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Mobile Push Notification services are ending for Windows Phone 7.5 and Windows Phone 8.0

Anonymous
2018-02-16T23:25:11+00:00

On February 20, 2018, Mobile Push Notification services will be turned off for Windows Phone 7.5 and Windows Phone 8.0.  Once this happens:

  • Your phone will no longer receive notifications.
  • Your phone will not receive additional live tile updates.
  • The “Find my phone” feature will no longer locate your phone.

Windows Phone 7.5 and Windows Phone 8.0 have reached their end of support dates, and thus services for these versions of Windows will be discontinued over time. 

Note: 

Notification services will continue to function for Windows Phone 8.1 at this time, and newer phones running Windows 10 Mobile are still fully supported.

You can find information at the Windows Phone 7 FAQ and the Support Lifecycle policy.

Windows for home | Other | Devices and drivers

Locked Question. This question was migrated from the Microsoft Support Community. You can vote on whether it's helpful, but you can't add comments or replies or follow the question.

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  1. Anonymous
    2018-02-19T14:58:14+00:00

    Someone say:  "Never personally owning an iPhone or Android, do those platforms disable notifications sooner or later than Microsoft? What are the oldest versions of iOS and Android that still receive notifications?"

    And other say: "Assuming the app versions are still supported on android, any OS version should still get push notifications. version 2.3 (from 2010-ish) still shows up in the platform numbers, so is reasonably still in use."

    60+ people found this answer helpful.
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  2. Anonymous
    2018-02-19T15:56:09+00:00

    This is an unfortunate step.  Android and iOS OS's are phones are typically supported for only a couple of years and will stop receiving updates, their push notifications will continue to work.  This wasn't a technical decision, it was a business decision.  While the numbers of Windows Phone users have dropped to be almost out of the picture, it doesn't send a good message to the remaining users.

    40+ people found this answer helpful.
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  3. Anonymous
    2018-02-19T17:20:37+00:00

    Thank your reply. I think Microsoft (at least Mr. Nadella) unloyal with the customers. The customer buy Microsoft devices, but they end of support all mobile devices??

    The customers just need their devices has long term support or slide load android apps (project Astoria) for using everyday (We don't need a thoudsands apps, we just need slide load app on operating system we love. We don't need new major features, we just need some tweak or minor updates).

    I am a big fan of Microsoft (I have 4 Lumia(which run Windows 10 mobile), 5 PCs run Windows 10, and a Xbox) and I am a C# developer but I don't know why he (Mr.Nadella) have that behavior with the customer (this lose all customer trust). I don't use Windows phone 7.5 or Windows phone 8 anymore but other customer will think about this??

    If project Andromeda (if it is existing) show to developer, customer; there will NO one develop apps for that device if he still lose the trust.

    Thank again for reply. I am living in Vietnam so I can't talk with Mr.Nadella. If you can, please send this to Microsoft CEO

    30+ people found this answer helpful.
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  4. Anonymous
    2018-02-19T22:17:02+00:00

    "...newer phones running Windows 10 Mobile are still fully supported."

    For notification services, this statement is perhaps true. For other things, not so much. As I have found, phones that were blocked at Windows 10 1511 (i.e. many if not most phones that were upgraded from 8.1 without significant hacking) no longer get any updates including security. Those ended in November 2017. So "fully supported" has to be carefully qualified.

    10+ people found this answer helpful.
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  5. Anonymous
    2018-02-20T03:28:03+00:00

    OK, I know what a "Push Notification" is in general terms.  But, does this only apply to Microsoft apps, or third-party apps as well?  I thought "Find my phone" used SMS?

    A little more info/explanation is needed for us non-developers.

    10+ people found this answer helpful.
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