Vodafone Also Release LG Optimus 7

As well as the HTC 7 Trophy, Vodafone now have on sale the LG Optimus 7 which is another Windows Phone 7 device and this one has a 5 megapixel camera with 720p video recording and also has 16GB memory which is twice what the Trophy has from HTC.

The Optimus 7 is free from £325 a month over 24 months which will get you the same as the Trophy so 500 Minutes, 250 Texts and 500MB of Internet use.

Link: Vodafone LG Optimus 7



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Vodafone Also Release LG Optimus 7

As well as the HTC 7 Trophy, Vodafone now have on sale the LG Optimus 7 which is another Windows Phone 7 device and this one has a 5 megapixel camera with 720p video recording and also has 16GB memory which is twice what the Trophy has from HTC.

The Optimus 7 is free from £325 a month over 24 months which will get you the same as the Trophy so 500 Minutes, 250 Texts and 500MB of Internet use.

Link: Vodafone LG Optimus 7



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HTC 7 Trophy Now At Vodafone

Vodafone have today announced officially the two Windows Phone 7 devices they are going to stock which are the LG Optimus and the HTC 7 Trophy.

The Trophy features a 3.8 inch screen, 5 megapixel camera with 720p video recording and LED flash plus 8GB internal storage and is available free from just £25 per month on a 24 month contract.  For that £25 a month you get 500 Minutes, 500 Texts and 500MB Internet.

Link: Vodafone HTC 7 Trophy



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HTC 7 Trophy Now At Vodafone

Vodafone have today announced officially the two Windows Phone 7 devices they are going to stock which are the LG Optimus and the HTC 7 Trophy.

The Trophy features a 3.8 inch screen, 5 megapixel camera with 720p video recording and LED flash plus 8GB internal storage and is available free from just £25 per month on a 24 month contract.  For that £25 a month you get 500 Minutes, 500 Texts and 500MB Internet.

Link: Vodafone HTC 7 Trophy



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Windows Phone 7 Arrives – Official Details

We’ve just had the official press release. Windows Phone 7 is now here. In Europe there’s some initial information about networks, although the release we have below only covers Orange, o2 and Vodafone in the UK – we presume that the other networks will be announcing something in due course.

Currently o2 have confirmed the HTC HD7, Orange will be picking up the HTC 7 Mozart and Samsung Omnia 7 whilst Vodafone will be getting the HTC 7 Trophy and the LG Optimus 7.

More news as we get it..



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Windows Phone 7 Arrives – Official Details

We’ve just had the official press release. Windows Phone 7 is now here. In Europe there’s some initial information about networks, although the release we have below only covers Orange, o2 and Vodafone in the UK – we presume that the other networks will be announcing something in due course.

Currently o2 have confirmed the HTC HD7, Orange will be picking up the HTC 7 Mozart and Samsung Omnia 7 whilst Vodafone will be getting the HTC 7 Trophy and the LG Optimus 7.

More news as we get it..



Read on and add your comments. Follow us on twitter too.


Windows Phone 7 Arrives – Official Details

We’ve just had the official press release. Windows Phone 7 is now here. In Europe there’s some initial information about networks, although the release we have below only covers Orange, o2 and Vodafone in the UK – we presume that the other networks will be announcing something in due course.

Currently o2 have confirmed the HTC HD7, Orange will be picking up the HTC 7 Mozart and Samsung Omnia 7 whilst Vodafone will be getting the HTC 7 Trophy and the LG Optimus 7.

More news as we get it..



Read on and add your comments. Follow us on twitter too.


Kin One and Kin Two Video Walk-Throughs

Once Again the guys at PocketNow are making me jealous, as they nab an ex-employee/current-Softie to give them a walk-through of the new Kin One and Kin Two devices announced by Microsoft.

The video above is a walk-through of the Kin One and some of the cool new Kin features, like the Kin Loop and the Kin Spot, the Zune software and the ZunePass, and the very connected 5 megapixel camera.

This next video is a nice tour of the Kin Two, which is the bigger, “bolder” Kin that features an 8 megapixel, HD-video capable camera and 8 gigs of storage (compared to 4 on the Kin One).

The charming young lady explains how the Kin Spot is “THE new way to share”, and how it skips the apps and focuses directly on the services and networks. This video includes a full demo of how the camera works and stores everything in the cloud, with a nice demo of the Kin Studio, too.

