▲ | Zambyte 21 hours ago | |||||||||||||
Can you elaborate on what you enjoyed about the Windows Phone? I've heard people say they liked it, but I've never really dug into why before. | ||||||||||||||
▲ | mrweasel 20 hours ago | parent | next [-] | |||||||||||||
The UI was very good. The tiles didn't work on the desktop (Windows 8) but it make a lot of sense on the phone. Every touchable element was large enough that you'd never miss. The UI itself ensured a very consistent experience. I assume that you could do more custom apps, but most apps I used conformed to the general look an feel of the operating system. One thing I don't think enough people mentions is the messaging app. It integrated with Facebook, before Facebook Messenger. This might not be a big thing today, with people leaving Facebook, but it was absolutely brilliant back then. Basically like iMessage, but with Facebook as the non-SMS protocol. I think it may also have integrated with LinkedIn, I don't recall, but it was suppose to just merge all your contacts into one messaging app. As much as I dislike Windows on the desktop, Windows Phone made perfect sense. The UI was completely tailored to the touchscreen and was so easy it use and navigate. It's a real shame it didn't take of. In some sense Microsoft should have treated it more like Windows on the desktop and aggressively offered it to OEMs. | ||||||||||||||
▲ | doubled112 21 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] | |||||||||||||
Windows Phone was really snappy even on the low end devices. Android at the time had significant lag issues. The UI was fairly consistent. There was no guessing what was a button, what an accidental drag would do, etc. The live squares on the homepage, in my opinion, are still better than anything iOS has come up with. | ||||||||||||||
▲ | no_wizard 21 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] | |||||||||||||
In my opinion it’s this: The interface was incredibly fast and intuitive. It was slick and easy to understand but felt modern at the same time. The font felt timeless, it had the best camera app for the time, which was a time where amazing mobile phone cameras were just starting to become a thing (Nokia famously made a 42 megapixel camera for their flagship windows phone and the pics were gorgeous) The first party software was really fast and stable. They were also some of the first phones I ever used with proper OLED screens If you ever get a chance to use one it’s worth it even if it’s only for a day. Really changes one’s perspective on what’s possible with mobile devices. IMO nothing has captured that magic again | ||||||||||||||
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▲ | sunaookami 21 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] | |||||||||||||
Not OP but I also had a Windows Phone (8). It had a consistent design in every app and it just "felt" good to use. The inboxed apps were great (surprisingly!) and the phones themselves were quite cheap. Windows Phone was optimized for low RAM phones so it ran smooth there. I also miss the keyboard, I rarely mistyped which happens constantly with GBoard. Haven't found a replacement that doesn't suck yet... It's hard to put into words because you have had to use it to understand! I despise Windows 10 Mobile though - it killed the whole platform and made the OS unbearably slow. It was full of bugs and it was clear that it was the beginning of the end for Microsoft's mobile amibitions. I use Android now but it's a mess. Google can't decide on a consistent UI + UX and everything is all over the place. | ||||||||||||||
▲ | nguyenkien 20 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | |||||||||||||
Everything feel smooth, on par with iOS. Unfortunate there no quality apps for it. If you want a detox phone (like light phone) just get an old WP, it's cheaper. |