Are you still using a Windows Mobile device for a specific task, or is it purely for the nostalgia? Let us know which apps you still can't live without! set up an emulator to run these classic apps on your modern PC?
: For media enthusiasts, this was the "VLC of Windows Mobile," capable of playing almost any video format without the need for pre-conversion. 💻 For the Developers
discusses the historical difficulty of developing for multiple OSs, including Windows Mobile, and the architectural hurdles faced before modern cross-platform tools existed. Applying User-Centered Techniques : Research available via windows mobile 6 apps
Before CorePlayer, TCPMP was the open-source hero of video playback. It was lightweight and extremely fast. 5. Navigation and GPS
Offered deep customization of the taskbar, start menu, and themes, allowing users to make their devices look like anything from a Mac to a custom Linux desktop. 3. Navigation and GPS Tools Are you still using a Windows Mobile device
If you owned an HTC device (like the legendary HTC Touch Diamond or HTC HD2), you were treated to . This was a custom, hardware-accelerated UI overlay developed by HTC. It bypassed the Windows Mobile look entirely, offering smooth tab transitions, animated weather clocks, and a visual photo gallery that rivaled the early iPhone. Media and Entertainment
This public link is valid for 7 days and shares a thread, including any personal information you added. This link or copies made by others cannot be deleted. If you share with third parties, their policies apply. Can’t copy the link right now. Try again later. : For media enthusiasts, this was the "VLC
While native Office Mobile allowed basic editing of Word and Excel documents, it lacked advanced formatting tools. and Illium Software’s eReader filled critical gaps for professionals, but the true champion of office productivity was SoftMaker Office . It offered unprecedented desktop-grade formatting compatibility for Word, Excel, and PowerPoint files directly on a handheld screen. Email and PIM Syncing
Windows Mobile 6 (released 2007, updated to 6.1 and 6.5) was a mobile OS based on Windows CE 5.2. It supported two main interfaces:
Since WM6 required a lot of manual management (memory leaks were common), system tools were in high demand.