These Kin phones look terrific. I showed them to my 15-year-old daughter and she hasn’t stopped bugging me: “when can I upgrade!?” Luckily/sadly, while Verizon and Vodafone customers can expect these devices to drop next month, no word yet on who will carry them in Canada.

I hope at the very Microsoft upgrades MyPhone to work more like the Kin Studio – that’s awesome!

[via and via]

Windows Phone Family Gets Next of Kin

microsoft_verizon_sharp_vodafone_kin_phones Microsoft just announced the long awaited Project Pink details – now to be known as Kin. Using the themes of “Kindred Spirits”, two phones (imaginatively called the Kin 1 and the Kin2) feature a new UI on some hip-looking smartphones.

Built by Sharp, the two new Kin 1 and Kin 2 phones are heavy on the cameras! Microsoft has placed a huge emphasis on the quality of the cameras, “especially in dim light”, on the Kin 1 and Kin 2, which feature a 5 and 8 megapixel camera respectively. The Kin 2 even shoots 720p video.

Still on the multimedia side, the Kin phones will both ship with Zune app, including the Zune Service.

The Kin Loop

Kin takes the ‘hub’ idea of Windows Phone 7 and brings it to a lower-end, ‘amplified, not simplified’ OS. The Kin Loop is a customizable contact screen that pulls in the latest social networking feeds from all your friends. The latest Facebook, Twitter, MySpace and, of course, Windows Live updates will be pulled right onto the phone.

The Kin Spot

The Kin Spot is a cool feature that allows users to drag items from pretty much any screen onto “the spot” – pics, videos, web pges, search results, even contacts, then send them, txt them, upload them or otherwise begin a conversation with those items Everything is also geo-tagged, so you can pull up your pics on a Bing map. Cool ideas.

Kin Studio

Microsof’t’s MyPhone on steroids, the Kin phones automatically store everything you do – pictures, videos and communications – and displays them to you on a "timeline”. Almost creepy, but with the way our phones are integrated into our lives these days I suppose it makes sense.

Applications

The Kin 1 and Kin 2 also feature some essential and solid looking apps, namely a handy global search, a decent looking web browser that includes pinch-and-zoom.

microsoft_sharp_vodafone_verizon_kin_1_and_kin_2_pictures Microsoft has teamed up with Verizon and Vodafone for distribution and – just before signing off with the “the new Kin: the phone experience that connects what you love to the people you love – Microsoft said the phones would appear on shelves in May.

It would be easy to assume that the Kin is a bit of a knee-jerk reaction designed to stop the hemorrhaging while they get Windows Phone 7 to market. After all, Apple has just announced their iPhone OS4 and and dropped the iPad, and Android is grabbing market share quickly.

But let’s not forget that Project Pink has been around for years now, so this is not a reactionary move. Microsoft has made no secret of their plans to keep Windows Mobile 6.5x devices around under the “Classic” brand, so perhaps these Kin devices will stick around in the long run be lower-functioning family of devices.

Regardless of the future of the devices, the Kin Studio is not a product that was developed on the side. I firmly believe we’ll see this incorporated into the MyPhone experience and integrated tightly into both the Zune and Windows Phone 7 devices, plus I’m sure your XBox world.

To me, the most revolutionary thing about what I’ve seen of Windows Phone 7 is the reorganization of data around the hub idea, and that seems to be the biggest feature of these new Kin phones (in form of the Kin Loop). In that sense, I’m really eager to see how the market receives the Kin.

We’ll surely be digesting this announcement for a while… any thoughts from you guys though?

Goodbye Windows Mobile, Hello Windows Phone 7 Series

Microsoft officially launched Windows Phone 7 Series (previously referred to as Windows Mobile 7, Windows Phone 7, or even Photon) on Monday, dropping the gauntlet on what will shape up to be a mighty mobile battle come Christmas.

