The biggest different is that the default application platform for .NET on Windows Mobile is .NET Compact Framework (.NET 3.5 SP1) and a "compact" version Windows Forms. For Windows Phone 7, you'll still be dealing with a compact version of the .NET framework, but the main application platform is Silverlight rather than Windows Forms. Silverlight is based on the newer presentation framework WPF.
The other big difference is the OS/platform APIs. Windows Mobile has okay support for hardware APIs, but the OS itself and the hardware tended to be really clunky and hard to work with, from both a developer's and user's perspective. The network connection manager on Windows Mobile is one of the most miserable APIs I've worked with lately. The Windows Phone 7 hardware overall is way nicer, and I would hope that the platform APIs are a little cleaner and less clunky, but I haven't worked with it enough to say at this point.