ZDNet's Stephen Chapman discovered one of the designs, for a USA Today app, on the Website of designer Robbie Dillon. "In preparation for the Windows 8 release, this app is being built to take advantage of the touch-first, native environment of Windows 8, while retaining the look and feel of the Windows Metro UI and showcasing the content of USA Today," Dillon wrote.
(After the design started circulating through the blogosphere, Dillon wrote a disclaimer: "this is simply an early design exploration and doesn't reflect the final product.")
The second discovery by Chapman is a bit more puzzling. A handful of screenshots show what look like a travel-oriented app that also includes news, media and messaging. The design was created by Jetsoft, a company that helps design user interfaces for other app developers.
Neither of these Windows 8 app designs may turn into finished products, but they do provide a sense of how Microsoft's "Metro" user interface will become a part of Windows applications. Like Chapman, I'm not in love with these particular designs, but I dig the Metro style and I'm interested in some of the features Microsoft is promising for Windows 8 tablets, like the ability to run two apps side-by-side on the same screen.
We may see some real Windows 8 apps in action next month at Microsoft's BUILD conference, when the company is expected to describe its next operating system in greater detail.
Source:http://www.pcworld.com/article/238904/sneak_peek_at_windows_8_tablet_apps.html#tk.rss_news
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