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Originally Posted by InGearX
- By far not all software titles are compatible with Windows Mobile 5
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For now, yes, but that shouldn't be a major factor stopping you from upgrading. Almost all major third-party applications now have been updated to support Windows Mobile 5.0.
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Originally Posted by InGearX
- Windows Mobile 5 needs much RAM...
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I'm not sure where you heard this from, but it doesn't. Windows Mobile 5.0 changes the memory management structure by using a feature called Persistent Storage. If anything, you should have more RAM available for program execution with Windows Mobile 5.0 than you will with Windows Mobile 2003/2003SE. Bear in mind that ROM is the default storage place for Windows Mobile 5.0 devices, so there isn't any sharing of memory for program execution and storage. In theory, you should have all of the X50v's 64MB of RAM to use for execution, as opposed to the ~32MB you'd have on Windows Mobile 2003SE, considering a 50:50 memory distribution between program execution and storage.
If you're comparing memory consumption between the two versions of the operating system, the differences are negligible.
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Originally Posted by InGearX
- No real out of the box advantages - rather a good core for software development...
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So you might not appreciate the updated and new out-of-the-box applications such as PowerPoint Mobile, an improved Outlook Mobile, etc., but you might appreciate the new ground that developers can use to create more advanced programs. And it's not just the developers that benefit, but it's the consumers as well since you're the market at which these programs are directed at.
For example, with Windows Mobile 5.0, we now see Direct3D Mobile support. This will allow richer multimedia content to be delivered on your device - something which is otherwise difficult to accomplish on previous versions of Windows Mobile. At the end of the day, developers benefit and consumers benefit. My two cents...