Microsoft working at full speed on Project Centennial
Microsoft’s Project
Centennial is a set of tools developed by the Redmond-based tech giant
that allows developers to bring their Win32 program in the Windows 10
Store and eventually make their universal apps.
And what better way to convince more developers to do this than by porting your own apps and bringing them in the store?
This is exactly what Microsoft is doing right now, as @h0x0d
has discovered that several Windows apps are now available in the
store, including WordPad, Character Map, Windows Fax and Scan. Microsoft
is very likely to continue work in this regard and bring more apps in
the store, including Paint.
At this point, these apps can’t actually be
downloaded, but the simple fact that they’re there shows that Microsoft
wants to spearhead the transition from Win32 software to Windows Store
apps that would eventually become universal and run on all Windows 10
devices, including PCs and smartphones.
The universal app push
Project Centennial isn’t Microsoft’s only effort to
boost the number of apps in the Windows Store, as the company also
developed Project Islandwood to allow the porting of iOS apps to Windows
10. Project Astoria, a similar effort aimed at Android apps, has
already been discontinued for no clear reason.
Back at Build 2016 a few weeks back, Microsoft also
introduced the so-called Desktop App Converter, a tool that makes it
possible to port Win32 software to the Windows Store.
“Desktop App Converter is a pre-release tool that
enables developers to bring their existing desktop apps written for .NET
4.6.1 or Win32 to the Universal Windows Platform. The developers can
run their desktop installers through the converter in an unattended
(silent) mode and obtain an AppX package that can be installed via the
Add-AppXPackage PowerShell cmdlet on their development machine,”
Microsoft explains.
The first apps, including Microsoft’s, are expected
to become available for all users in the store when the Anniversary
Update goes live in the summer, so until now, developers still have the
time to concentrate on their porting work using the existing preview
builds.
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