
And yes, the stream of controlled Windows 8 leaks continues. This time around, Thurrot and Rivera have published a number of screenshots from Windows 8's brand-new tablet user interface, and surprise surprise, its built on Metro, the same design language that underpins Windows Phone 7. Windows 8 will also include its own PDF reader, Modern Reader, which also happens to be the first application packaged in Microsoft's new AppX format.
Update: Long Zheng has
some technical details on AppX, including this little tidbit: "The extensive list of properties signifies the comprehensive scope of this system to be the ideal deployment strategy for 'applications', in all essence of the word. In fact, the AppX format is universal enough so it appears to work for everything from native Win32 applications to framework-based applications and even *gasp* web applications. Games are also supported."
Member since:
2005-07-06
Windows Phone 7 apps can share much more of their codebase with desktop OSes (Windows *and* Mac) via Silverlight. So Microsoft is already ahead in this area, and providing a common app distribution format will put them firmly in the lead.
Did you actually read what you quoted or did you just choose a random quote to plonk at the top as to make it appear as though you read the article and Thom's take on the matter? the quote is as follows with the part in bold that you should have focused in on:
What part of 'similar' don't you understand? similar means 'close enough' or 'near to it' or 'not exactly like it'. The appx idea is very similar to what Apple has be it Microsoft making fully portable from top to bottom rather than requiring the front end to be re-written again for a new form factor.