With Sony Ericsson’s inaugural Windows Mobile device, the Xperia X1, set to be launched in the coming days, the handset maker has revealed that it had to convince Microsoft to embrace plans to make the Windows interface more user-friendly.

Show related articlesSony Ericsson hopes the Microsoft device, first announced at the Mobile World Congress event in February, will appeal to “fast living” professional users who want to be able to use their device for work and play.

To take the device beyond Windows’ traditional business roots, Sony Ericsson has added a user-friendly front end to the operating system (OS), in the form of nine customisable panel icons. The panels enable users to run applications straight off the desktop, rather than digging through the Windows menu structure to find and boot them, and the phone maker has also launched a software-development kit (SDK) to encourage developers to create more and more panels.

Keisuke Kakoi, head of product and application planning in Sony Ericsson’s convergence unit, said Microsoft’s initial response to Sony Ericsson’s plan to skin the OS with panels was not a positive one: “I still remember, in the very beginning phase, we… disclosed our panel concept to Microsoft and [the] first reaction from Microsoft was: ‘No, no, no. Please stay Microsoft way; Windows way.’ But we showed the panel application, then Microsoft top management suddenly changed [to]: ‘Yes, OK, you should do that.’”

“They change their mind quickly. So I think this is one very simple example. We… now very much closely work with Microsoft, they very much… understand our strategy with the panel concept; we are getting lots of help with them as well,” said Kakoi.

The X1 runs the Opera mobile web browser as default, despite also having Microsoft’s Internet Explorer. Sony Ericsson has high hopes for the Xperia: that it will not just appeal to ‘prosumers’ but could even tempt enterprises away from the wares of BlackBerry-maker RIM, which has also been adding in a multimedia-entertainment edge to its offerings.

Kakoi added: “As you can imagine, our sister companies, like Sony Pictures, Sony BMG — everyone has the office in west coast [of the US] — we can work easily [with them], of course. Unfortunately RIM cannot do that.”

“But also we are open to work with RIM. They are approaching us as well because they have the Windows Mobile BlackBerry client, so it’s vice versa. You can see BlackBerry and its size as direct [competition] but also we can potentially work together. So this is an open-platform product really,” said Kakoi.

Kakoi works at Sony Ericsson’s Silicon Valley office. He said the company wanted to have a base in the heart of web-development country, where there are “so many creative companies”. He added that the company is working with Apple in “the connectivity area”.

Asked why Sony Ericsson has chosen to offer a Windows Mobile phone now, company chief technology officer Mats Lindoff said: “The adventure started in 2001. [In] those days we had four, five percent market share. Today we have eight, nine — I think we had almost 10 in Q4 — and, of course, when you grow, you can also grow the opportunity to develop — you have more resources, you are reaching out to more markets.”

Read more from the source