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Windows 8 Can Run 'Desktop Apps' on ARM

IT professionals wondering what x86 applications "Windows 8" will support in the near future probably will have to wait for further clarification, based on current communications from Microsoft.

Windows 8 (codenamed) is still under development and could appear as early as April 2012 or sometime in 2013. The operating system will support classic "desktop apps" (defined as apps written for x86-based hardware) as well as so-called "Metro-style apps" (apps written for the new Windows Runtime APIs). Complicating this mix is Microsoft's addition of Windows 8 support for ARM-based processors, which represents a new platform for Microsoft's flagship OS.

Last week as its Build conference, Microsoft announced a new "developer preview" release of Windows 8, promising that applications that ran on Windows 7 would run on Windows 8. That explanation seemed straightforward enough at the time, and Steven Sinofsky, president of the Windows and Windows Live Division, reaffirmed that view at the Microsoft Financial Analyst Meeting last Wednesday in response to a question.

"I think I said that if it [an application] runs on a Windows 7 PC, it'll run on Windows 8," Sinofsky said. "So, all the Windows 7 PCs are x86 or 64-bit." 

However, Sinofsky's next statement to the financial analyst added a nuance that caused some press accounts to declare that x86 apps would not be supported on Windows 8-based ARM machines.

"We've been very clear since the very first CES demos and forward that the ARM product won't run any X86 applications," Sinofsky told the analyst, according to a Microsoft transcript. "We've done a bunch of work to enable that -- enable a great experience there, particularly around devices and device drivers.  We built a great deal of what we call class drivers, with the ability to run all sorts of printers and peripherals out of the box with the ARM version. 

"What we talked about yesterday was -- what we announced yesterday for the first time was that when you write a Metro style application, all the tools are there to enable you in any of the languages that we support to automatically support ARM or X86.  I think that's the key part of everything that we'll run."

This clarification apparently meant that Windows 8 will support languages and tools to build either ARM or x86-based applications. It didn't mean that x86 apps could run on ARM-based machines. Sinofsky had implied as much at Build on Monday when he told the press that "all of the apps for ARM will be Metro-style."

These descriptions all pointed one direction: x86 apps today will not be able to run on ARM-based Windows devices. But that assumption is "not correct," according to a new report from veteran Microsoft observer Mary-Jo Foley.

"The user interface (with the desktop mode as well as Metro) is going to be consistent across both X86 and ARM infrastructures," Foley wrote in her blog. "To repeat, the Desktop tile and experience will exist on both Windows 8 on x86/x64 and ARM hardware when Windows 8 is out (presumably next year)."

Foley has been correct in her observations about Windows 8 thus far. However, Microsoft has not confirmed such details.

It appears that software developers will have to recompile their x86 applications to run on the new ARM machines. However, if that's what Microsoft is saying, company officials are not exactly saying it. Possibly, only simple x86 apps would get recompiled for Windows 8 on ARM, rather than complex business apps, but such simple apps could also be recoded in HTML 5 or XAML to become Metro-style apps. Microsoft's seeming obtuseness may be a sign that it is leaving such decisions up to the software venders. It may also effectively be too difficult to recompile x86 apps for ARM, causing Microsoft to go mum.

The difficulties of porting x86 apps to ARM were anticipated by IDC analysts Al Gillen and Al Hilwa. They addressed this question in a June 9 position paper, "Getting Old Apps to Windows on ARM: Not So Easy." Gillen and Hilwa noted in their paper that recompiling applications would require work by independent software vendors. That one step was what had tripped up the arrival of applications by the time Windows Vista was released. It was one factor among many that caused mass disaffection toward Microsoft's flagship desktop OS at the time.

That grim memory of Vista, with its timing issues among partners building software and drivers, could explain Microsoft's lack of clarity about porting x86 Windows 8 apps to ARM. Microsoft has been careful not to overpromise or cause "strategic confusion" per its "building Windows 8" blog philosophy.

Microsoft may be having problems of its own in making a version of Microsoft Office to run the Windows 8 ARM platform. At the CES show in January, company officials showed off an ARM-based laptop running "Windows Next," which was able to print an Office document. However, eight months later, no such demo was shown at Build. At the Financial Analyst Meeting last week, CEO Steve Ballmer was asked directly if Microsoft planned to build a Metro-style version of Office. He didn't say, "Yes."

"When we have something that we want to talk about, we will, but certainly you ought to expect that we are rethinking and working hard on what it would mean to do Office Metro style," Ballmer told the analyst.

Andrew Brust, a Microsoft regional director, weighed in with an opinion at the Build event, telling Visual Studio Magazine that "Office is still going to be a desktop application."

About the Author

Kurt Mackie is senior news producer for 1105 Media's Converge360 group.

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