or if they release desktop and mobile versions at the same time they could be just windows 9 and windows 9m. just add m to mobile os.
That is definitely possible, and I think it would be awesome.
However, just to be clear, that wouldn't run the merged Phone/RT OS MS is currently working on.
Nailed it.Why not?
From what I understand
-There is Full Windows. It has two components:
1) Modern UI(WinRT)
2) Desktop UI(Win32)
-There is Windows RT. Currently it has two components:
1) Modern UI(WinRT)
2) Desktop UI(Win32 for ARM; locked down)
-There is Windows Phone. Currently it has only one component.
1) Modern UI(WinPRT; since WP8.1)
NO DESKTOP UI
It remains to be seen how Microsoft implements Threshold.
From what I see, Threshold will mean:
-Shared code or subset of a greater code in Modern UI.
- No Desktop UI in Phones and tablets. (According to sources).
It remains to be seen if they completely remove Desktop UI or just disable it. Technically, from what I understand, Desktop UI is an independent component that MS can attach and bundle with anything if they so desire, given the compatible hardware i-e
-Desktop UI(win32)
on Intel X86/64 and atom chipsets.
-Desktop UI(win32 for ARM; currently locked down) on ARM chipsets.
If they could code some sort of universal ModernUI, the possibilities will be endless.
Am I right? Or did I mix things up? Lol.
Am I right? Or did I mix things up? Lol.
Nice summary! I think you got almost everything right. Here is the bit that isn't:
The Windows RT SKU will be killed, but all of the modern UI features we associate with Windows/RT will be ported over to WP. I've been saying this for a long time already, and we are just now starting to hear about the first such features making it into WP, like split screen support (known as the snap feature in the modern UI).
MS will therefore neither remove the desktop component nor just disable it. It will just never have existed in the OS that will end up running on phones and cheaper tablets.
While you are correct that the desktop is a separate component, that isn't enough for desktop applications to run reliably. To reliably run any desktop software, we also need the other gigabytes worth of functionality that ships with Windows. As I already explained, this completely screws up any chances MS has of making Windows tablets cost competitive with cheap Android tablets. MS needs a tablet option without the legacy baggage. That is what this "merged" Phone/RT OS is. That is why you won't see Windows programs running on that OS.
Of course, there is nothing stopping MS from installing full blown windows on tablets (like the surface Pro) or future phones, but that will come at a cost (storage space, power consumption, etc) that not every device can afford to bare.
Thank you for the explanation. Of course, I understand what you mean. It would be impossible to squeeze 'pc experience' in budget offerings.
But, flagship surface phone with atom chipset may do wonders for MS in enterprise or people who have to work on MS suite of office apps on daily basis. Although of course Intel would have to come through on this. A processor that is not only efficient to run full windows but also gives a longer battery life. But considering what MS has achieved with Surface Pro 3, I wouldn't be surprised if they do it again.
Another, lazy way of doing it would be to use ARM. It might solve the problem of battery and power. A tegra k1 based phone with desktop UI(when needed) which already has Office2013(recompiled for ARM). But that would probably suffer the same fate as Surface 2 due to locked down nature of desktop(on ARM) and not being able to run legacy apps. Although, I'm surprised MS hasn't tried it already.
Exciting times ahead. Let's hope MS execute it properly this time.
But, flagship surface phone with atom chipset may do wonders for MS in enterprise or people who have to work on MS suite of office apps on daily basis.
Why not?
From what I understand
-There is Full Windows. It has two components:
1) Modern UI(WinRT)
2) Desktop UI(Win32)
-There is Windows RT. Currently it has two components:
1) Modern UI(WinRT)
2) Desktop UI(Win32 for ARM; locked down)
-There is Windows Phone. Currently it has only one component.
1) Modern UI(WinPRT; since WP8.1)
NO DESKTOP UI
It remains to be seen how Microsoft implements Threshold.
From what I see, Threshold will mean:
-Shared code or subset of a greater code in Modern UI.
- No Desktop UI in Phones and tablets. (According to sources).
It remains to be seen if they completely remove Desktop UI or just disable it. Technically, from what I understand, Desktop UI is an independent component that MS can attach and bundle with anything if they so desire, given the compatible hardware i-e
-Desktop UI(win32)
on Intel X86/64 and atom chipsets.
-Desktop UI(win32 for ARM; currently locked down) on ARM chipsets.
If they could code some sort of universal ModernUI, the possibilities will be endless.
Am I right? Or did I mix things up? Lol.
nononono. I love the XBox name. Why would they drop something that has such a loyal base? It took billions for create that brand recognition, ya can't just toss it out the window. I don't know.... I'm partial to Windows Phone.... because THAT'S what it is! It is not a "windows", it is a "windows" device. Which device I prithee? A phone... a Windows Phone![]()
As for Surface, that's just the model of the device, not the platform.
Ehm, no, but granted, iOS is by far the fattest of the three. It occupies about 1.4 GB. That would be 14 hundred megabytes, and I did say hundreds of megabytes, not just "a couple megabytes" as you've falsely implied.
You are likely refering to the fact that to download, unpack, and install iOS requires about 3GB of free storage space, but that is irrelevant in this context.
WP clocks in around 400 megabytes. AOSP Android can be even smaller.
The point is, again, that these are all much leaner and cheaper to accommodate than a full blown Windows/RT installation of 7GB or more.
Finally, I never said MS would cut out the desktop on your surface (Pro). Such devices will continue to ship with full blown Windows, just as they do today. Completely different topic. However, MS will completely remove it from the simpler Surface (non Pro) tablets... they already kind of have.
Technically, yes. So? Again, that is completely irrelevant to my point.
I think your reaction kind of proves how refering to both OS' by the same name would just confuse people.
because technically it will all be the same OS with slightly changed interfaces on each form factor,
The rumors say it's the same code, same kernel, pretty much the same OS on every device, except
I have an awesome idea for a mobile OS name:
Windows Vista.
What? Why are you looking at me like that??
Bad decision. Will make public confuse. Everyone will expect to run PC apps on their "pocket pcs".
I have an awesome idea for a mobile OS name:
Windows Vista.
What? Why are you looking at me like that??