Gizmodo: “Windows Phone 7 and the End of Hardware Choice”

Korneel De Feyter on February 23rd 2010, 17:53

At 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.

Read further on Gizmodo

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If you can’t get enough: two ultimate guides to Windows Phone 7 Series

Korneel De Feyter on February 18th 2010, 14:31

If 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

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Windows Phone 7 Series Marketplace images

Korneel De Feyter on February 16th 2010, 15:36


Microsoft showed all the major hubs that are present in the Windows Phone 7 Series OS, but it apparently forgot to show pictures of its Marketplace hub. Well, here you have them. The first picture shows us the main screen in the marketplace hub. Here you can choose between some sections of the marketplace, including: applications, games, music and podcasts. Gizmodo points out that the first two words Contoso and Fabrikam are place holders for Microsoft. It are two fictional company names they often use. It might be for the mobile operator app stores.

The first thing you’ll see when you open up the Marketplace is featured content. It’s — in this case — an application, but it could probably be music, podcast or a game as well.

If you dig deeper, to the application section, again some featured app would show up along with a list of other featured applications, new ones, a list of the most popular ones and subcategories.

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Forget about the Zune Phone, all you want is a Windows Phone

Korneel De Feyter on February 15th 2010, 19:10


Microsoft presented his Windows Phone 7 Series today at the Mobile World Congress 2010 in Barcelona and one thing I can tell you: it’s amazing.

When you watch videos about the Windows Phone 7 Series experience you’ll immediately see that the UI (User Interface) has a lot in common with the Zune HD, but is also very different.
The Windows Phone UI goes much deeper than the Zune HD’s. I was already amazed by the UI of the Zune HD, but this design takes mobile Operation Systems to a whole new level. You wanted a Zune Phone, well here, you got it. Not as a hardware device, but as a piece of software. This video makes me want to bury my old Nokia 3220 – which still works great after 5 years – and buy a Windows Phone right away.

The Windows Phone 7 Series will feature Zune and Xbox Live integration. So you’ll be able to get the best mobile video and music experience along with games on-the-go from Xbox LIVE, this means your phone will automatically be a “Xbox portable”.

According to Microsoft’s press release partners are already building phones for the new mobile OS and consumers would be able to buy a Windows Phone from Holidays 2010. Mobile operators AT&T, Deutsche Telekom AG, Orange, SFR, Sprint, Telecom Italia, Telefónica, Telstra, T-Mobile USA, Verizon Wireless and Vodafone, and manufacturers Dell, Garmin-Asus, HTC Corp., HP, LG, Samsung, Sony Ericsson, Toshiba and Qualcomm Inc are working on future Windows Phone 7 phones.

Microsoft tried to make a phone-experience that worked the way people want, they did that even from the hardware. Every Windows Phone will feature three buttons on the front: a back button, a home/windows button and a search button. Something else that’ll be on every Windows Phone is a capacitive touch screen (finger friendly) that enables multi-touch.

The great UI experience is brought to us by what Microsoft calls Windows Phone hubs.
This is what Microsoft says about them in their press release:

Read the rest of this entry »

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[dutch] Ballmer bevestigt komst Zune Software voor Windows Phone

Korneel De Feyter on October 6th 2009, 16:13


Tijdens een interview voor CNet Conversations bevestigt Steve Ballmer de komst van Zune Software voor Windows Phone (de nieuwe naam voor Windows Mobile).
Het is geen wereldschokkend nieuws – we wisten namelijk dat het er zat aan te komen –  maar die officiële aankondiging is er nu wel. De uitspraken van Ballmer zijn te bekijken in het onderstaande filmpje, 8:40 min verwijdert van het einde.

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