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        Microsoft Releasing Windows Phone 7 to Developers
        
        
        
			- By Kurt Mackie
 - July 19, 2010
 
		
        
		Microsoft's Windows Phone engineering team announced  yesterday that Windows Phone 7 (WP7) Series has reached the technical preview  stage.
Achieving that milestone means that developers will start  receiving WP7 prototypes from Microsoft's hardware partners in the "next  few weeks," according to Terry Myerson, CVP for Microsoft's Windows Phone engineering  team, in a blog  post. He said that Microsoft now is on a path to "create a different  take on mobile phone software, an experience we think many people will find fun  and refreshing …."
Microsoft has released  a beta of Windows Phone developer tools and described some of the changes  coming with the beta. New dev tool features include the integration of Expression  Blend 4, new APIs, framework consolidation and updated Silverlight control  templates. It takes more than an hour to install the toolkit, according to a  Microsoft blog.
During this technical preview stage, Microsoft has been  managing the distribution of the WP7 devices to developers. Brandon Watson, who  has been on the WP7 team for  three months, explained how Microsoft prioritizes distribution. Partners  get top priority, followed by ISVs and companies using Windows Mobile 6.x apps,  according to Watson. Last on the list are other WP7 developer groups.
"Finally, we are prioritizing for those committed  developers who are building apps for Windows Phone 7 and sharing their  knowledge about Silverlight, XNA and Windows Phone 7," Watson explained in a  blog post concerning this latter category of developer. The blog provides  tips on how these developers can get Microsoft's attention and possibly receive  a WP7 device.
A few product  reviews by media outlets have emerged. Microsoft has not actually disclosed  when WP7 products will appear on the market but Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer  hinted at the Microsoft Worldwide Partner Conference last week that it could  happen in the "next several months," at least for Windows 7-based  slate devices.
An early review in InfoWorld panned the device. Galen Gruman and others at InfoWorld described  WP7 as a "disaster" and "a platform that no carrier, device  maker, developer, or user should bother with."
Microsoft lately has been making sharp changes regarding its  mobile businesses. In  May, the company announced the exit of two long-time senior executives in  the Entertainment and Devices Division. By  July, Microsoft had killed its Kin phone, which was loosely said to be part  of the WP7 Series effort, although based on technology from Microsoft's Danger  acquisition.
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Kurt Mackie is senior news producer for 1105 Media's Converge360 group.