a5cent
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- Nov 3, 2011
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Actually your example Google Music, Outlook Calendar and Mail are quite telling. Your best examples of universal apps are the ones for which there is no gap: These apps are already available.
This is exactly the point. This is why universal apps would have been great back in 2007 when Microsoft needed to migrate core apps to WP. Now what is the point of rewriting existing apps to make them universal?
Clearly the onus is on you to point to an example of area not covered already and well suited for universal apps.
When comparing initial development costs to maintenance costs, the later typically represents a far larger chunk of a software's total cost over its lifetime. If a company already has an application on Windows and a few mobile apps, and they expect their services and products to evolve for at least a few more years, they would be very stupid to not migrate to the UWP and save themselves some serious money. Even if that did entail a complete rewrite, that would still be worth the effort for many companies, but migrating to the UWP necessitates nowhere close to that kind of effort.
Some companies like PLEX have already done that. If it was as ridiculous as you're making it out to be, no companies would be doing it, but some are. That should already make it clear that you're at least somewhat wrong (and yes, PLEX had Windows and mobile apps long before the UWP came along).