NYT: Nokia was testing Android on Lumia phones before Microsoft deal

Elop and Ballmer

Microsoft officially acquired Nokia’s devices group to improve the overall Windows Phone platform. The New York Times, however, hears from sources that the company may have had another incentive: Nokia had been testing Android on Lumia devices. The Finnish firm reportedly started experimenting with Android “well before” the deal, making it easier to switch platforms if the Microsoft partnership didn’t last beyond 2014. Nokia’s potential OS switch wasn’t mentioned in the acquisition discussions this year, according to one tipster. Even so, the sources claim that Microsoft’s executives knew of the project’s existence — they would have understood the consequences of losing Nokia’s support. Microsoft and Nokia have so far declined to comment on the rumor, but it’s clear that any Android-based Lumias are now consigned to the history books.

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Source: New York Times

Samsung SGH-i187 reaches the FCC, may be a Windows Phone for AT&T

Samsung SGHi187 reaches the FCC, may bring more Windows Phone to AT&T

Samsung hasn’t launched any Windows Phones for AT&T in the past year, but there are new hints suggesting the company may renew its support. An unannounced SGH-i187 phone has surfaced at the FCC with AT&T-compatible GSM, HSPA and LTE frequencies. While the filing doesn’t reveal the OS, the i187 name last appeared in benchmarks for a Windows Phone; if the tests are authentic, we’re looking at a mid-range handset with a 720p screen and a Snapdragon 400. We don’t know if or when Samsung will ship the i187 to AT&T, but it could bring some diversity to a Windows Phone lineup that’s increasingly Lumia-centric.

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Source: FCC

Windows Phone 8.1 rumors hint at personal assistant and notifications tile

Windows Phone 81 rumors hint at Cortana assistant, notification center

Windows Phone’s future may involve more than just a few more home screen tiles. Elaborating on rumors from the summer, ZDNet claims that the next version of Windows Phone (possibly 8.1) will focus on Cortana, a personal assistant that goes beyond the likes of Google Now or Siri. The Halo-inspired component is reportedly more of a shell than an app, and would integrate the OS with Microsoft services like Bing. Ultimately, Cortana would find its way into versions of Windows and the Xbox One’s Dashboard.

The assistant might not be the only major feature in 8.1. Windows-Phone.pl has posted what it says are photos of the OS running on a smartphone. They suggest that the previously leaked notification center would reside in a Live Tile, and that users could group-select tiles like they can with Windows 8.1. There’s no guarantees that the images or the Cortana rumor are authentic, although they’re consistent with Microsoft’s publicly stated desires for both a notification center and a “service-enabled shell.” We may not get any official details for a while, however — if real, Windows Phone 8.1 might not ship until sometime in early 2014.

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Via: Windows Phone Central

Source: Windows-Phone.pl (translated), ZDNet

Nokia Lumia 625 review

DNP Nokia Lumia 625 review

Another week, another Lumia. This latest grenade thrown by Nokia in its continued assault on the smartphone market is the Lumia 625. Following up on its previous high-end devices — the good-looking one, the one with the fancy camera — the 625 is a soldier of lower rank. There’s already an army of budget Windows Phones that fill various niches, so what’s the deal? Well, despite the number on its dog tag, the 625 is far from a Lumia 620 variant: it’s a completely different phone. For starters, it sports the biggest screen of any Lumia to date (for now, anyway). Actually, make that any Nokia phone ever made. But the real reason it exists has nothing to do with the display size; it’s all about the 4G radio hiding away inside. Does LTE, plus a big screen and eyebrow-raising price tag, make it worth your while, though?%Gallery-slideshow79311%

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Nokia Lumia 1020 price drops to $199 in the US

Nokia Lumia 1020 price drops to $199 in the US, Microsoft throws in a free camera grip

One of the barriers to Lumia 1020 adoption in the US has been the high price; you’ve had to really love phone photography to justify spending $299 on-contract. That shouldn’t be an issue from now on, as both AT&T and Microsoft have permanently dropped the Nokia flagship’s price to $199 with a two-year agreement. If you buy from the Microsoft Store, you’ll even get a free black camera grip through a limited-time offer. The new pricing might not sway every Windows Phone fan when a next-gen Lumia may lurk just around the corner, but those who’ve been waiting for a good bargain on the 1020 will find one at the source links.

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Via: Windows Phone Blog

Source: AT&T, Microsoft Store

Extra-large Nokia Lumia 1520 surfaces in press image

Nokia Lumia 1520 press image surfaces

Want a clear look at Nokia’s Lumia 1520 (aka Bandit)? You may just have it. After posting a screen capture earlier in the week, @evleaks has released what’s reportedly a press image of the super-sized, 1080p Windows Phone. The render largely matches what we’ve seen before, including the additional Live Tiles on the home screen, but the back is new. It suggests that there will be a Lumia 925-style camera hump — sorry, no 41-megapixel sensor here — along with aesthetics borrowed from other members of the Lumia family. There’s no guarantee that this image is real, but we won’t be surprised if it accurately represents Nokia’s last flagship before Microsoft takes the reins.

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Source: @evleaks (Twitter)

Skype for Windows Phone 8 now supports video messaging

Skype for Windows Phone 8 now supports video messaging

Fans of Skype for Windows Phone 8 can now record more than just voicemail: Microsoft has updated the app to support video messaging. Like on other platforms, Windows Phone users can send an unlimited number of video clips to their Skype contacts for free. There aren’t any other new features, but Skype members who prefer visual communication will likely want to grab the upgrade today through the Windows Phone Store.

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Via: Windows Phone Central

Source: Windows Phone Store

Nokiasoft comes full circle: Microsoft’s play for ultimate control will redefine the Windows ecosystem

Nokiasoft comes full circle Microsoft's play for ultimate control will redfine the Windows ecosystem

The “soft” in Microsoft isn’t what it used to be. A score ago, the company was certain the software-licensing business was the one it wanted to be in — Apple decided to hold its cards a lot closer to the chest, and it cost the company dearly for years. Meanwhile, Microsoft made a lot of cash with Windows, and it still does. But the tide is turning. Two of the last three Windows operating systems haven’t generated the kind of crazed mindshare that a company needs to remain relevant over the long haul, and at some point, one has to wonder if Microsoft will be able to inject a bit of life into its stodgy, outmoded self by grabbing the reins on the hardware side.

In fact, that’s exactly what Microsoft wondered, as it casually announced a plan in June of 2012 to affront scores of OEM partners with its Surface initiative. In an instant, Microsoft dove headfirst into the hardware game, and regardless of how it wanted the public to perceive the move, the truth was impossible to hide: this was Microsoft telling Acer, ASUS, Dell, Lenovo and the rest that it could no longer trust their design chops to keep its revenue on the up and up.

In February of 2011, well before it transformed the Surface from a big-ass table into a slate that almost no one wants to buy (Microsoft’s words, not mine), the company managed to procure a huge ally on the mobile front. The Nokia / Microsoft alliance was monumental. This was Nokia’s formidable hardware being exclusively used to push Microsoft’s fledgling Windows Phone OS. At once, Nokia loyalists found hope, and those praying for a coalition with Android were dismayed. Little did we know: that partnership marked the end of the original Microsoft, the end of the original Nokia and, in my estimation, a complete rerouting of the Windows roadmap. This week’s acquisition simply makes it all the more official.

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Ballmer promises shorter names for Nokia phones: goodbye Nokia Lumia Windows Phone 1020

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What will Microsoft’s thunderous multi-billion dollar purchase of Nokia’s mobile phone business mean for little ol’ you and me? Time will tell, of course, but in the short term Steve Ballmer is promising something concrete: shorter brand names. Speaking on a conference call today, the Microsoft CEO seized on the Nokia’s latest flagship phone as an example of the need for simpler, more unified marketing:

“We can probably do better for a consumer name than the “Nokia Lumia Windows Phone 1020,” and yet, because of where both companies are, and the independent nature of the businesses, we haven’t been able to shorten that name.”

Now, “Surface Phone” certainly has a ring to it (and it’d be better than Windows Phone Pro Home Edition, in any case), so let’s just hope Microsoft doesn’t try to over-think things.

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Why Microsoft Bought Nokia (And What It Means for You)

Why Microsoft Bought Nokia (And What It Means for You)

By now you’ve no doubt heard today’s surprising news; Microsoft has gobbled up Finland’s finest phone division in a $7.2 billion deal. On the surface, it’s a takeover that doesn’t make much sense. But when you look closer, it… still doesn’t make much sense. But that doesn’t mean we can’t try.

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