It's been about a year since he left Microsoft, but the J Allard  era came to a more definitive close yesterday, with the shuttering of  his brainchild, Pioneer Studios. Microsoft opened the incubation lab  more than three years ago as an entrepreneurial space where designers  could toy around with new consumer technologies. The tragically shelved Courier  tablet was first developed within Pioneer's exposed brick walls, where  Allard and his Alchemy Ventures team also worked on the Xbox, Zune and  Windows Phone 7. Now, however, a Microsoft spokeswoman has confirmed  that the downtown Seattle office is no longer occupied, telling CNET  that many of the lab's employees have either left, or moved on to  different positions within the company. Pioneer co-founder Georg  Petschnigg left Microsoft in April to pursue an "undisclosed new  venture," while fellow godfather Jonathan Harris is still at Redmond,  where he serves as "principle experience director," according to their  respective LinkedIn profiles. The spokeswoman didn't offer a specific  reason for the decision, but in a now-ominous video posted to  Microsoft's developer site back in October, Petschnigg acknowledged that  the unit's innovative spirit would frequently lead to dead ends. "Often  times our work just doesn't go anywhere," he explained, adding that  Pioneer would only pursue projects expected to bring in more than $100  million a year. "That's one of the perils of being an entrepreneur." See  the full video after the break.
 
 
 
        
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