Microsoft's 'Project Pink' Phones Seek Younger Audience
Microsoft is expected to finally introduce the two smartphones in its
project code-named "Pink" on Monday, April 12. The company sent invitations to
select journalists for a San Francisco
event, with the title "It's Time to Share."
The phones have been the stuff of rumors for months, with their
reported names-Turtle and Pure-being leaked in September 2009, followed images
in March. Both are expected to be slider phones with large touch screens
and QWERTY keypads, with the Turtle said to be named for its boxier shape.
While Microsoft has designed the software, online services and hardware, the
phones will be made by Sharp and available on the Verizon Wireless network
later in April, according to the Wall Street
Journal, which on April 6 quoted "people familiar with the matter."
Struggling to regain market share and reinvigorate its branding, particularly
as increasing numbers of Android-based handsets join the market, Microsoft
introduced a new mobile operating system, Windows Phone 7, earlier in the year,
and analysts
believe it may offer the phone maker new traction with consumers.
Windows
Phone 7 is expected to be released in time for the 2010 holiday season;
consequently, it's said the Project Pink phones won't run this latest software
but a variation. The phones are being geared toward a young demographic, with
Microsoft looking to mimic the success it saw with the Sidekick flip-screen
phone after acquiring startup Danger in 2008. After
the acquisition, it was Sharp that made the Sidekick for Microsoft.
According to the Journal, "The software on the new Pink phones resembles
elements of the Windows Phone 7 software, but devices that run on the two
technologies aren't expected to be able to run the same applications."
Microsoft desperately needs a homerun, and some Sidekick-level success could
certainly work wonders on its slipping market share. The latest quarterly
report from comScore showed Microsoft to be well behind leaders Research In
Motion and Apple, and with a hustling Google at its heels.
In the three-month period ending in February 2010, Microsoft
held 15.1 percent of the smartphone OS market share in the United States,
which was down from 19.1 percent the quarter before, according to comScore.
By contrast, during the same period, fourth-place Google jumped its market
share from 3.8 percent in November to 9 percent by February, while Palm,
falling to fifth place, fell from 7.2 percent in November to 5.4 percent in
February.
