Posted on 10/21/2010 8:51:50 AM PDT by SmokingJoe
Good writers borrow, great writers steal, or so the saying goes. Microsoft's new Windows Phone 7 (WP7) operating system borrows heavily from Apple's iOS and Google's Android but then takes the interface and navigation in an intriguing new direction, offering a user experience that at least equals and in some ways surpasses them.
Yet WP7 is very much a work in progress; adopting it out of the gate requires something of the same leap of faith that the first iPhone or Android buyers took. Certainly, there's no expectation at launch that the application marketplace for Windows Phone will be anything like robust, and -- beautiful as it is -- the software doesn't always provide a smooth experience.
WP7-equipped phones are on sale now in Europe. On Nov. 8, three WP7 phones from AT&T -- the Samsung Focus, the LG Quantum and the HTC Surround -- will be available in the U.S., followed shortly by the HTC HD7 and the Dell Venue Pro from T-Mobile.
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The first thing you'll see when you fire up a WP7 phone is an interface that will knock your socks off. It's immediately apparent that Microsoft achieved at least three design goals:
1. Forget that Windows Mobile ever existed. Start with a clean sheet of paper.
2. Make a phone that is at least as tied to the cloud with Microsoft tools as anything Google could ever do.
3. Build an interface that's impossible to look at without getting information.
It's that third point that makes WP7 truly different from other phones. Where other smartphones use small icons that, aside from status badges, are pretty much static, Microsoft's large icons, which it calls tiles, are either in motion or tell you something substantive.
(Excerpt) Read more at computerworld.com ...
Those tiles are more than large enough to describe the information they lead to, are impossible to mis-tap and are easy for grown-ups to see, even with their glasses off. For example, tiles for e-mail accounts show the name of the account and the number of unread messages. The double-wide Calendar tile shows your next appointment.
The tiles on the Start screen are more than large enough to describe the information they lead to.Tiles don't have to be for applications, either; tiles for people or your Facebook feed are in constant motion, showing a photo on a contact tile or a mosaic of Facebook profile pictures. Tap a person tile, and you'll see a not just a list of phone numbers and e-mail addresses, but actual verbs: "call mobile," "text mobile," "map home address," "send e-mail."
The tiles can be slid around the screen, with the shimmy and tap familiar to iPhone users. Applications not on the Start page can be found by flicking the display to the left, revealing a long list of apps on significantly smaller icons. Any of them can be pinned to the Start page, where the icons become tiles.
When you wake a WP7 phone from sleep, the splash screen shows the time, the day and date, your next appointment, and the number of unread e-mails. Slide upwards to get to the Start page.
It soft spot seems to be apps. Will iPhone and Android developers develop for MS?
Yes they will, most of them already know .NET well enough to make the switch and migrating a Windows program to WP7 will be easier also. I’ve read reports that many developers say this will be the easiest platform to work on.
But is the deal as good? Costs, ownership, revenue, etc? Is MS going to develop competing apps?
Face book feed? Is that where I take a cream pie, smash it inside a book, then strap the book to my face?
Tell me what useful thing this does that a rotary phone with a longer coiled cord to the handset can't do?
Well the SDK was only release three weeks ago so we’ll have to wait and see on how the marketplace develops.
The app restrictions are similar to Apple when it comes to adult content but open otherwise (unlike apple). Developers will be getting 70% revenue from apps although we can still expect a good chuck to come from MS at first.
How did you find your way to the computer-thingy?
ROFL!
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