


So it comes as no surprise that Microsoft's mobile darling - the innovative rebirth of a weak and faltering Windows Mobile platform that was quickly falling into obscurity - would need to go through a similar process.

For the first eleven months of its existence, it's lacked many of the common features we've come to enjoy (and take for granted) on Android and iOS, but then again, even those platforms have taken their turn getting the major wrinkles ironed out. Mango rollout going smoothly, now available to half of all Windows PhonesLet's face it: Windows Phone, as we know it, has an enormous amount of potential, but it's a first-generation operating system.