A whole new OS

Windows Phone 7 Series Phones, as the new devices will be officially known (yikes), will be a complete departure from the Windows Mobile devices we are all familiar with and feature a brand-new, possibly revolutionary UI. The Start menu? Gone. Touch elements designed for six-year-old fingers? Gone. In fact, Microsoft’s new OS is aiming to change the mobile phone paradigm by shifting away from an app-centric model to an experience or task-based system that groups your personal data, social networking streams, location-based services, and media sources into what Microsoft calls ‘hubs’ (more later)

Reflecting their determination to re-define the relationship between end-user and their phone, Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer announced at the Barcelona 2010 Mobile World Congress:

“In a crowded market, filled with phones that look the same and do the same things, I challenged the team to deliver a different kind of mobile experience. Windows Phone 7 marks a turning point toward phones that truly relfect the speed of people’s lives and their need to connect to other people and all kinds of seamless experiences.”

Joe Belfiore, vice president of Windows Phone, said it was time to stop thinking about mobile phones like PCs:

“A phone is not a PC, it’s a smaller, more intimate device,” he said. “Too many phones are made to look like PCs. We wanted to come up with a user design that was different, that moved beyond the metaphor of the PC.”

Live Tiles

windows_phone_7_live_tiles This ain’t your daddy’s Windows Phone. Microsoft has taken advantage of the fact that it is so late with this product to properly think out how people use their mobile devices. They have no doubt heard for years now about how un-finger-friendly Windows Mobile is and how counter-intuitive it can seem compared to its competition. They’ve seen people complain about icon overload and the app-to-app routine on the iPhone (one app for Facebook, one app for twittering, one app for YouTube, etc); The result? Live Tiles.

The new home screen on WP7 devices will consist of several vertically-scrollable live tiles. The main screen shows 5 live tiles: Internet Explorer, Phone, Text, People. Each of these boxes is “live” and auto-updates with real-time information from all of your various info sources. So when your friend updates his Facebook page, that update shows on the Friends tile. If you miss a phone call, the Phone tile updates to show the number of missed calls, and your most recent photos fade in and out in the Pictures tile.

Hubs

windows_phone_7_people_hub Clicking on any of these main live tiles will bring up the corresponding Hub. There are a bunch of default hubs that will ship with WP7: People, Games, Xbox Live, Pictures, Music & Video (with support for more than just Zune accounts), Zune, Office (with support for multiple exchange accounts), and of course the Marketplace. These hubs pull in data from all of your various sources and present it in a task-oriented manner, rather than using a separate app for each service you use.

For example, the above pic shows the People hub. The first screen you will see when you click on the People tile is the ‘Recent’ screen. Scrolling right will give you all of your peeps, scrolling right again will show you the What’s New tab, which lists all of your friends’ most recent social media updates,

Similarly, when you tap on the Music and Video tile, up pops the Zune menu. Scrolling to the right brings up your History, continuing to scroll brings up the “What’s New” tab, and then Apps that are music or video related. Hubs create an easy way to browse all of your data – both on-device and online – by topic or experience. Very cool.

windows_phone_7_music_and_video_hub X-Box and Zune Integration

While Microsoft’s mobile lately may have missed the mark, they have had remarkable success with their X-Box and Zune line. The X-Box model has been a decade in the making and Microsoft has earned a very respectable share of a competitive market – something it needs to do with WP7. The Zune HD was released last year to terrific reviews and great critical, if not commercial, success.

Microsoft is finally taking advantage of these successful platforms and fully integrating X-Box Live and Zune with Windows Phone 7 Series devices. Mobile gaming might be limited initially, but expect this to be a major component and battle ground in the coming year or two, and Microsoft (for once) has a clear advantage over rivals like Palm and Apple here.

As for Zune integration, you can almost thank the Zune for the new UI. Internally at Microsoft, the UI for the Zune HD was referred to as Metro; the same name they use to discuss the Windows Phone 7 Series interface. Beyond that, expect to see complete integration with the Zune service and any Zunes you might have lying around.

Manufacturers and Carriers

Just as with Windows Mobile, Microsoft has lined up a top-notch list of manufactures who are eager to start putting out Windows Phone 7 Series devices. The list includes longtime Windows Mobile supporters HTC, LG, Samsung and Toshiba, as well as Garmin-Asus, on-the-fence Sony Ericsson, and even Dell.

Unlike with Windows Mobile, however, and this is absolutely critical, Microsoft has imposed a Chassis requirement for all WP7 devices. This means that all WP7 phones will need have a minimum hardware spec that – so far – includes several mandatory hardware buttons (home, search and back), CPU and screen size/resolution requirements, plus an accelerometer, GPS, camera and other goodies.

