First Prototype of Windows Phone 7 device shown at Engadget Show: http://bit.ly/czUwbh
First Prototype of Windows Phone 7 device shown at Engadget Show
Korneel De Feyter op February 28th 2010, 13u 13I had an unusual very busy wee…
Korneel De Feyter op February 26th 2010, 18u 20I had an unusual very busy week, here’s what you and I might have missed this week: http://bit.ly/afaYa9
Had a busy week: Things you might have missed
Korneel De Feyter op February 26th 2010, 17u 17I had an unusual busy week, so I’m making a round up about the news you and I might have missed past week.
Gizmodo: “Windows Phone 7 an…
Korneel De Feyter op February 23rd 2010, 18u 55Gizmodo: “Windows Phone 7 and the End of Hardware Choice” http://bit.ly/bv1rtM
Gizmodo: “Windows Phone 7 and the End of Hardware Choice”
Korneel De Feyter op February 23rd 2010, 17u 53At HelloFromEurope.com we want to give you the best stories about Zune, Windows Phone 7 and Microsoft in general. Whether it’s ours or not. We want to share with you the good articles we read about these topics and that’s why you’ll see more external posts in the future. If we believe that a certain article or opinion could be interesting for you, we’ll share it with you.
Windows Phone 7 is a new beginning for Microsoft, and at the same time, an ending. The epoch of the “slap our software on any old hardware” open platform is dead.
There’s a spectrum of hardware and software integration. At one end, you have the likes of Apple, RIM and Nintendo who create software and design the hardware that it runs on. It’s controlled and tightly integrated top-to-bottom. At the other end, you have the classic Microsoft model—they just create the software, and a hardware company like Dell or HTC or Joe’s Mom buys a license to install it on their machine, which they sell to you. (FWIW, Microsoft would argue they’re in the middle, with open source, that is, “unstructured openness,” down on the other, wild ‘n’ crazy end.) In the center, you have a mix—there’s still a split between software and hardware, but one side dictates more stringently what’s required of the other side, or they work more closely together, so it’s sorta integrated, but sorta not.
Gizmodo: Microsoft, Into the L…
Korneel De Feyter op February 18th 2010, 22u 26Gizmodo: Microsoft, Into the Light: The Unofficial Windows Phone 7 Strategy http://bit.ly/coYmdL
For those who can’t get enough…
Korneel De Feyter op February 18th 2010, 19u 44For those who can’t get enough about the new Windows Phone 7: 2 articles about everything you wanted to know about it http://bit.ly/aFFVZ3
If you can’t get enough: two ultimate guides to Windows Phone 7 Series
Korneel De Feyter op February 18th 2010, 14u 31If you really can’t get enough about Microsoft’s latest mobile OS, here are two very extensive guides covering Windows Phone 7 Series.
Gizmodo:
Windows Phone 7 Series: Everything Is Different Now
Engadget:
Windows Phone 7 Series: everything you ever wanted to know
Bonus: Gizmodo: Windows Phone 7 Interface: Microsoft Has Out-Appled Apple
Zune music and video services …
Korneel De Feyter op February 16th 2010, 17u 22Zune music and video services to be available (outside the US) inside Europe http://bit.ly/cxs58f thanks to Windows Phone 7 Series




