The widely discussed retrenchment strategy currently followed by MS is unquestionably damaging W10m. What I wonder is how much damage is being done to the future viability of Windows 10 in general.
With the world moving their computing habits largely to mobile first, the non-presence of W10m on any meaningfully available hardware I'd guess is resulting in very little in the way of UWP apps being developed. If developers are not building for the platform then all we are left with is legacy Apps that we know are just not the future of the platform.
With the world moving their computing habits largely to mobile first, the non-presence of W10m on any meaningfully available hardware I'd guess is resulting in very little in the way of UWP apps being developed. If developers are not building for the platform then all we are left with is legacy Apps that we know are just not the future of the platform.