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Starting with the Microsoft KIN ONE and KIN TWO mid 2010, the Zune music services and features from the Zune HD became available on Microsoft's mobile phones. Shortly following the failure of the KIN line, Windows Phone 7 released and included the same Zune music app that was present on KIN.
Unfortunately, Microsoft no longer makes the Zune software available with all Zune services closing down several years ago. However, the download is available online where people have stored it themselves.
Years after the launch of the iPod, Microsoft introduced its own competitor. The Zune MP3 player faded away seemingly as quickly as it arrived.
Microsoft may have killed off its flagship MP3 player nearly a decade ago, but these fans are keeping their enthusiasm alive.
Microsoft’s Zune doesn’t ooze the iPod’s svelte sexiness, but inside that boxy casing beats a high tech heart with a state-of-the-art user interface, wireless networking, radio and a killer screen for movies
Calamity has been avoided, and justice for woefully underappreciated noughties hardware served: Microsoft has fixed an issue in Windows 11 affecting compatibility with the Zune MP3 player.
It's been an unnecessarily slow, cruel death for Zune. Microsoft's music service—which lets Zune hardware users stream and download tracks—was left to wither on the vine and quietly die.
Zune is a discontinued software program that was developed by Microsoft for Windows [1] that functions as a full media player, library, media streaming server, [2] mobile device management, and interface for the discontinued Zune Marketplace.
Zune turned 13 years old in 2019. While it's long gone, and it never had a chance of stopping iPod's domination, it's still my favorite Microsoft product of all time.
A Microsoft product in an era of poptimism. Zune was many things to many people in the five and a half short years it was with us; it was an early streaming service, an inflight playlist...