Surface RT Devices Won't Get Windows 10
whoever57 writes: In its announcement of Windows 10, Microsoft indicated not all devices would get the updated operating system. Now, Microsoft says its Surface devices running Windows RT won't be receiving full updates, though it does plan to roll some new functionality into them. "Given that Windows RT and RT 8.1 were designed for power economizing devices sporting 32-bit ARM architecture, and never had the same functionality — to many users' frustration — as full-blown Windows 8 and 8.1, it comes as little surprise that the RT versions of the operating system should be left out of the latest update loop. In fact, a week before Microsoft's big Windows 10 reveal on January 21, the company released firmware updates for all three models of its Intel-powered Surface Pro series, but neither of the ARM-based Surface tablets — the Surface 2 or Surface RT — received any new updates this month." The Surface Pro line of tablets, which run a normal version of Windows, will be getting an update to Windows 10.
"We're dumping RT"
one os for all devices?
Be or ben't
MS has a habit of abandoning devices. Maybe that's a reason so few people want their phones.
In the Microsoft view of the world, all devices will become power hogs which are comparable to a desktop, because they've completely missed the fucking point.
I think this is why MS's "one platform for everything" notion is complete crap ... a mobile device should have less resources and hardware than a full on desktop.
But to Microsoft, they can only envision a desktop PC ... which really makes all those "I'm a PC/I'm a Mac" commercials more hilarious, because it really seems like Microsoft just doesn't get it. They have yet to see past Exchange and Office and understand what most people actually do with these things.
Lost at C:>. Found at C.
What this says is no long term vision/planning/execution at Microsoft.
He's dead Jim...
No they are continuing to make phones and likely tablets with long battery life. But they aren't going to be on as long an upgrade cycle as computers.
While I would be pissed if I owned an RT device, the whole thing had the classic Ballmer "me too!" strategy all over it.
x86 can't support a tablet for more than 4 hours? Better use ARM! Everyone else is! Screw compatibility!
Whats that Intel? You've new chips coming in 8 months that will give Windows tablets 9 hour run-times with no real work on our part? You left a voicemail? Our WinPhone 7 never upgraded to voicemail and we didn't want to ditch it for WinPhone 8. Oops.
Unlikely. The effective death of Windows RT only affects some 32-bit ARM devices, of which there are still about a zillion in the field, and more rolling off the production line as we speak(and likely to continue to be for some time to come, unless ARM Ltd. decides to piss off every customer who cares about cheap CPUs and has no need to even touch the boundaries of a 4GB memory space.
The non-RT 'Surface Pro' devices were 64 bit x86s from the start(though there were a few devices that shipped with 64 bit CPUs and 32 bit OSes because Intel didn't have some feature working quite right in 64 bits at the time); but are unaffected, so irrelevant in any case.
This will also have no effect on systems that either have 32-bit Atoms, or 32-bit UEFI(will 64 bit Windows boot from that? it certainly caused a schism among mac models at one point), which are all x86.
You are certainly getting safer as time goes on in ignoring 32 bit OSes, especially x86; but this announcement will have no effect.
Should have been fairly obvious, I would have thought, that the bastard child would be soon abandoned. The coffin lid was pretty-well nailed down from the start due to lack of application support, so it was more like WindowsCE (aka "wince").
Mind you, Google is hardly better - plenty of Android phones & tablets out there with no upgrade path, (yes, often because of the constructors or carriers crapware, I know). Also, don't bother trying to get iOS to run on an iPhone 4s or iPad 2 (I did - devices were virtually unusable).
Calls from slashdotters that redmond is abandoning surface might hold water. Zune was discontinued after 5 years of dismal sales, and with redmonds new "turning the corner" mentality its possible this is going to be accellerated. This is in fact the tablet that cost Microsoft 900 million in earnings in 3 years; its nothing trivial. It could be the new leadership just isnt interested in blowing a full 5-7 years of xbox revenue on propping up and enhancing something that users just dont care for much. Or perhaps microsoft is just spread too thin. between a failing line of operating systems, a phone no one seems to want, a cloud offering thats nothing short of inferior and overpriced, and a business world that refuses to upgrade from windows 7 Id say its a pretty safe bet the purse strings are tight. Combine this with Gaben's steam machines, OS, and broad support for an approachable commodity linux and its hard to really see where microsoft makes money until you look at where they really shine: the office. Their chat, email, and office applications are absolutely lightyears ahead of any other commercial offering. even Google still uses it despite having developed a large office competitor.
Good people go to bed earlier.
They axed Steve Sinofsky.
I have heard rumors from folks that work at MS that he was basically blinded by his vision, and didn't want to listen to anybody. The result as we all know, is Windows 8.
