The rumors about Microsoft completely cutting the compatibility cord with Windows Phone 7 had been accurate.Charlie Kindel,
Office Home And Student, Microsoft Partner Group System Manager for that Windows Telephone Application Platform & Developer Experience,
Office Pro Plus 2007, in a March 4 blog post, acknowledged that existing Windows Mobile apps won;t be able to run on Windows Phone seven devices. From his post:“To enable the fantastic user experiences you’ve seen in the Windows Phone seven Series demos so far we’ve had to break from the past.To deliver what developers expect in the developer platform we’ve had to change how telephone apps were written. One result of this is previous Windows mobile applications will not run on Windows Phone seven Series.”Kindel said Microsoft will continue to support phone makers who rolled out Windows Mobile 6.5 phones “for many years to come,
Microsoft Office 2010 Key,” meaning
“it’s not as though one line ends as soon as the other begins.”Kindel also confirmed that Silverlight and XNA will be key to the Windows Phone 7 development platform. .Net developers will find “your skills and much of your code will move forward,
Microsoft Office Pro 2007,” he said.Microsoft will detail more of its tools and plans for Windows Telephone 7 application and game development at the Mix 10 conference,
Windows 7 Ultimate, which kicks off on March 15. Microsoft is expected to have more to say about Visual Studio 10 support for Windows Phone seven at that time.