This Chassis system should help maintain a good user experience and avoid manufacturers putting out shoddy hardware that gives Windows Phone 7 devices a bad rap.

Carriers will include all of the Big Four US carriers: AT&T, Sprint, T-Mobile and Verizon – as well as Deutsche Telekom, Orange, SFR, Telecom Italia, Telefonica, Telstra, and Vodafone. Rogers and Telus haven’t made any comment yet.

WP7: Do or Die for Microsoft

By most accounts, it’s do or die time for Microsoft. For whatever reason, most likely because they simply underestimated the growth of the smartphone/mobile market, Microsoft hasn’t taken the mobile space very seriously for the past four or five years… despite being one of the first out of the gate.

By the time the first Windows Phone 7 Series device hits the market, we’ll be looking at a new iPhone, a new version of Google’s Android, and an updated webOS from Palm… very serious competition for Windows Phones. If Microsoft blunders, they might just miss the last train out of the desktop station.

Windows Mobile 6.5 Helping Drive Sales

peter_chou_htc_ceoIs Windows Mobile 6.5 is helping to drive sales of HTC Windows Phones? According to HTC CEO Peter Chou:

HTC is currently cooperating with a number of carriers in Europe, including T-Mobile, Orange and Vodafone, to promote the sales of HTC HD2 and demand from those carriers is outpacing supply, Chou indicated.

Digitimes and HTCPedia read this as evidence that WinMo 6.5 is helping to sell devices, but you’ve got to wonder: HTC makes excellent quality devices, has completely replaced the Windows Mobile interface with TouchFlo, TouchFlo 3D, and now Sense and just re-branded themselves and launched a new, expanded marketing campaign… so is this demand for their devices thanks to Windows Mobile 6.5 or in spite of it?

Anyone care to hazard a guess?

Vodafone Launches LG GM750 Windows Phone

vodafone_LG_gm750

UK Windows Phone fans should be stoked: the new LG GM750 has just dropped on Vodafone running Windows Mobile 6.5! The LG GM-750 has pretty decent specs, including a 5mp camera, GPS, and a big, 3″ touch screen. This device is apparently exclusive to Vodafone, so enjoy, Brits!

Check out the LG GM-750 on Vodafone here.

ROM Updates for Vodafone and Orange Touch Pro2

htc-touch-pro-2_468HTC Touch Pro2 users on Orange and Vodafone should be happy to know that HTC has released official ROM updates for you folks!

Check out HTC UK’s support site to download the latest ROM for your device. The website doesn’t provide much info on what’s new, so feel free to give it a try and post some feedback!

Top 10: Most popular WinMo How-to's of 2008

With the year drawing to a close, it’s time to pull out the best that WindowsMobile Cool had to offer our readers this year in the way of comprehensive guides on everything from personalizing your WinMo phone to using your phone as a wireless modem.

Let’s take a look at WindowsMobile Cool’s most popular how-to guides of 2008:

Top 10: Most popular WinMo How-to’s of 2008

HTC Touch Viva, HTC Touch Pro launched in India

Officially announced today, Indian Windows Mobile users will soon be able to get their hands on the HTC Touch Pro and the HTC Touch Viva.

These two popular Windows Mobile devices will not be sold by any of the three major Indian mobile operators though (Airtel, Reliance, or Vodafone), it seems, as HTC has partnered with Idea Cellular for the release of these devices.

The HTC Touch Pro will be sold for the retail price of Rs. 34,900 ($708) and will be marketed as the HTC Touch Pro T7276 while the HTC Touch Viva will be available for Rs. 16,490 ($335) and will be called the HTC Touch Viva T2223.

No news yet on when they will go on sale but rumours have them available in the next few weeks.

[via]

Yeeehaw! It's the sister site Round Up!

Welcome to the first of a series of weekly round up posts gathering the best of the week’s content from WindowsMobile Cool’s sister sites BlackBerryCool and QuicklyBored!

Each Friday, starting NOW, I will be giving you a glimpse at some of the cool things that are going on in the BlackBerry world with highlights from BlackBerryCool and the biggest and best in mobile entertainment news with QuicklyBored.

So, what’s awesome this week on BlackBerryCool and QuicklyBored?

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