Windows 10 looks to be shaping up quite well, and that they are dumping RT isn't a big surprise; it's kind of relevant given that Intel/MS have huge synergies as well as the fact that Intel is making a great dent in the mobile space versus the ARM designs.
I have an x86 Atom Tablet that gets me plenty of battery life and works exceptionally well with Windows 8. I'll be glad to upgrade to Windows 10.
The price is always right if someone else is paying.
I guess that's the end of RT and ARM-powered Windows devices.
In my opinion this is a good thing. Despite all the bashing, Microsoft has done a decent job with server operating systems lately, and Windows 7 was pretty good. It's interesting that they have enough money, power and leverage to recover from a move that would probably have sunk a smaller company -- it was also able to absorb 3 iterations of Surface Pro before they got it right, and the killing of Surface RT. Windows 8 was basically a panic reaction to the iPad/mobile/social/Bubble 2.0. I'm sure Windows 10 isn't going to give that all up, but it'll be cool to see them not totally write off desktop/laptop computing yet. Let's hope they don't mess up Windows 10 and Office 2016 too badly before launch. One thing about killing RT is that they're basically saying they can't make money off the Windows Store apps the same way Apple does. This could be a good thing -- let them focus on being a good OS developer instead of trying to be another Apple.
Shocked, I tell you. That Microsoft would release a non-real-windows-compatible, promote it, and then leave users out in the cold. This has never ever happened before Windows CE. Sorry, I mean, Windows Alpha. Sorry sorry sorry, I mean Windows RT.
Oliver's law of assumed responsibility: If you're seen fixing it, you will be blamed for breaking it.
Umm... you can stop compiling for ARMv7 based Windows RT...
MS in their infinite wisdom is still making an x86 based Windows 10 version so you can't just start developing everything as 64-bit just yet.
Okay, I actually think it was a good idea for MS to keep a 32-bit version of Win10, but only to give the poor Win8.1 32-bit users a chance to upgrade to something with a usable desktop. I don't foresee the same need with a hypothetical Windows 11, so maybe this will be the last time we ever see a 32-bit Windows release?
Why?
Good-bye
Not very PC.. or maybe it is 100% PC.
I am very small, utmostly microscopic.
That makes sense. RT - Windows on ARM - made even less sense than other NT on RISC platforms in the past. At that time, there was at least a rationale of running NT on more powerful CPUs than Pentiums, or getting Silicon Graphics software on the platform via that route.
But Windows on ARM never made sense. As it is, for the tablet market, both iOS and Android are well entrenched, and for anyone to even consider Windows there, it would have to offer a strong reason to do it. That strong reason would be the ability to run Wintel apps, which one can do on any of the Surface Pro lines. But this line hardly offers that advantage. Good of Microsoft to have finally recognized this reality.
Now, if anybody could install Cyanogenmod/Replicant on these Surface 2s, they'd be in business.
NT multi-architecture might be a good thing, but the time for that had come & gone once the Alpha went under. They could still resurrect it for the MIPS or the Power architecture (the same one that they made the Xbox 360s) and go there. But the opportunity to go multi-architecture for Microsoft existed in the 90s, and they blew it. Had they made a separate win64 based OS (like we have today) then for just the Alpha & the MIPS, they'd have had time to test & refine it, and had alternatives to 64-bit Wintel when it surfaced. But they never made any serious attempts to support these platforms.
I think now, the wars are b/w platforms, rather than just OSs or just CPUs. The only thing you'll get iOS on will be the A series of processors from Apple. Android comes on a variety of platforms, but Windows Phone 8.x seems to come on just the Cortex.
Seriously - I like the form-factor of the device - and the price. The only thing that stopped me from buying one when they came out was the OS.
Request for Microsoft --- now that you're abandoning it --- please unlock the boot loader.
I have my doubts that a "zillion" RT devices are floating around out there, unless you mean in a warehouse somewhere.
The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
The actual OS I really like. It has a lot of features that are missing from iOS and Android. One big plus is the support for Network drives. If an app can read a file, it can read it from anywhere, including network drives and OneDrive. There's no special coding required on the application developers part. And apps are still restricted well enough that they can't just read/write willy-nilly to the file system.
What I really don't like is just the fact that so few developers have latched on to their App store ecosystem. And for me that only means less games, as I've been able to find apps to do just about everything else I would want to do on a tablet. If they aren't going to support it anymore, they should at least provide a supported way for running whatever apps you want to on it. Let people program their own applications at least. It wouldn't require unlocking the boot loader, but would still open up the possibility of a lot of independent app development.
Anthropic principle: We see the universe the way it is because if it were different we would not be here to see it.
