Microsoft’s Kin saves a Roots show: a touching recollection by Questlove

The Kin may be dead and buried, but you can bet that the legacy of Microsoft’s biggest failure in the phone market will live long in the minds of technophiles. What you probably wouldn’t bet, however, is how it’ll also live long in the mind of famed Roots drummer Questlove. You heard right — the same beat maker that was caught FaceTiming with our own Josh Topolsky during a recent sit-down on Late Night with Jimmy Fallon has a special place in his heart for the fallen phone series, and he’s taken the time to pen a memoir detailing the reasons why. Undoubtedly an avid visitor of the (temporarily down) Kin R.I.P. web memorial, Questlove was recently held up behind a team of brats at the airport. As the story goes, even arriving 75 minutes early to his flight wasn’t enough to clear through on a flight to Canada, leaving him in quite the pickle. If he didn’t hop on this bird, his band mates would be struggling to please fans sans a drummer. As is so often the case these days, Quest ran into a particularly perturbed airline agent who wasn’t about to bend in order to get him onboard; rather than name-dropping himself, he simply agreed to have his photo taken with a smattering of fans who just happened to waltz by during his pleading.

Suddenly, the light popped on in the mind of the agent: “OMG! You are the guy in the Kin commercial… I see that commercial all the time!” Needless to say, Quest’s ego took a serious hit, but he did manage to catch his flight and make the show in the Great White North. He told his manager that it was the “Kin commercial he almost passed on” that got him to the show, and closed with a simple remark: “R.I.P. Kin.” Hit those source links for the full skinny — it’s a compelling read, we assure you. Oh, and that aforesaid ad is embedded just past the break.

Continue reading Microsoft’s Kin saves a Roots show: a touching recollection by Questlove

Microsoft’s Kin saves a Roots show: a touching recollection by Questlove originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 06 Jul 2010 14:31:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceTwitLonger [Questlove], Twitter [@questlove], Kin R.I.P.  | Email this | Comments

AT&T stores getting Windows Phone 7 retail materials, launch coming sooner than expected?

Microsoft’s mobile efforts may look like they’re slightly in disarray after the expensive and embarrassing Kin debacle, but it looks like Windows Phone 7 may yet emerge unscathed from the chaos — and potentially even earlier than expected, if this sheet of AT&T retail signage that’s being sent out for a July 24th store overhaul is to be believed. Don’t get too excited, however: we’re told that cards like this have hit in July for September launches in the past — which would line up with that hint of an October Telstra launch — and that the “QTY: 6” label likely points to two devices, not a sextuplet. (We’d guess… Samsung and LG?) Either way, it would be a big win for Microsoft if it can manage to get Windows Phone 7 in store shelves before that promised “holiday 2010” due date — we’ll see what happens.

AT&T stores getting Windows Phone 7 retail materials, launch coming sooner than expected? originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 05 Jul 2010 22:08:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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What killed the Kin?

While the news today that Microsoft has killed its troubled Kin line didn’t come as the craziest of surprises, it’s definitely left a lot of lingering questions about just what happened. Now we may have a little insight into what went wrong — and what might be in store down the road — thanks to a reliable source of ours who’s shared some news on Redmond’s inner turmoil.

Apparently, the troubles started long before the swirling Pink phone rumors (and way before the name Kin was ringing in our ears). According to our source, the birth of these devices began with a decision at Microsoft to create a platform agnostic, cloud-centric featurephone. A featurephone that could be had at a relatively low cost, and sold to a burgeoning market of teens and young adults who had little need for a BlackBerry-level device (or pricing). The first step in the project was acquiring Danger to leverage the work it had done with the Sidekick platform, and aligning with Verizon as a launch partner who could offer attractive pricing plans for the devices to a big pool… and here’s where the trouble begins.

Continue reading What killed the Kin?

What killed the Kin? originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 30 Jun 2010 19:27:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Microsoft Kills Kin [Breaking]

Just six weeks after launch, Microsoft’s Kin, the social phone we wanted to love, is dead. Microsoft is ending its short life, sources close to Microsoft tell us. More »

How would you change Microsoft’s Kin One and Two?

Hey! Microsoft debuted two new phones earlier this year! Remember that? Okay, so there’s a fair chance that Microsoft actually moved fewer Kin One / Two handsets than Fusion Garage did JooJoo tablets, but we’re pretty confident that a few of you fell for the whole “my life is so social, so I’m buying in” thing. We’re still personally trying to figure out why the full Windows Phone 7 wasn’t used here instead of an OS that’ll likely be forgotten by the time you finish reading this, but enough of our rambling — this space is all about you. Did you pick up one of the Kin brothers? How’s the experience? Are you still kosher with paying the same data plan price as future Droid X users? Have you gained more friends than you know what to do with? Starred in your own commercial? Tell us below, tweeps.

