Ouch! Microsoft got a kick in the teeth today from one of its few Smartphone allies. Sendo, the UK handset maker, today announced that it's stopping all development on the Windows for Smartphone 2002 platform. It is instead signing a licence for Series 60, the Nokia smartphone platform erected upon the Symbian OS.
This is a blow for Microsoft - Sendo was supposed to launch its Z100 MS 'Stinger' handset this month into Spain and Italy. There must also be a question mark over the $12m that Microsoft has invested in Sendo, set up in 2000 by three former Philips execs.
So why is Sendo swapping horses mid-race? In a statement, Sendo chief exec Hugh Brogan, said the company conducted a review of its smart phone strategy in early fall. The conclusion was that the "Series 60 fully embraces both our mission and the new strategy".
The buzz-words for Series 60 are interoperability and open and common standards. The handset firms it appears prefer to sup with Nokia than with the Beast.
News source: The Reg