Windows 8 phone

Edgars
Edgars Member Posts: 13
edited November 21 in English Forum

Hello, i want to ask people who use Logos on Windows 8 phone.

Do you need internet connection to use logos? I know my android doesn't need internet connection to open it and most books i can download there. 

Also how is the software?

Thanks for answer! 

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Comments

  • Graham Criddle
    Graham Criddle Member, MVP Posts: 32,427 ✭✭✭

    Hi Edgars

    Currently there is no Logos app for the Windows phone platform

    Graham

  • Dan Francis
    Dan Francis Member Posts: 5,335 ✭✭✭

    I would not likely see one anytime soon since the Windows phone market share is falling. The whole product may well go the way of the Zune.

    -Dan

  • Edgars
    Edgars Member Posts: 13

    Ok, then i will not buy the Windows phone. Android is still better :D

  • Dan Francis
    Dan Francis Member Posts: 5,335 ✭✭✭

    Whether it is better or not Android has the market share. I prefer Apple best and have others i know who left android for iOS too.. Even if W8 was better, it's not catching on and likely will not last. Microsoft believes their name is enough, when it certainly isn't.

    -Dan

  • Genghis
    Genghis Member Posts: 232 ✭✭

    Even if W8 was better, it's not catching on and likely will not last. Microsoft believes their name is enough, when it certainly isn't.

    I don't think they think that way at all.  MS knows they are coming from behind and have made some major strategic mistakes like sticking with Windows Mobile for too long.  Maybe they thought that the Windows desktop interface would be so familiar to users that they would demand it on their phones too.  Probably some did, but most didn't.  Wrong bet. 

    IMO, it's more a problem with poor organisational dynamics, marketing and timing.

    1. Product design was good followed by lots of positive reviews.  Elements of its design language have been followed by both iOS and Android. 
    2. Lots of exclusive telco deals meant that many handsets were not available to users.  I wonder if a telco independent marketing strategy would have worked.  AFAIK, the trouble is every telco has to "approve" a handset before it can be used on their network and if you're not in their good books you can be sent to the back of the queue.
    3. When WP7 was first launched, MS worked with various product teams that almost seemed to work independently from and competitively with each other.  Thus WP7 was based on a different foundation from that of the rest of the MS family of products.  Changing that meant creating WP8 and its incompatibility with the previous version.  MS should have softened the blow with something like a discount voucher for anyone who traded in their WP7 handset.  If there's anything that ran against MS' usual ethos, it was this lack of loyalty to its cohort of early adopters.  On Windows, MS has strived to maintain backwards compatibility with previous versions of its OS for this reason.
    4. Acquiring Nokia meant a stutter in the flow of new handsets for almost six months to a year, hence the fall in market share as consumers thrive on continual and fast paced progress.  The release dates between flagship phones 920 (Nov 2012)-->930 (Jul 2014) of 20 months is way too long. 
    5. The advertising campaigns are awful.  They don't show points of difference.  They don't explain why Windows Phone is better.  Both Samsung and Apple seem to outspend MS on advertising.

    Anyway, MS have shown repeatedly that if they can hang in there and constantly refine their product, they can reach parity if not ascendancy in a product category.  Interesting examples, include DOS, Excel, Word, PowerPoint, XBox, and SharePoint.  The SmartPhone category and its relation to everyday computing is just too strategically important a category to pass up, so I think MS has no choice, but to keep soldiering on. 

    In the meantime, I'm enjoying the use of my Windows Phone but sadly without a Logos app.  I tried using Biblia which does give access to my library but network latency makes it painful to use. 

  • Genghis
    Genghis Member Posts: 232 ✭✭

    Do you need internet connection to use logos?

    You can gain access to your entire library via Biblia.com, Logos' online option.  Currently there is no offline mode with Biblia.  As others have said, there's no Windows Phone app. 

    We have WiFi in our church auditorium so Biblia is an option for me.  Biblia is OK but there is quite a pause between pages being updated, which makes it tedious to use.  This could be due to a slow site, or a slow network or your query coinciding with high traffic volumes on the Internet.