Our Windows Phone 7 Review

I’ve had the pleasure of using a Windows Phone 7 device as my main phone for the past two months. There have been some little annoyances, but as you’ll see, WP7 is a very convincing platform.

Please note, this was on pre-release hardware, and until fairly recently, was pre-release software as well. Things may well have changed since this was written.

Interface

The interface is probably the thing that’s most likely to tempt people to WP7 over other platforms. It’s something completely new, and something “authentically digital” that hasn’t been seen before. The whole concept is based around having clean and clear glanceable information, rather than having yet another “app for that”. The text heavy design language (known internally as Metro) does a lot to aid that cause, and the live tiles which we’ll cover in a bit also give WP7 a leg up on the competition.

IMAG0742IMAG0743

Even on the lock screen, the Metro concepts show through, with large fonts for the things that you’re most likely to check regularly (the time) and information like the next appointment and any missed calls, texts or emails shown on the screen. A simple swipe up brings you to the home screen, with blocks of bright colours on a plain background. This is probably the thing that most divides opinion, there’s not a whole lot of subtlety to be had from bright squares on black, and if you like pretty coloured icons, this definitely isn’t the place to look!

IMAG0748

It’s an effect that grows with you over time, though, and the information that can be gleamed from the larger (but fewer) icons does really boost the “glance and go” tag line. For example, you can get the next appointment shown, alongside counters for emails. This feature will get better when the marketplace opens up, as it would be possible to have something like a weather application showing you a weather forecast, or a stocks application showing recent changes.

IMAG0776[4]IMAG0777IMAG0778

So great is the obsession with hiding anything not immediately useful that the title bar actively hides all information but the time. A press on the top few pixels of the screen does bring it back though.

Sometimes, the interface can be a little dull, and perhaps not as flashy as things like the iPhone, or Android, but it puts information, rather than shininess first, and at that, it’s pretty much unparalleled.

IMAG0765[4]IMAG0766IMAG0767IMAG0768IMAG0769IMAG0770

Theming wise, there are two options, “Background” and “Accent colour”. The background colour is the overall feel of the OS, dark, or light. By default, it’s dark, and this is because it’s designed with AMOLED screens, and black has significantly lower power usage on AMOLED screens than white does. The accent colour is used to highlight information, and is used to great effect in a demo weather application. There are a variety of colour options available, though some should definitely be avoided (magenta on a light background is a rather painful experience). OEMs are allowed to add one accent colour to the mix, but that’s the limit of OEM theming. There’s no way to change icons or anything like that, so WP7 is quite limited in that respect.

IMAG0771IMAG0772IMAG0773IMAG0774IMAG0775

The keyboard is for all intents and purposes excellent. It’s a standard QWERTY layout, and works in both portrait and landscape. It also changes colour with the theme of the application/device. It’s black text on a white background in “light” themes, and the opposite in “dark” themes. The auto correction is very good, with the ability to correct virtually everything I’ve typed – it’s even good enough to be able to text without looking, and that’s an achievement for a SIP. If you do mistype a word (even if you’ve skipped over it and moved on the the next sentence, a tap on that word brings up a sliding panel of all the possible words you might have typed, and a simple tap on one changes it. This is reminiscent of the way the Windows Mobile (without the third party keyboards) handled spell checking, and it’s one of the few things that’s been carried over. The typing experience will vary with different hardware/devices, but on the devices I’ve tried, it’s been very very good.

IMAG0780IMAG0779[4]

The Metro design language has a few things that should be consistent between apps. The “Application Bar” replaces the text based softkeys of WM6.5 with small graphics similar to WM2003, and an expandable bar that can house less commonly used functions. Context menus also exist, and can be brought up with a tap and hold on any object that supports them.

The other big design idea with Metro is the concept of the Panorama or Pivot. There have been countless demos of these, so it’s not worth going too much in to detail on them, but the basic idea is a small window on a much larger space. This fits with the swiping gestures that are used so often in WP7, and the typography helps to hint that a swipe to the left or right will lead you to things.

1_thumb_046A3FE7[1]

Pivots differ from Panoramas in that they’re a list of lists, rather than a single page that you look at a part of. This works well for things like the mailboxes, where you can swipe between certain areas (flagged, urgent, unread etc).

The implementations for both these ideas are very slick, and with the latest tool release, developers have been able to build their own applications using them.

Built in software

IMAG0750IMAG0751

The Email client is pretty much spot on. It supports IMAP, POP, Hotmail/Live and Exchange ActiveSync push email, as well as full HTML support, and the interface is brilliant to boot. One of the key styles of the Metro design language is used in the mail program, the Pivot. It lets you quickly switch between things like urgent, unread, and flagged (if supported) with a simple swipe left or right.

