With
Windows 8 unveiled, Microsoft is in a desperate push to get developers to make
apps to run on the new operating system. Microsoft knows it needs the apps to
match or even better its rivals.
The message
was clear: "Please go out and write lots of applications," pleaded
Microsoft Chief Executive Steve Ballmer as he addressed 2,000 developers at a
four day meeting near Seattle this week.
And just in
case Ballmer's words weren't enough, Microsoft made sure it gave each paying
attendee one of its Surface tablets and 100 gigabytes of free space on its
SkyDrive cloud storage platform. Nokia provided free Lumia 920 smartphones
running Windows Phone 8.
Microsoft
knows it needs to convince developers that it is worth their while to create a
thriving environment on the new Windows 8 operating system - an environment to
compete with main rivals Apple and Google Android.
It's an
area where Microsoft - the once dominant software maker - has been lagging
behind.
All
surface, no feeling
While Apple
and Android based mobile devices have allowed users to swipe their way through
the modern world, Windows users have - until now - been left clicking like the
old days.
But that is
to become a thing of the past. Windows 8 has a completely new look.
With the
arrival of Microsoft Tiles, the company has changed its game. Desktops will no
longer be filled with program icons - in fact, the company no longer even
refers to programs - but apps - as everyone else does. And its customers are
now "users."
|
Oliver Guertler, director of Microsoft Germany, presents Windows 8 in Berlin |
The tiles
constantly update your status - users can see when new e-mails come in, check
appointments, stock exchange figures or weather information. You can bid on
eBay, watch YouTube videos and have Facebook and Twitter all in sight.
Touch
technology has long been a feature on Apple devices. It released its first
notebook with a multi-touch trackpad in 2008, making full navigation possible
without a mouse.
Now,
Microsoft has gone touchable - some have said Windows 8 will take some getting
used to for old school desktop users.
But the
company is making every effort to get in on the action, even on price.
Upgrades
are available for an introductory price of 30 euros ($38). And even older
computers running Windows 7 through to Vista and XP can upgrade to the new
platform.
|
A fusion of laptop and tablet: Microsoft's Surface on display |
Ripe
competition
The arrival
of Windows 8 coincides with that of Microsoft's high-end tablet, the Surface. A
merger of tablet and laptop, the Surface has a widescreen and is docked on an
ultra thin keyboard that doubles as a screen protector.
It's
silenced some doubters and is starting to make the rest of the industry
nervous.
Samsung,
Acer and other big technological players, who use Windows, may face stiff
competition from Microsoft's first real attempt at hardware. Apple has been
quick to fight back by unveiling its next generation of MacBooks, iMacs and by
launching the iPad Mini.
But
Microsoft boss Steve Ballmer was keen to make a splash and staged a fancy
Windows 8 release party in New York, where people could test drive the Surface
tablet.
|
Microsoft's chief Steve Ballmer laid on a New York party to get people touching the Surface |
"The
Surface is really exciting," says Greg Lutz, whose company, ComponentOne,
develops tools that software makers can build into their apps, such as
calendars and charts. "It's been interesting to see people that would
normally be critics of Microsoft surprised to see how good it is."
Microsoft
hopes it can reestablish itself as a relevant platform for developers. It's
also hoped that the release of Windows 8 will allow Microsoft to regain some of
the street credibility it's said to have lost to competitors.
Once
developers see the user base for Windows 8 grow, the momentum will start to
have an effect, says Mike Cousins, a software developer in Calgary, Canada.
"All
the new PCs people buy will be Windows 8 and people will start demanding
Windows 8 apps from companies, and then they will start making them," says
Cousins. "I think we'll see a wave of apps coming out pretty soon."
|
Lumia 920 smartphone running Windows Phone 8 |
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