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Windows Phone 8 Apollo screenshots leaked

by Mark Tyson on 13 June 2012, 11:47

Tags: Windows Phone, Nokia (NYSE:NOK)

Quick Link: HEXUS.net/qabh65

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A few low quality screenshots have been leaked onto the internet via Nokia fan site Nokia Innovation. The screenshots are said to show Windows Phone 8 Apollo running on a test device. The images show new features within Apollo including the following;

  • Skype integrated
  • Nokia Drive 3.0 (for Nokia only)
  • New camera UI
  • Native data monitor with live tile

 

The first set of screenshots, above, show two Skype screenshots and one of Nokia Drive. The Skype screenshots show the user interface allowing Apollo users to accept a video call with video or just as a voice call. In the social/communications list you can see RCSe listed just below Skype, this feature is the Rich Communication Suite said to be a major part of WP8. The next screenshot above is of Nokia Drive 3.0 and you can see it is “Updating traffic” the app is capable of re-routing depending upon traffic and is bundled with Nokia branded phones for free.

 

This second set of screenshots, above, shows the new standard camera interface, the “DataSmart” monitor and the Apollo home screen. The camera interface is very simple, on the left you see a zoom slider, on the right just two other on screen buttons, one supposed to be the new “lenses” button. Extra options are found under the ellipsis. The shutter button is a hardware button on Windows phones.

The DataSmart function looks useful, especially if combined with a live tile to keep an eye on data, use for people who need to do so. Finally the last screenshot shows the Apollo home screen, which looks like the Mango home screen with its “Metro” tiled interface.

We have the Microsoft Windows Phone Developer Summit in San Francisco starting in exactly a weeks’ time so hopefully all these things will become a little clearer. “A sneak peak of the future of Windows Phone” is supposed to be on view at the show, starting 20th June.



HEXUS Forums :: 16 Comments

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I'll be interested if they bring out a Winpho8 the same size as the Galaxy Note. And with a little more oomph, perhaps dual/quad core support.
Lord Midas;2490917
I'll be interested if they bring out a Winpho8 the same size as the Galaxy Note. And with a little more oomph, perhaps dual/quad core support.

The Apollo update is supposed to up the hardware specification to support “super phones” - i.e multicore support. However, if you use a Windows Phone, you'll see that multi core support isn't required as a single core doesn't even struggle.

It really depends how much more taxing WP8 is in comparison to WP7. The biggest hardware specification people want is an increased screen resolution (currently the maximum is 480x800).
Lord Midas;2490917
I'll be interested if they bring out a Winpho8 the same size as the Galaxy Note. And with a little more oomph, perhaps dual/quad core support.

What do you need the dual/quad for? Everyone with a smartphone has been hooked by this marketing BS that you need a quad core in your pocket and I don't understand it. You get less battery power and barely any applications are properly threaded (I don't know about the kernel itself).

WP7 has been running on single core hardware for the last two years and there have been no complaints about slowdown, the OS clearly works and developers code accordingly.

I've been writing code for a microcontroller with 2kB RAM and a paltry 8MHz clock and it's surprising how much you can squeeze in. Putting faster chips in phones makes developers lazy.

If your phone suffers from slowdown it's because the OS wasn't written well enough, not because your phone isn't fast enough.
Whiternoise
What do you need the dual/quad for? Everyone with a smartphone has been hooked by this marketing BS that you need a quad core in your pocket and I don't understand it. You get less battery power and barely any applications are properly threaded (I don't know about the kernel itself).

WP7 has been running on single core hardware for the last two years and there have been no complaints about slowdown, the OS clearly works and developers code accordingly.

I've been writing code for a microcontroller with 2kB RAM and a paltry 8MHz clock and it's surprising how much you can squeeze in. Putting faster chips in phones makes developers lazy.

If your phone suffers from slowdown it's because the OS wasn't written well enough, not because your phone isn't fast enough.

I was trying to be tactful - but hey, you hit it on the head - a good OS doesn't require more than 1 core.
Whiternoise
What do you need the dual/quad for? Everyone with a smartphone has been hooked by this marketing BS that you need a quad core in your pocket and I don't understand it. You get less battery power and barely any applications are properly threaded (I don't know about the kernel itself).

WP7 has been running on single core hardware for the last two years and there have been no complaints about slowdown, the OS clearly works and developers code accordingly.

I've been writing code for a microcontroller with 2kB RAM and a paltry 8MHz clock and it's surprising how much you can squeeze in. Putting faster chips in phones makes developers lazy.

If your phone suffers from slowdown it's because the OS wasn't written well enough, not because your phone isn't fast enough.

True in many ways, WP achieves a great deal of it's speed from closely tying you to specific hardware…so that's why Android (for example) really needs better hardware to be smooth and slick. It's a different way of achieving the same end product, but for me it's also a reason that WP hardware will always lag behind Android in many ways…