IMAG0752IMAG0753

Selecting multiple emails is very quick, you just tap at the left side of an email, and a checkbox pops up, at which point it’s possible to mark as read or unread, move, delete, or flag (if your mail service lets you, which Hotmail doesn’t, but EAS does).

IMAG0754IMAG0755

Access to folders other than the inbox is equally simple, a tap on the picture of a folder lets you pick from commonly used folders, or all folders.

IMAG0756IMAG0757

For anyone use to Windows Mobile, the settings for messaging are remarkably easy to use, instead of a massive number of pages filled with very little information, there are now two. One that lets you change quick settings like automatically BCC’ing yourself (a feature I’ve not noticed on any other smartphone I’ve used), and one for setting up synchronisation settings such as how frequently to sync, and what server address to use.

IMAG0758IMAG0759

By default, emails are shown without downloading any images (this is done for privacy reasons apparently), and there’s no way to change that to automatically download. Once you’ve viewed an email with images that need to be downloaded, it does at least cache them and save having to force it to download again. WP7 supports full HTML emails, and does a great job displaying emails even if very image heavy. Pinch to zoom is supported, though text doesn’t reflow, which can be a little annoying at times.

IMAG0760

My biggest annoyance with the email client is a lack of a single messaging program. I don’t want a unified inbox, if I did, I wouldn’t use 5 different email accounts, I’d use one, but what I do want is something like Windows Mobile, where a swipe left or right takes you in to a different mailbox. As it is, you need an icon for each mailbox, and that clutters things up. I’m sure many people would like a unified inbox as well though.

IMAG0763IMAG0764

SMS is a great experience as well, though the first possible annoyance becomes obvious very quickly. There’s no way to have non-threaded SMS. For many, this won’t be an issue, but I can see it getting annoying to some (including me). On the bright side, conversations are handled very well, and even in threads of over a thousand texts, there’s no noticeable slow down, and no “tap here to see older messages”. I haven’t had the phone long enough to try longer streams of texts, but I’m fairly sure WP7 will cope.

Phone calls will be dependent on the phone and network you’re on as well as the signal you have, but the dialler is something none of those will change. Unfortunately, it’s lacking massively in both features and design. The first thing that hits you is a list of recent calls (both outward, and inward) with missed calls highlighted. This in itself isn’t a huge issue, but with the lack of hardware call buttons, there’s no quick way to get to the dial pad, and that’s annoying. When you do finally get to the dial pad (it’s the middle button in the app bar by the way), it’s lacking a lot as well. There’s no smart dialling. At all. You either have to know the number, or call someone from the contacts list, and that kind of makes the phone app a bit pointless. Why go via the phone app, when the people hub does a better job of letting you call people?

Final thoughts

Up until the RTM, there was no way to delete just one text of a conversation. You used to have to delete the entire conversation, or just live with whatever was shown. From the fact that things like that have changed in the past few weeks, it’s clear that Microsoft listen to what people want, and will add things, or adjust software to make the OS work as people want it.

From features like the selection of a folder to view, it’s clear that a lot of work has been done on the details, and that microsoft really are commited to perfecting the OS with a few key features, instead of just putting more and more in to it in ways that make it harder to use.

11

About Surur

Site Admin and Windows Phone enthusiast, he has been using Windows Mobile devices since before they were called PocketPC’s. He is currently sporting a HTC 7 Trophy.

  • http://www.martinschmidler.com martinschmidler

    Although it´s prototype hardware / software: How is battery life? Some described it to be one of the weak spots of WP7. Also, how about app loading/start-up times? Engadget notes that "The Harvest" took several minutes to load…. ?!

    • Sharkaat

      Battery life was described by Miniman some time ago and it was horribly low (as I recall), however he continually articulated it is preproduction device. Things have certainly changed in production devices and OS, so I wouldn't worry too much about that. I expect one full day of usage on most of devices that are to come. Perhaps a bit more on devices that will sport amoled screen and have user setting of a black bacground.

      Regarding startup times – engadget had an enormous flaw while stating "Everything takes forever to load" with a slight comment from me that "Everything" was ONLY a game Harvest. Not a single other app, either shown or only written. And that makes "everything".

      All other apps/games shown in videos loaded in seconds…I really hate how they report on many gadgets that are non-Apple. Biased bloody quasi-journalism.

  • dropqube

    Wait – you kept this secret from us? I assume you had signed a NDA ;)

    And what's up with the site? The huge downtimes are some kind of a bummer :(

  • mussab

    I keep commenting in this post, but my comments keep disappearing!

