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July 27, 2011 12:57 PM

Windows 8 Start Screen and Windows Phone Mango Preview

Windows IT Pro
InstantDoc ID #139894
Rating: (32)


Windows 8 Start Screen

PROS: A single UI that works well across devices (PCs, phones, Xbox) and user scenarios (home, work, server)

CONS: Such a dramatic UI change requires retraining

RATING: 5 out of 5

RECOMMENDATION: Microsoft has been planning for quite some time now to bring a new, cohesive user experience to virtually every end-user product it makes: phones and tablets, of course, but also notebook and desktop PCs, the living room, and, I think (or at least hope), the server. Our first peek at this user experience was the Windows Phone OS “Metro” UI, but now that we’ve seen this UI implemented in the Windows 8 Start screen as well, it’s starting to all come together. What’s amazing is that Microsoft was able to create a single UI that works well on phones, ARM-based slate, x86/x64-based slate, and convertible tablets, netbooks, notebooks, Ultrabooks, PC desktops, the Xbox 360 and, perhaps, media center PCs (and, I hope, the server). This single UI can be controlled with touch and multitouch, with keyboard and mouse, with a remote control or Xbox 360 hand controller, or with voice or Kinect-based hand gestures in the air. And it works.

CONTACT: Microsoft

DISCUSSION: SuperSite for Windows: Three Screens: Celebrating Microsoft's Cohesive New User Experience Strategy



Windows Phone Mango Preview

PROS: Free; fills in many functional gaps in the initial release; deep integration with online services

CONS: Still no way for developers to integrate their services into Windows Phone hubs

RATING: 4 out of 5

RECOMMENDATION: Microsoft will provide Windows Phone Mango as a free update to all existing Windows Phone 7 handsets, so there’s some value in that. Mango improves the platform’s capabilities while using the same basic user experience, so the upgrade will be seamless and painless from a user perspective. Although Mango doesn’t address some of the version 1 shortcomings, it adds so many useful features and fixes so many of the early complaints that I find it hard to criticize this release with any enthusiasm. I’ll keep using it and report back when we get closer to the final release—but Mango looks great so far.

CONTACT: Microsoft

DISCUSSION: SuperSite for Windows: Hands on with Windows Phone "Mango"

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Comments
  • MAGIX5
    9 months ago
    Aug 01, 2011

    Since Office 2007 Microsoft has pursued terrible interfaces. They continue to double down and cram these down our throats. The only thing they got right on Windows 7 was the marketing. 99% of my clients will not get a new pc's without anything but XP Pro. When they see Office 2010 have me down grade them to Office 2003, and now they are going to force a mobile phone interface on us? An interface that is so unpopular they can not give the phones away. What Microsoft needs are reviewers that do not turn to Redmond Washington five times a day and give homage. Reviewers that will stand up to them and tell them when they are wrong. Reviewers that will think about the people who are not geeks and do not want new toys to play with, just something simple and works. Microsoft and its users will be better off.

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