Kin – Signature9 http://198.46.88.49 Lifestyle Intelligence Thu, 01 Jul 2010 02:46:40 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.3.4 Microsoft Kin is Done Less Than 2 Months After Launching http://198.46.88.49/electrotech/microsoft-kin-is-done-less-than-2-months-after-launching http://198.46.88.49/electrotech/microsoft-kin-is-done-less-than-2-months-after-launching#respond Thu, 01 Jul 2010 02:46:40 +0000 http://198.46.88.49/?p=13587 KIN ONE and TWO
Microsoft hasn’t had much luck with it’s social-centric semi-smartphone platform, Kin.  Now it looks like that misfortune has finally caught up with the software juggernaut.  Until now, Microsoft had planned to launch the Kin platform in Europe in the Fall of 2010, right around the time when Windows Phone 7 would likely be hitting. {Engadget}

Now Microsoft has announced that Kin will not be coming to Europe, and that it will be moving those who are still on the Kin team to the Windows Phone 7 team, which would hopefully brings some of Kin to the new smartphone platform.  Microsoft will still continue selling the Kin One and Two with Verizon, but it doesn’t look like we’ll be seeing it on any other carriers any time soon, as in not ever.

According to report from Engadget, it looks like Kin may have been doomed from the start.  Microsoft had Danger, the guys who did the original software on the Sidekick, switch from building on top of Danger and switching to a Windows CE-based system.  That delay bothered Verizon, the partner for Kin, and possibly ruined any chance at getting the cheaper data plans the Kin so desperately needed in order to succeed.  With smartphone pricing and the typical expensive data plans, the Kin would ultimately fail before even getting a chance – even with Best Buy offering them up for free.  There’s a lot more corporate politics over at the Engadget story which makes for an interesting read.

The Kin seemed like a great idea, even without the apps.  Connecting to social networks easily along with the cute form factor of the Kin One seemed perfect for the teenage market.  The fact that most of it’s users wouldn’t be able to afford or convince their parents to pay up for a data plan was a major issue, when it got to that point, an iPhone or Droid would seem to make much more sense.

The Kin Studio was perhaps the greatest idea, and hopefully is something that finds it’s way into Windows Phone 7 when that launches, likely in October.  Being able to find and send/upload/download all the photos taken on your phone arranged in chronological order would be fantastic.  It might be too late in WP7’s development cycle to implement it, but it could always come as an update later on, or even a cheap pay-per-month service if it was really needed.

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Best Buy is Giving the Kin One Away Free and Selling the Kin Two for $50 http://198.46.88.49/electrotech/best-buy-is-giving-the-kin-one-away-free-and-selling-the-kin-two-for-50 http://198.46.88.49/electrotech/best-buy-is-giving-the-kin-one-away-free-and-selling-the-kin-two-for-50#respond Thu, 03 Jun 2010 22:22:24 +0000 http://198.46.88.49/?p=12589 Best Buy seems to be be the place to go for smartphones as of late.  Does the phone have a ridiculous mail-in rebate like the upcoming EVO 4G?  Best Buy will just take it off the price.  Does the phone cost about $50 too much for the intended market?  Best Buy will solve that problem as well.

The Kin phones from Microsoft launched last month, with the Kin One costing $50 and the Kin Two costing $100 after rebate.  The phones are somewhere between a feature phone and smartphone, aimed directly at pre-teens to those in their early twenties.  The only problem was that the phones were just a bit too expensive for that market.  Best Buy has answered by lowering the phones by $50 each, bringing the Kin One to free on a two-year contract, and the Kin Two to $50 with a two-year contract. {Engadget}

That still doesn’t solve the problem of the $30 data contract required for the phones, however.  With actual phone service, the total comes in around $70/month. That, unfortunately for Best Buy, is left up to Verizon Wireless and Microsoft.  Given the phones’ market, it’s more likely that the users parents would be buying the phones and paying the contracts every month.  It’s not very likely that there are a lot of parents who are willing to spend an extra $30 per month on a phone that can only really use Twitter, Facebook and the mobile web, but coupled with enough pressure from teens the free price tag of the Kin One could be convincing.  Still, with the price of the monthly data plan, we’re betting that the tech savvy teens will save their leverage to get a Palm Pre Plus or Droid Incredible instead.

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