Maybe touch screens are the future, and it is what we've seen in the modern Star Trek episodes, and it does look functional and logical there. But do we really want the Windows Phone GUI as a desktop interface?
Windows-8-start-menu.jpg
What Sinofsky showed off was the much-rumored tiles-based UI, which I exclusively revealed back in January. This user experience will be complementary to the normal Windows desktop, and can be used as is an iPad, with multitouch gestures. It looks and works much like the Start screen in Windows Phone 7 but actually uses completely different technologies under the covers. So there are Live Tiles, as with Windows Phone, but apps in this environment are based on HTML 5 and JavaScript, not Silverlight.Complete story at Paul Thurrott's Supersite for WIndows here, and here.There's also a Windows Store (also revealed back in January), and the demo included peeks at a number of built-in tiles for stocks, email, calendar, weather, and so on. Sinofsky describes the new Windows 8 user experience as "the biggest change to Windows since Windows 95." He noted that the new UI would work only in full screen and would work equally well with keyboard and mouse, and on TVs, as it would on slate PCs.
And for Microsoft's take on the whole thing, we have this, and this:



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with Microsoft and liking it (Yes, I'm talking to you Nokia and htc) though Motorola probably do somewhere as well, I'm just not CURRENTLY aware of it.


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