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Windows Phone Update: June 2010
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Not surprisingly, Microsoft continues to tweak and hone the look of the live tiles that differentiate the dynamic Windows Phone home screen from the more static grids of icons used by the competition. If you look back at the initial UI shown off in February, most of the live tiles are bland and featureless, and not very differentiated. But as these shots provided by Microsoft corporate vice president Terry Myerson, during his TechEd session Windows Phone 7: A New Kind of Phone, show, the Windows Phone UI is progressing nicely.

Before and after: The February build (left) compared to a more up-to-date build (right) of Windows Phone.
More specifically, the plain Mail icon from the February build has been replaced by more expressive Outlook and Windows Live icons, each of which can appear on mail-based tiles based on the type of account being used. And the Marketplace tile has a nice look that mimics the current Windows Mobile-based Marketplace imagery.
And while you can't see this in the shots above, during the live demo, you could see some interesting "squishing" effects that I first noticed during my hands-on time back in May. When you scroll to the bottom of a list of tiles or icons, it sort of bounces into the bottom. But you can also touch a tile and cause it to squish a bit, a visual cue that you can do something with that object.
Myerson also provided a more up-to-date look at the various hubs, or integrated panoramic experiences, that Microsoft plans to include with Windows Phone. Interestingly, some of these haven't changed at all since February, but the Music + Video view is updated, and the Applications view (from within Marketplace) is new.

A more up-to-date look at the Windows Phone hubs.
There's more going on with the Marketplace, but I don't believe that was ever shown off at TechEd, so I'll have to hold back on that until I'm sure. But even with these small, subtle changes, it's obvious that work is progressing and that Microsoft is inching ever closer to the final design.
When I did visit the Microsoft campus back in May, I mocked up a semi-complete Windows Phone 7 home screen based on what I had seen and the screenshots I was able to take. Now that all of the information seen in that mockup are public, I can present it here. Note that this is the "full" home screen and that the Windows Phone screen acts as a portal into that view, displaying only a portion of it at a time. So it's a tall image that the phone would normally scroll down over.

My Windows phone mockup.
--Paul Thurrott
June 13, 2010

Interested in Windows Phone 7? I wrote the book! Read along as I write about the writing process and blog about my experiences with Windows Phone 7 at my Windows Phone Secrets blog. The book should be available in mid-October.
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