Ah, that was ambiguous. I meant that there are zillions of 32-bit ARM devices in the field. Only a hilariously tiny percentage of those are RT devices; but given the absurdly gigantic number of ARM architecture CPUs shipped, and the fact that 64-bit ARM is still very new and a relatively modestly player even in higher end stuff(much less the 'just a bit more than a microcontroller' market, where it probably never will be, I'm assuming that 32-bit ARM is going to be sticking around for a good while yet. RT, Not So Much.
Who cares about architecture when the OS platform and the development tooling around them are becoming more relevant?
Because the OS platform is still relevant. Some people still want to run lightweight desktop applications on a 10" laptop, even if they have to buy a tablet with a keyboard. "Mobile" operating systems don't run desktop applications. Or should people buy an Android tablet, install an X server, and recompile their applications for Linux/ARM?
Having to create and maintain only one build is better than two. It would also force software companies to develop for 64 bits. If MS dropped 32 bit support, maybe we'd finally get a 64 bit version of Visual Studio that doesn't drop dead when you hit over 3GB in use. Is Firefox even 64 bit on windows yet (the main version, not a dev branch)? There's no reason for most of us to have 32 bit support on our PCs anymore, and dropping it would convince some stragglers to finally release their software in 64 bit form.
So let's get started on 128 bit systems..
If they aren't going to support it anymore, they should at least provide a supported way for running whatever apps you want to on it. Let people program their own applications at least.
In theory, you can get a developer license without charge to privately deploy self-made apps onto an Internet-connected Windows RT device. Like the Steam receipt cache, a Windows developer license expires after a month but can be renewed without charge indefinitely.
Mine's running the latest version, 8.1.2, and it works great. Sounds like you just had a borked phone, it happens.
I agree re RT, it was obvious MS was abandoning it, anyone who expected to upgrade one to Win 10 was pretty clueless.
Never let a lack of data get in the way of a good rant.
While Microsoft may have liked to make some money from RT instead of writing off nearly a billion dollars (with more to come), the real reson was to stop OEMs making ARM tablets with a non-Microsoft OS. They brought back XP to kill off Linux on netbooks by treatening to remove discounts on _all_ MS products if the OEM disloyally loaded a different OS on machines that could run Windows.
With ARM tablets MS could not leverage this 'loyalty' while there was no Windows for ARM. With RT they could kill the Dell Android tablets and HP's WebOS. And it worked.
Except that mobile devices like phones and tablets are fundamentally different than PCs.
In what way? Pair a Bluetooth keyboard and plug in an HDMI monitor, and the phone's touch screen ought to become the trackpad of a computer with a desktop-style window management policy.
What kind of insane monster are you building that requires 3GB of memory in an active instance of devenv.exe? I have solutions with 100+ projects in them and they almost take 1 GB of memory when they're fully loaded. And VS has had the option to selectively unload projects for a long time now.
I don't agree completely with the VS team on their attitude that 32-bit is forever, but you really shouldn't be coming anywhere close to the limits right now or for the near-to-mid future. Maybe in a decade, but probably not.
Or maybe your code is horribly bloated. If so, you should work on that before bitching that VS doesn't support 64-bit memory addressing.
> So if you will not be able to upgrade the OS and MS eventually stops providing updates to that OS will they at least release the keys to install something else?
No of course not. And the reason is, if you continue using your Surface RT, regardless of what OS you're running, you aren't buying some other Microsoft product. I think the expected behavior is to throw your RT away and buy a "real" Surface. So hop to it.
Oliver's law of assumed responsibility: If you're seen fixing it, you will be blamed for breaking it.
CNN can go back to using them as kickstands to hold up their ipads. As seen on CNN...
You guys are all over the Connect requests for this, and I want to strangle each and every one of you.
Yes, the code itself doesn't take up much memory. If that's all we were doing, we would never hit the 3GB ceiling. VS isn't just a text editor. When you start using designers (both MS's and third party), analyzers, code mapping, workflow, etc you'll find that you quickly run out of space. Products like DevExpress really chew through memory. It is very easy to hit the limit, and there are many, many developers complaining to MS about it.
I've use that to develop my own software. It's really quite great. If they just opened up the development a bit more so that things didn't expire, or things didn't have to be signed at all, then it would be as good as Android as far as side-loading apps goes. I also think it would be great if they opened up the desktop API. there was a jailbreak for Windows 8 (doesn't work on 8.1) which allowed desktop apps to be run if recompiled. I think they got DOSBOX, SharpDevelop, and a few other things working on it. Just unlocking the thing would probably make a lot of people happy for not supporting Windows 10. Let's hope somebody at MS is reading this.
Anthropic principle: We see the universe the way it is because if it were different we would not be here to see it.
If they had a fire sale, and you could load a decent Linux.....tempting.
Clearly they didn't test it enough either.
You stick your name on something and your reputation suffers if it spectacularly fucks up in a very stupid way.