Microsoft may be obtaining lots of download really like for its Bing app for your iPhone. On August thirty,
Buy Windows 7 Ultimate, the organization introduced delivery of a brand new Bing app — this time for Android.Microsoft is rolling out the expected “Bing for Mobile Android” app and is making it available for free via the Verizon Wireless Android Marketplace, according to a new blog post by the Bing team.Bing for Mobile Android App available to Verizon customers. You can now download the free Bing App from your Verizon Wireless Android phones’ Marketplace.Like the Bing for iPhone app, the homepage features the Bing image of the day with clickable hotspots. Users will be able to swipe through up to seven days; worth of Bing images, Microsoft officials said.Voice search is enabled in the new Bing Android app, as well,
Windows 7 Home Basic X86, according to the blog post,
windows 7 Home Basic sale, as is integration with Bing Maps.Bing on the iPhone has proven surprisingly popular (in terms of number of downloads from the Apple store). Microsoft has issued a few fixes for it since its initial release in December 2009. Some Windows Mobile phone users have said they felt left by the wayside,
Office Professional 2007 Sale, in terms of the functionality and appearance of Bing on iPhone compared to how it works/looks on Windows Phones.I;ve asked Microsoft for more details as to which other carriers might be getting Bing for Android next. No word back yet. Stay tuned….Update: This just in from a corporate spokesperson: “The Bing for Mobile Android App is available on any VZW Android 2.x devices and higher. The only device we don’t support today is the Motorola Devour. Given the deep partnership with VZW on Bing search, we’ve decided to roll out our Bing search experiences on VZW first. We’re working to make Bing available on the other mobile operators and their Android devices.”Microsoft unveiled Bing for Android the same day that the Hotmail team announced Exchange ActiveSync push support for a variety of phones, minus Android ones. (The reality is various Android phones currently do work with the new EAS capability,
Office Standard 2010, but Microsoft officials are not yet making support for Android “official.”)