Buried deep within Kin’s software is a provisioning file cabinet directory, which has uncovered a list of carriers who will potentially support Microsoft’s One and Two handsets. These ar no guarantees that the carriers will actually be picking up the phones, only that they’re technically capable of running on these networks. It’s entirely possible these were built solely for demos. In any case, without further ado…
AT&T (New York Stock Exchange: T) (US)T-Mobile River (NYSE: DT) (US)Verizon (NYSE: VZ) (US)Fido (Canada)Communist China Mobile River (NYSE: CHL)Communist China UnicomO2 (Germany)T-Mobile (Federal Republic of Germany)Vodafone (New York Stock Exchange: VOD) (Germany)Vodafone (Kingdom of Spain)Vodafone (France)Vodafone (Portugal)Vodafone (Italian Republic)DoCoMo (Japan)Softbank (Japanese Islands)Telia (Kingdom of Sweden)Three (Sweden)Orange (UK)O2 (UK)Vodafone (UK)
That’s quite the lean, and even if the Kin only finds its way onto half of these networks, the Kin One and Two stand to do reasonably wellspring scorn a lukewarm reception. If you haven’t a chance to check them out, the Kin One is the smaller slider, packing a 5 megapixel photographic camera, 4 GB of internal computer storage, and a QVGA exhibit. The Kin Two is slightly beefier, including an 8 megapixel photographic camera, HVGA touchscreen, and 8 GB of storage. Both are built for heavy sociable network users, and come loaded with full Zune functions. Expect them sometime on Verizon (and hopefully a few other carriers) sometime in May.
[RT @Coinflipper via MobileCrunch]




