How would you change Microsoft’s Kin One and Two? originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 25 Jun 2010 22:01:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Windows Phone 7’s October release casually mentioned in Microsoft ad presentation

“I’m gonna ask rock star Kostas… to come on. And Kostas has brought with him Windows Phone 7, which we launch this October.” So sayeth Microsoft VP for Marketing Mich Mathews in introducing GM of Live Labs’ Kostas Mallios, who was at the Cannes Lions advertising conference to show off the advertising capabilities of the upcoming smartphone platform. Of course, last we heard, the official company line on WP7’s release was “holiday 2010,” so this would definitely narrow the launch window quite a bit, as well as corroborates earlier Telstra roadmap leaks. Not an official statement, but Mathews would definitely be someone in the know here. Don’t expect the folks in Redmond to go ahead and confirm — they work on their own schedule, thank you very much — but should someone ‘fess up, can we also talk about that $150 Kinect price? Video after the break.

[Thanks to everyone who sent this in]

Continue reading Windows Phone 7’s October release casually mentioned in Microsoft ad presentation

Windows Phone 7’s October release casually mentioned in Microsoft ad presentation originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 24 Jun 2010 21:29:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceWMPoweruser  | Email this | Comments

Samsung Windows Phone 7 prototype hands-on

It’s been a bit of a unicorn since making a quick appearance at MIX, but we just got the chance to go hands-on with Samsung’s Omnia i8910-based Windows Phone 7 prototype phone. Interestingly, we were told that this hardware will never be released to market — it’s just for testing purposes right now. That testing is going quite well, as far as we can see — Microsoft’s people are starting to carry WP7 devices as their personal phones now, and while the software is still quite buggy, the build we saw in action was noticeably faster than before. We were also told that the hardware in the pipeline — particularly from Samsung — is apparently quite spectacular, and that this particular device doesn’t represent the launch set of devices. We’ll have to see — we actually thought this prototype was quite handsome in person, although it’s a little thicker than you might expect. Hit up the gallery for some more pics!

Samsung Windows Phone 7 prototype hands-on originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 22 Jun 2010 20:31:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Leaked Telstra roadmap points to October Windows Phone 7 launch, HTC Mozart device

Microsoft still hasn’t gotten any more specific than “holiday 2010” for a Windows Phone 7 launch date, but it looks like we may now have a bit more specificity courtesy of Australian carrier Telstra. According to a leaked snippet from a purportedly authentic Telstra roadmap, the hereto unheard of Windows Phone 7-based HTC Mozart will be launching sometime in October — presumably coinciding with the launch of Windows Phone 7 itself. As you may be able to tell, however, the phone pictured is actually a poor mockup (grey copy and paste border around the phone, Sense UI behind the WP7 UI, etc.) of an HTC Desire, but none other than Conflipper says that the Mozart is indeed a real device and, incidentally, headed to T-Mobile US as well.

Leaked Telstra roadmap points to October Windows Phone 7 launch, HTC Mozart device originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 22 Jun 2010 03:37:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink WMPoweruser  |  sourcexda-developers  | Email this | Comments

Behind the scenes with Microsoft’s Windows Phone 7 team: ‘I think about this really as a first release’

CNET had a chance recently to get embedded deep within Microsoft’s Windows Phone 7 engineering group, listening in on meetings with OEMs, arguments, celebrations, and all the other drama that comes with trying to ship a huge product that’s new from the ground up in just a couple years’ time. There aren’t any blockbuster revelations in here — no launch devices, ship dates, or prices — but it’s an interesting look at the project from Windows Phone engineering VP Terry Myerson’s perspective, who acknowledges that it’ll take a long time and several releases to catch up to the competition but still thinks they’ll “actually have a lot of happy customers” with version one.

On a related note, some existing Windows Marketplace devs have started getting notifications that Microsoft wants to send them loaner Windows Phone 7 devices — yes, loaners, meaning they’ll need to be returned to the mother ship at some point down the road. They’re apparently set up for delivery in July, which should give publishers plenty of time to stock up the Marketplace in time for that planned holiday launch.

Behind the scenes with Microsoft’s Windows Phone 7 team: ‘I think about this really as a first release’ originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 17 Jun 2010 16:23:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink SlashPhone, Windows Phone Thoughts  |  sourceCNET, Mobility Digest  | Email this | Comments

Microsoft luring iPhone game devs to Windows Phone 7 with cold, hard cash?

A solid third-party app ecosystem is going to be absolutely critical to Windows Phone 7’s commercial success — and Microsoft clearly knows that, having spent nearly as much (if not more) energy talking to developers since the platform’s announcement than it has directly to potential end users. In particular, one area where Microsoft really wants to play ball (pardon the pun) is with a rock-sold gaming experience — and to that end, it seems Redmond isn’t being shy about putting its money where its mouth is. The rumor going around today is that Microsoft is reaching out to developers of popular iPhone games, offering cash in exchange for a Windows Phone 7 port; you might think that most of these devs would be totally down with dropping their games on a hot new platform with revenue potential, but the challenge is that WP7’s development environment is different enough from the iPhone’s to make porting a pretty big challenge. The dev that allegedly contacted PocketGamer.biz about the offer turned it down, saying the financial compensation was “substantial” but ultimately not enough for the amount of work he’d have to put into it — so this might just be a question of how badly Microsoft wants to come roaring out of the gate with a great catalog of apps. They’ve certainly got the cash to make this happen if they decide to up the ante.

Microsoft luring iPhone game devs to Windows Phone 7 with cold, hard cash? originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 15 Jun 2010 23:42:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink TUAW, 9 to 5 Mac  |  sourcePocketGamer.biz  | Email this | Comments