    Is it on purpose or a flaw in the commenting system?

    • http://wmpoweruser.com wmpoweruser

      I can see your post :) Some times when you comment too fast in the row it can trigger the spam filters.

      • mussab

        Thanks

        It is there now :)

  • mussab

    Oops, wrong post!

    Good review by the way :)

  • Eric

    MY TOP ISSUES…

    -Better app switching (the back button does not cut it and start menu)
    -Copy+paste(RTM build 85% of what we need for copy paste is there)
    -Voicecommand/tellme but on steroids
    -Ability to change default browser (opera/fennec/skyfire)

    My words on multitasking, this topic seems to be misunderstood….
    -FOR SELECT APPS that are allowed onto the IRIS WP7 development framework, THEY should be allowed to fully multitask. I think this is the case so I am happy.
    For everything else not on IRIS the approach taken HERE makes sense.

    Things that will come eventually/other quirks

    * No videocalling(this could be coming, qik/skype/windows live messenger/be carrier dependent.)
    * No Flash or Silverlight support in the web browser(this is coming)
    * No internet tethering support(this is apparently coming or carrier dependent)
    * No Bluetooth file transfers(For Pictures/Documents?? come on MS)
    * No USB mass storage mode( Not every computer i will be going on will have ZUNE software)

  • bch

    Can someone clarify on whether you can e-mail a Word or Excel document? The linked review suggested it's not possible to send any Office doc, save One Note, via e-mail. It's not clear that you can't send the doc from the Word app via e-mail, or whether you simply can't attach a doc as an attachment directly from the e-mail app.

    • bch

      By linked review, I meant the review at GSMArena.

  • dtreo

    "My biggest annoyance with the email client is a lack of a single messaging program. I don’t want a unified inbox, if I did, I wouldn’t use 5 different email accounts, I’d use one, but what I do want is something like Windows Mobile, where a swipe left or right takes you in to a different mailbox. As it is, you need an icon for each mailbox, and that clutters things up. I’m sure many people would like a unified inbox as well though."

    I agree very much on this point. And the lack of smart dialing. That's ridiculous not to have on a modern smartphone. Still, I hope I like this new OS once I get the chance to try, coming from years on WinMo. I've given up trying to switch to Blackberry and always return to WinMo after a few days.

Scan QR Codes, UPC, EAN, Code 39/128 or ITF barcodes on your Windows Phone 7 to find best prices online. Enjoy slots? Blackjack? Video Poker? Play Crazy Casino FREE! #1 FREE Solitaire on WP7 If your a fan of Pong then you will love this game. Heavenly Skies. Save the universe! Are you ready? A rewarding mix of match 3 and tetris gameplay Free, Live Tile support for Word Of The Day and so much more. Why NOT try it out? Set up reminders with only two taps. Supports also text reminders and voice reminders. Download the best puzzle game in WP7 Marketplace for FREE! Are you a good Alchemist ? Use your brain to discover Atomic Energy, Chuck Norris, Angry Birds and 1400 more ! Fun puzzle game with over 150 levels! Fully featured, beautifully designed WP7 YouTube app. u.n.i MEGA PACK (FREE), the ultimate addictive top GAMES bundle for Windows Phone 7! 7+ and growing! Highly addictive word game designed for adrenaline junkies. Practice locally, but then are you fast enough to compete online? Google RSS reader Windows Phone WP7 The smartest Google reader app. Air Soccer Tour Air Soccer Fever - Realtime Online Multiplayer casual soccer game for FREE Beat the Story Mode. When your done Bring your skill online. Rank up by winning online matches. Have 1 on 1's with anyone! Global Online Multiplayer! Newest devices leaks, online charts and ultimate performance benchmark for every Windows Phone. Every day, get great app deals from Windows Phone developers pushed to you! Quick Tiles, a fully featured live tile editor for Windows Phone. Great sports app for NFL, NBA, MLB, NHL. Pin scores/games to live tile on your home screen. MobileFax gives you the opportunity to send fax pages from your mobile phone anytime, anywhere ! WP7 Exclusive version of Hanging with Friends Fabulously fun, lovable, crazy! Bubble Pong Championship A remake of the classic snake game. The snake wants to grow so don't wait and help her!

Promote your app on WMPoweruser.com
Wholesale Cell Phones

Nokia LCD, Flex Cable,Wholesale phone partstrusted supplier.

Find the latest mobile phones at the cheapest prices at mobilephones.org.uk

Cell Phone Accessories

canon dslr cameras
See The Smartphone Database for the latest smartphone specs.

Windows Phone 7 Apps