Microsoft’s Chromium Edge browser is ready for beta testing

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Meet Cortana, Microsoft’s answer to Siri and Google Now


In front of 5,000 developers earlier today, Microsoft's Joe Belfiore announced Windows Phone 8.1 and Windows 8.1. But the main gist of Belfiore's talk is Cortana, Microsoft's answer to Apple's Siri...

Microsoft announces Windows Phone 8.1 with Cortana


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Microsoft Confirms Windows Phone 8.1 and Cortana PA

Windows Mobile 8.1 Cortana

Even though a bit late to the game, Microsoft launched it’s own mobile personal assistant to compete against Google Now and Apple’s Siri.

It looks like Microsoft finally decided to have some consistency in numbering its operating systems for desktop and mobile. It might take a few months till the new version of Windows Phone hits the market, but at least it has been officially announced by the Redmond giant, and it will be available before Windows 9 comes to desktops.

Cortana, the main selling point of WP 8.1, will be launched in beta, and since it’s getting released 3 years after Apple’s Siri and two years after Google Now, Microsoft’s mobile personal assistant will have to play catch up for a while. Or maybe Microsoft has just been watching from the shadows all this time, learning the things that made the other personal assistants successful and the aspects that draw them back.

Joe Belfiore, corporate VP of Microsoft’s OS group, called Cortana “first truly personal digital assistant who learns about me and the people that matter to me most.” Unlike Apple and Google’s personal assistants, Cortana can also be contacted via text, so it’s not everything about voice commands.

In the demonstrations made at Microsoft’s Build 2014 developer conference, Belfiore demonstrated how Cortana can easily do the same things a real personal assistant does in terms of managing the calendar and relationships. In one particular demo, Belfiore asked Cortana to set an appointment at a specific time, and Microsoft’s personal assistant reminded him that he has another task scheduled at the same time. Finding schedule conflicts and making people aware of them is certainly something that sets Cortana apart from its counterparts.

Remember the BSOD (Blue Screen of Death) that showed up on Windows 98 during an official Microsoft demonstration? Well, Cortana is not without bugs, and a couple of them became apparent during Belfiore’s demonstration. That’s exactly why he reminded people that “We’re launching Cortana as a beta while we train the service on the back end, with lots of voice utterances to improve speech recognition.”

Patrick Moorhead, an analyst at Moor Insight & Strategy, is a bit skeptical about Cortana being able to boost WP sales, as he stated about Microsoft’s mobile personal assistant that it “is impressive but so was Siri and Google Now when it was demoed on stage, so I’m skeptical that it can make a different in Windows Phone sales.”

It remains to be seen if Moorhead is right or not, but even with Cortana, Microsoft will have a hard time trying to dethrone Google and Apple.

Be social! Follow Walyou on Facebook and Twitter, and read more related stories about Microsoft bringing Android apps to Windows and Windows Phone, and Halo’s Cortana, Microsoft’s answer to Siri.

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Microsoft’s Joe Belfiore pokes fun at iPhone and Android, provides deep dive of Windows Phone 8 in new video

Microsoft's Joe Belfiore pokes fun of iPhone and Android, provides deep dive of Windows Phone 8 in new video

Microsoft's Joe Belfiore -- also known as the manager for the entire Windows Phone program -- spent a fair amount of time on stage in California today detailing the highs of Windows Phone 8. Clearly, that wasn't enough. The man himself has thrown out a near-20 minute video detailing the nooks and crannies of Microsoft's latest mobile operating system, no doubt in hopes of convincing tired users of Android and iPhone to consider something more Metrorrific.

Outside of tightly integrated Skype, beautifully arranged live tiles, outstanding new hardware, support for LTE, a guest access mode by the name of Kid's Corner and refreshed photo sharing, WP8 offers a wealth of cloud services to those who will also be upgrading to Windows 8 on their PCs. Heck, the outfit's Mac software is even going to make it possible port your iTunes libraries and playlists over to the Music hub in Windows Phone 8. It wouldn't be an all-out marketing assault without a bit of verbal assault, though, and it doesn't take Joe long to get there:

"It's the only phone that has live tiles, for the people you care about and the apps that you use all the time. It's a different story than iOS and Android. The iOS 6 homescreen is really just a sea of static icons. It's not people; it's not live data. Of course, after five years, they have added one more row of icons! Android homescreens typically present a complex maze of icons, widgets, and settings. But, they look a lot like iPhones, too. If you put a bunch of them together on a table, it'd be hard to tell your own from the crowd. We felt there was a better way. Windows Phone 8 -- it looks different, and that's because we didn't make WP8 for all of us, we made it for each of us."

Catch the full clip after the break.

Continue reading Microsoft's Joe Belfiore pokes fun at iPhone and Android, provides deep dive of Windows Phone 8 in new video

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Microsoft's Joe Belfiore pokes fun at iPhone and Android, provides deep dive of Windows Phone 8 in new video originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 29 Oct 2012 15:03:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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