Google Search App bungs Bing on Windows Phone 7 Marketplace

Bing not meeting your needs? Don’t fret, Google just pushed its Google Search app for Windows Phone 7 live in Marketplace. A move the mirrors the Bing app availability on the Android Market. The Google Search app utilizes your location to provide local search results and features suggestions as your type and a search history to quickly repeat any previous queries. While there’s no way to reassign Google Search to the dedicated search “button” on WP7 devices, you could always pin the app to the Start screen. Unfortunately, we’re still not seeing it populated in the UK Marketplace (search for “Google Search”) but that should be remedied anytime now.

Google Search App bungs Bing on Windows Phone 7 Marketplace originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 09 Nov 2010 04:57:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceGoogle Mobile Blog  | Email this | Comments

Google Comes to WinPhone 7 As an App, Not an Option

Windows Phone 7 lets you make Google searches, but only through a back door.

Google’s free Search app for WP7 is available today, according to the Google Mobile team. “Just search the Marketplace for ‘Google Search,’ download, pin to Start, and the power of Google Search is only a click away.”

“Search, download, pin to Start” — doesn’t that seem a little complicated just to load a search engine on your phone?

A distinguishing feature of Windows Phone 7 handsets is their three dedicated hardware buttons. The Windows logo goes home, the left-arrow button goes back, and the magnifying-glass “search” button opens up Microsoft’s search engine, Bing.

That button is permanently tied to Bing. There appears to be no way to change it. (An anti-trust violation? Not likely, unless WP7 corners the smartphone market.)

On the iPhone or Blackberry, or nearly every web browser on the desktop, you can pick your default search engine. You can’t do that with Windows Phone 7. On the Microsoft smartphone, you get Microsoft search.

Now, Bing has a lot going for it; it works very well on WP7, and I think Microsoft is onto something by putting search front-and-center on smartphones. The hardware button is usefully contextual, too: If you’re in the Marketplace, it searches the Marketplace; if you’re in Outlook, it searches your inbox, etc. That’s handy, and exactly the kind of behavior you’d hope for.

But that doesn’t change the fact that hardwiring Bing makes Windows Phone 7 much more closed than most other smartphone platforms.

Considering the close ties between internet search, ad revenue and content-sharing with partners like Facebook, the fact that Microsoft is driving nearly all of its mobile search through Bing is no accident.

It’s a feature, but it’s also a problem.

See Also:


Poll: Did you get a Windows Phone 7 device today?

You may have heard that Microsoft unleashed its new mobile platform on unsuspecting Americans today (see our reviews here), and we were curious to see how many of you broke out the credit card. Let us know how you played things in the poll below, and we’re welcoming everyone into comments for an open (and totally not trolltastic) conversation about what Day One with a WP7 handset feels like. So get to it!

View Poll

Poll: Did you get a Windows Phone 7 device today? originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 08 Nov 2010 17:30:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |   | Email this | Comments

Windows Phone 7 in review: the good, the bad, and the Surround

Windows Phone 7 has arrived in the US, and there are plenty of phones to choose from — even more if you’re looking internationally. So, which one should you get? Is the OS even good enough to bother with just yet? Which one is the prettiest? We answer all those questions and more in our exhaustive complement of launch phone reviews. You can find them all after the break. You won’t be sorry.

Continue reading Windows Phone 7 in review: the good, the bad, and the Surround

Windows Phone 7 in review: the good, the bad, and the Surround originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 08 Nov 2010 15:06:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |   | Email this | Comments

Dell Venue Pro on sale at Microsoft stores, but good luck getting one

So, just as was rumored, it seems Dell pushed a small handful of Venue Pros to Microsoft’s seven flagship stores for sale today. We just spoke with a friendly rep who told us they were “going fast” and didn’t sound too confident that we’d be able to get one by the time we got down there, but theoretically if we did, it’d be $199 for a new line (or an eligible upgrade) or $449 outright. If you manage to score one, that’ll put you about a week ahead of everyone else — they aren’t expected to be available straight from Dell’s site until the 15th. On a related note, Dell’s website is showing two configurations for the phone — an 8GB and a 16GB model — though none of the stores we called could tell us which one they were stocking. Let’s hope for 16, eh?

[Thanks, Andrew and @FocusedProverbs]

Dell Venue Pro on sale at Microsoft stores, but good luck getting one originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 08 Nov 2010 14:47:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  source@stakita (Yfrog), Dell  | Email this | Comments

Microsoft slide chronicles the journey from Portable Media Center to Windows Phone 7

In case you missed it, Wired has a new piece out on the (very brief) history of Windows Phone 7. Unfortunately, the article pulls all punches, and skates through some bizarre statements from Microsofties, including calling Kin “a worthwhile risk that resulted in important lessons,” and the real head scratcher of the piece: “Software is like making a movie and building a skyscraper. You’re not quite sure how it’s going to stand until it comes out in the end.” Still, we were glad to find this slide (pictured above) in the article’s photo gallery, chronicling the journey of the Metro design language from Microsoft’s ill-fated Portable Media Center, to the vaguely successful Zune products, and around at last to the newly available Windows Phone 7. A bit of comeuppance for 2004’s ahead-of-its-time, PlaysForSure-laden iPod killer? We like to think so.

