Lenora Owens—a bright 12-year-old with sassy blue streaks in her brown hair— was a kid on the go, zipping from dance class to horseback riding lessons to her church youth group. There was just one element of her life that wasn’t so speedy.![]()
“I had a really stupid flip phone,” she sighs. “Every time I wanted to send a text, I had to go 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, okay, got it.” Lenora knew what she needed: a smartphone. The problem? Her parents didn’t seem to know it.
Yet.
It took a few months of lobbying, but on Christmas Lenora woke to find a toy phone in her stocking—the signal that she was getting her wish. Her parents, Sean and Teresa, then gave her a choice: she could have an iPhone like her mom’s or a Windows Phone like her dad’s. After carefully weighing pros and cons, she chose a Samsung Focus Flash and never looked back.
Why did you choose a Windows Phone?
I really wanted to have music on my phone, and I don’t like my mom’s music. My favorites are Taylor Swift, Cody Simpson, and Sara Bareilles. With an iPhone, I would have had to buy it all on iTunes. With a Windows Phone, I could use a Zune subscription and get all the music I wanted.
What’s your favorite thing about your phone?
The music, and I listen to podcasts on the bus. I really like How to do Everything, Planet Money, and Wait Wait Don’t Tell Me. And I like games—my favorites are Falling Man and Words by Post.
What are your favorite apps?
I like to change my background practically every day, and Backgrounds Wallpaper has more than 10,000, with abstract art and all kinds of things. I used Tunafish to find guitar tabs for my favorite Taylor Swift song. I am using Freda, which is an app for Project Gutenberg, to read A Midsummer Night’s Dream right now. And Service Bell—I just tap it and tap it and tap it.
How does your phone help you with school and life?
I use the Dictionary.com app when I’m doing homework on the bus. My mom sometimes texts me to tell me that she’s picking me up, so I run to the bus, check my phone, then run backwards to the pick-up zone. And my friends text me for boy advice.
Has your phone ever saved your butt?
Yeah! One time I took the wrong bus. I hopped on the school bus before mine, then I missed my bus and had to text my dad. And some days I’ll check my calendar to see if I am going to my grandma’s—my mom will text me and say, “Check your phone.”
If you could add a feature to Windows Phone, what would it be?
I would add a way to get Java onto it, because I like online games. Or, when I’m at school I have to have the volume off, so I would like a way to have an alarm come on automatically after school, even if I forget to turn the volume back on.
What would you tell a friend who’s thinking about getting a Windows Phone?
I would say if you have an Xbox, get a Windows Phone because you’ll love that. You can use it with your Xbox LIVE account. But I had to change the gamertag, because at first it was my dad’s, and I was friending my friends and they were saying “Who’s this weird guy ‘Sean O’?”
And sadly, I can’t get blue streaks for my avatar’s hair.
Related: How to control access to apps on your kid’s Windows Phone
Our occasional First Person series spotlights real people and their Windows Phones. Know someone interesting whose Windows Phone plays a key role in their job, business, research, or hobby? Shoot us an email and let us know! –Ed.
