. If not, try to lock in 
for as little time as possible; and there's new dual core phones coming out 
next month, and then no doubt more to follow. 

-----Original Message-----
From: Stephen Liedig
Sent: Tuesday, 24 May 2011 1:14 PM
To: ozDotNet
Subject: Re: [OT] Windows Phone 7 & Plans

Cheers everyone, all good information.

.net noobie, your Mozart review is interesting, all the others I have seen
have been a bit average. And the reviews on the HTC HD7 have also been
somewhat discouraging (not to mention I totally object to having to pay $17
a month just for the privilege of owning one). It seems to me that all
carriers are just pushing iphones and android devices. When you look around
at what else is on offer WP7 don't look like an attractive option. Is this a
failure on Microsoft's part not to push their marketing campaign further or
is it the carriers refusal to push it due to the popularity of iPhone? I
spoke to a rep in the Telstra store and he said that 55% of sales made last
year were for iPhones. When you have those kind of figures why would you be
interested in pushing the competition. Anyway, not going to analyse it too
much, in fear of showing my ignorance in these matters but I just find it a
bit strange.

Thanks again for all your comments.

Steve


On 24 May 2011 09:58, .net noobie <[email protected]> wrote:

> I have played with Samsung Omnia 7 and HTC Mozart 7
>
> I found the Mozart to be better, runs better, Telstra much better network
> even after the new Samsung update has been released I still think
> the Mozart runs more smoothly
>
> when i swap from the larger 4" screen to the smaller 3.8" screen, i don't
> even notice the difference in size
>
> I also think the Mozart is just a nicer designed phone, it looks nicer
>
> One advantage of the Omnia 7 is the screen in bright light
>
> I actually got Optus to test mt 3G connection because as previously
> mentioned in the threat it's not great
> I am on the Gold Coast, not a small place, but my connection switches from
> 3G to GSM all the time
> Optus actually offered me to cancel the contract due to the results of the
> test on my connection
>
> If i personally chose again I would get the Mozart, due to superior 3G
> network and the phone is just better design and also I think runs a bit
> smoother and I may still take Optus up on the offer to hand back my Omnia 7
> and get a Mozart (or some other Telstra WP7 phone) as I have really only
> used the two I mentioned
>
>
>
> On Tue, May 24, 2011 at 11:22 AM, mike smith <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>> On Tue, May 24, 2011 at 11:09 AM, David Connors <[email protected]> wrote:
>> > On Tue, May 24, 2011 at 11:07 AM, mike smith <[email protected]>
>> wrote:
>> >>
>> >> Probably get the phone and plan separately.  With Android at least,
>> >> you get far more timely upgrades if the phone maker delivers them
>> >> rather than waiting for the carrier to cripple^H modify the firmware.
>> >
>> > You still have to wait for carrier updates for Android unless you root
>> your
>> > phone and use cyanogen mods etc. My HTC Desire still has 2.2 on it and
>> > Telstra aren't releasing 2.3 until next month.
>> > Apple are the only company who has the update process right (i.e.
>> everyone
>> > in the world gets it on day one).
>>
>> Inclined to agree, but Google go close with their own models.
>> NexusOne, etc - it deployed 2.3.4 this month.  When it falls
>> apart[1](no sign so far), or I get tired of it I'll keep buying Nexus
>> series.
>>
>> http://www.mobicity.com.au/samsung-google-nexus-s.html  or its successor?
>>
>> [1] It's holding together fairly well, I've got a silicone holster
>> type cover that leaves the screen exposed, and use the clear covers on
>> that.  A minor quibble is that occasionally the touch screen goes out
>> of alignment, but a on-off (not a power recycle) fixes that.  Could be
>> the clear screen cover I guess.
>>
>>
>>
>> > --
>> > David Connors | [email protected] | www.codify.com
>> > Software Engineer
>> > Codify Pty Ltd
>> > Phone: +61 (7) 3210 6268 | Facsimile: +61 (7) 3210 6269 | Mobile: +61
>> 417
>> > 189 363
>> > V-Card: https://www.codify.com/cards/davidconnors
>> > Address Info: https://www.codify.com/contact
>> >
>> >
>>
>>
>>
>> --
>> Meski
>>
>> "Going to Starbucks for coffee is like going to prison for sex. Sure,
>> you'll get it, but it's going to be rough" - Adam Hills
>>
>
>

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