Microsoft slide chronicles the journey from Portable Media Center to Windows Phone 7 originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 08 Nov 2010 14:10:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceWired  | Email this | Comments

Windows Phone 7 Debuts in U.S. Stores


The first batch of phones running Microsoft’s brand-new Windows Phone 7 operating system hit U.S. stores Monday.

Windows Phone 7 is now available on three handsets: the HTC HD7, the HTC Surround and the Samsung Focus (pictured above). The HDC7 is available for T-Mobile customers, and the Surround and Focus are available for AT&T customers.

The phones are listed at $200 retail, but some web discounts bring them down to as low as $150 with a new contract.

Two other Windows Phone 7 handsets — Dell’s Venue Pro and the LG Quantum — are scheduled to ship during the holiday season, according to Microsoft.

All the phones include a Snapdragon processor, 256 MB of RAM, at least 4 GB of flash storage, 802.11 b/g wireless, a capacitive touchscreen and five sensors (A-GPS, accelerometer, compass, proximity and light).

Full specifications for the five Windows Phone 7 handsets are available at Microsoft’s website.

Windows Phone 7 is Microsoft’s complete do-over on a mobile OS after scrapping Windows Mobile in late 2008. For more details on what happened behind the scenes, see our feature “How Microsoft hit CTRL+ALT+DEL on Windows Phone.

Photo: Jim Merithew/Wired.com


HTC HD7 Review: Size Ain’t Everything [Review]

No smartphone platform is complete without a phone big enough to double as an ice scraper. The hulking HD7 is that phone for Windows Phone 7. More »

Microsoft’s Surface Computer Has the “Wow” Factor

This article was written on May 30, 2007 by CyberNet.

MicrosofttableSurface Computing is a project that’s been in the making over at Microsoft for several years now, and just last night Microsoft filled everybody in on all of the details regarding their Tabletop Computer (also code-named Play Table). The videos that are included at the bottom of this post do most of the talking, and after viewing them, I have to admit that this tabletop computer looks slick! It’s more intuitive than anything I’ve seen before, and I’d say without a doubt, surface computing definitely has the “wow” factor.

Where will the tabletop computer appear?

This tabletop computer will appear in hotels like Starwood, restaurants, retail locations like T-Mobile, and casino resorts like Harrah’s.  Gestures like pinches and pushes will navigate you through data like pictures. The top of the table which is a 30 inch touchscreen in a clear acrylic frame will react to brushes, fingers, and everyday objects.

While responding to more than just one touch at a time, it will be able to recognize physical objects like cell phones, cameras, paint brushes, etc.,  It gives you  the control over photos, music, maps, and more.

Uses

One example that I was impressed with was the table acting as a cashier and splitting the bill amongst a group of people.  Restaurant patrons would be able to place their credit cards right on the table (object recognition) and then drag the food and beverage items that they had right to their card.

Users would be able to resize and shuffle through photos using their hands and their fingers instead of a mouse. The resizing of the photos reminded me of the iPhone demo in which two hands were used to resize a photo.  It can also act as concierge in the lobby of a hotel to provide directions and maps.

It’s no everyday table.

Your everyday table is now something much, much more sophisticated.  No longer is there a need for a mouse or a keyboard, so interaction is not traditional by any means.

Microsoft outlined the key attributes for this table as:

  1. Direct interaction – Users can “grab” info with their hands and interact with content.
  2. Multi-touch – Use one finger, two fingers, or all of them!
  3. Multi-user – Everybody gathered around the table can collaborate using the computer.
  4. Object recognition – Depending on the object, a different digital response will occur.

Steve Ballmer, Microsoft’s CEO says:

“We see this as a multi-billion dollar category, and we envision a time when surface computing technologies will be pervasive, from tabletops and counters, to the hallway mirror.  Surface is the first step in realizing that vision.”

Pricing will range from $5,000 to $10,000 per table, so it won’t be popping up in every household anytime soon.

Surface computing is certainly a new method that will undoubtedly impress. I just can’t help but wonder though, what would a blue-screen of death look like on this one?

Oh, and I don’t think I’m alone on this one when I say that this can only mean a multi-touch Zune must be coming soon. In fact, perhaps there is evidence that this is true?

Source: Thanks for the tip Radu and Cory!

Copyright © 2010 CyberNet | CyberNet Forum | Learn Firefox

Related Posts:


Kinect Hacker Won’t Share, Even for Money

Over the weekend, a member of the NUI Group hacked the new Xbox Kinect to run on Windows 7, posting proof-of-concept videos, but not the code.

“As a research project, I took a weekend challenge of getting this awesome new Xbox Kinect device to work on Windows,” writes Alex P, who previously hacked the PS3 Eye camera to run on Windows. “Here are the first tests of controlling the Kinect NUI Motor and reading the Accelerometer data from a PC. Outlook looks good for other sensors (ie cameras and microphones) of the device.”

A day later, he posted the following video of the Windows-controlled Kinect with on-screen output from its depth and color sensors:

Open-source hardware company Adafruit has offered a bounty for open-source Kinect drivers, upping the reward to $2000 after Microsoft threatened legal action against anyone opening up their peripheral.

Engadget reports that Alex P isn’t interested in the reward, preferring to use it with Code Laboratories’s $150 video suite CL Studio Live.

DIYers, robots and children all hoping to leverage the Kinect for educational use did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

See Also: