Windows Phone 8 will move from its current Windows CE kernel to the same  Windows NT core that Microsoft employs on the desktop, according to two separate  reports. The revamped smartphone operating system will reportedly gain four  screen resolutions, microSD support, NFC (near field communication), and more --  but will apparently still run apps written for Windows Phone 7.
Windows Phone 8 will support multicore processors and native BitLocker  encryption, and integrate in many ways with the upcoming Windows 8.
Those are just a few of the features mentioned in a Pocketnow.com report Feb. 2,  many of which were subsequently confirmed by Paul Thurrott in a same-day posting  on his Supersite for Windows. Pocketnow claimed its information came from a  Microsoft-produced video meant for Nokia executives and hosted by Windows Phone  manager Joe Belfiore.
Microsoft's Joe Belfiore, said to have provided Windows Phone 8 details
Source: Pocketnow.com
Pocketnow didn't post the video, though it did offer the still image reproduced  above to bolster its story. Author Evan Blass paraphrases Belfiore as saying  that Windows Phone 8 will "use many of the same components of Windows 8" and  that areas of heavy overlap include "kernel, networking stacks, security and  multimedia support." Developers will apparently have the ability to reuse  massive chunks of code when "porting an app from desktop to phone."
 
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In his own posting, Thurrott suggested that Windows Phone 8 "will be based on  the Windows 8 kernel and not on Windows CE as are current versions."  Nonetheless, applications developed for Windows Phone Mango (the current  version) will apparently continue to play well on the upgraded platform.
According to both sources, Windows Phone 8 will include the same 128-bit,  full-disk BitLocker encryption that currently runs on Windows -- the better to  appeal to businesses possibly looking for an alternative platform to Research In  Motion's BlackBerry, Apple's iOS or Google Android. A "Data Smart" feature will  give WiFi hotspots priority over using the smartphone's cellular connection, in  turn reducing data usage.
Thurott noted a Skype application, SkyDrive integration, secure payments via  near-field communication (NFC), camera improvements and Internet Explorer 10  Mobile as other additions.
Will it help?
Microsoft has launched a renewed push for Windows Phone, centered on the Mango  software update and new devices from Nokia and other manufacturers. As a  platform, it has so far struggled for adoption in the broader smartphone  marketplace, trailing Google, Apple and RIM.
Data from research firm Nielsen suggests that Microsoft owned 7.3 percent of the  U.S. smartphone market in the third quarter of 2011, down from nine percent  earlier in the year; much of that decline was due to users abandoning the  antiquated Windows Mobile platform, something that Microsoft executives say they  anticipated.
While Microsoft regularly declines to provide Windows Phone sales figures, CEO  Steve Ballmer described the platform's market share as "very small" during a  July 11 keynote speech at the company's Worldwide Partner Conference. Could  Windows Phone 8's features help change that? 
 
 
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