Microsoft Kin One and Kin Two announced: Windows Phone roots with a social slant


It’s finally official: Microsoft Pink — the product of Redmond’s acquisition of Danger — has just been unveiled as a pair of handsets sourced from Sharp (which made most of Danger’s Sidekicks) known as the Kin One and Kin Two. The devices are being marketed as Windows Phones, and while they’re ultimately based on most of the same underpinnings of Windows Phone 7, it’s a distinctly and totally different experience — the entire user interface is custom to Kin with a heavy social media slant, a custom browser (we’re told it’s based on the Zune’s browser), and surprisingly, zero support for third-party apps. The displays are capacitive with support for multitouch (yes, you can pinch and zoom in the browser), but there’s no support for in-browser Flash or Silverlight.

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HTC HD2 gets early Windows Phone 7 OS port, could be released before official devices

Don’t look surprised. With the Windows Phone 7 Series dev tools now out in the open the pent up demand for that elusive HD2 upgrade was bound to be a priority for some well-meaning developers, somewhere… namely, Russia. Now we’ve got what looks to be the first screenies of the WP7S OS running on an HD2. Better yet, htcpedia claims that almost everything is working including WiFi, GPS, and Bluetooth. However, the graphics driver is still showing problems and there is noticeable device lag. Nevertheless, the team is planning a beta release soon. Imagine it, an HD2 WP7S ROM available before Microsoft and its partners can even launch an official device, with its 5 buttons or not — now that would be something. One more grab after the break, the rest at the source below.

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Mysterious HTC Windows Phone hits the FCC launching on September 15th

A new Windows Phone handset from HTC has just hit the FCC a few days ago,the PB92100. Unfortunately nothing about it is know yet other than the following statement:

We are requesting the comission to grant short-term confidentianlity request on the following attachements until 9/15/2010..

Is this a Windows Mobile 6.5.X or Windows Phone 7 Series handset? My guess is that this is probably the Us version of the HTC HD Mini.

Mozilla halts Firefox development for Windows Mobile, won’t offer it on Windows Phone 7 without NDK

Color us resolutely unsurprised at the news that devs are starting to abandon the Windows Mobile platform in favor of, well, longer-lived opportunities. Firefox’s maker, Mozilla, has come out with a statement that it’s ceasing development of its WinMo builds and — perhaps more importantly — it’s also curtailing work on a Windows Phone 7 offering until Microsoft opens its new platform up to native apps. So basically, no Native Development Kit from Microsoft equals no Firefox for Windows Phone from Mozilla. The browser maker does express hope, however, that Microsoft will make it possible to deliver the popular IE alternative in the future, pointing out that the underlying Windows CE 6 architecture suits Firefox well and the company is “well positioned to have an awesome browser on Windows Phone 7.” For now, the focus in Mozilla’s mobile HQ remains on bringing out a great product on the less restrictive Android and MeeGo platforms.

Word, Excel and OneNote for Windows Phone 7 Series revealed

We actually haven’t seen any official shots of the Office apps for Windows Phone 7 Series, but now that Microsoft’s emulator has been hacked and unlocked, we’ve got a glimpse of what creating a Word doc in OneNote looks like — and while there’s a high probability that this a super-early version of the app, it’s still revealing in how drastically minimal it is. Microsoft says most people just want to make minor edits and leave comments to Office docs while on the go, not make large edits with copy and paste, so we’d expect to see track changes in the final version, but something tells us the main interface isn’t going to look tremendously different than this. One more shot and the video with Word after the break — hit the source for the second vid with Excel.

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Windows Phone 7 Series Emulator ROM Unlocked

The boys in Redmond aren’t going to be happy about this…After a bit of digging, blogger Dan Ardelean managed to fully unlock the ROM found within the Windows Phone 7 CTP Emulator. As you can see in the screenshots above all the apps are now available and also access to the task manager among other things. Dan has also posted the Bin file here. I frankly wouldn’t be surprised if Microsoft decides to take down the whole thing in a few hours.

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Microsoft’s Windows Phone 7 Series Ad Plays It Safe

Microsoft is offering up an ad for its upcoming Windows Phone 7 Series, in conjunction with MIX 10. The funny thing is, I don’t remember Microsoft saying anything about the hardware requirements including a funky Star Trek-style hologram projector…oh, wait, never mind.

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Windows Phone 7 Tablet Best Design I’ve Seen All Week

Umang Dokey, a “multidisciplinary designer” specializing in graphic and product design, recently posted a rendering of an 8-inch tablet PC running Windows Phone 7 Series. Wired and other sites have already posted articles about the design, and it’s definitely worth a look-see:

IMAGE 1 - Win Phone 7 Tablet.png

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Windows Phone 7 Series’ cutting room floor is an extravaganza of bright colors and chunky fonts

It’s hard to argue that Windows Phone 7 Series’ Metro UI concept isn’t utterly unique in the mobile world, but it was wasn’t the only option Microsoft considered — far from it, in fact. The company has published a bunch a design concepts it churned through on its wild, wacky journey to finalizing Metro as we know it today, and one thing’s for certain: they’d clearly planned on simple, square lines, partially-obscured typography, and in-your-face colors pretty much from day one. After careful consideration of everything they’ve got here, we still think we like the production design best, but that’s kind of besides the point — why, pray tell, couldn’t these have just been user-selectable themes?

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Windows Phone 7 Series multitasking: the real deal

We’ve definitely learned a ton about Windows Phone 7 Series here at MIX, but getting the full picture on multitasking has been difficult, since the OS isn’t ready, no one has final hardware, and the emulator seems to behave differently than actual devices and Microsoft’s descriptions. So let’s set the record straight on multitasking: it’s not going to happen, at least not in the traditional way. Not only have we directly confirmed this with Microsoft executives several times, but the developer sessions here are totally clear on the matter — you don’t tell 1000+ devs that they should expect their apps to be killed whenever the user switches away from them if you don’t mean it. Now, that’s not to say that the OS can’t do multitasking: first-party apps like the Zune player and IE can run in the background, and third-party apps are actually left running in a suspended state (Microsoft calls it “dehydrated”) as long as the system doesn’t need any additional resources. If the user cycles back to an app, it’s resumed (“rehydrated”) and life continues merrily along, but if the user opens other apps and the system needs additional resources, the app is killed without any indication or remorse.

If that sounds familiar, it’s because it’s basically a single-tasking riff on Android and Windows Mobile 6, both of which also purport to intelligently manage multiple running applications like this, and both of which usually find themselves greatly improved with manual task managers. We’ll have to see if Windows Phone 7 Series can do a better job once it ships — we have a feeling it will — and later down the line we’ll see if Microsoft decides to extend multitasking to third-party apps. But for now, just know that you’re not going to be running Pandora in the background while you do other tasks on a 7 Series device — it is a question we have specifically asked, and the answer, unfortunately, is no.

P.S. Still don’t believe us? Hear it for yourself directly from Microsoft’s Todd Brix: