An anonymous reader quotes a report from ZDNet: When Microsoft launched UWP in 2015, officials promised that the platform would provide apps with better performance and security because they’d be distributable and updatable from the Microsoft Store. Developers would be able to use a common set of programming interfaces across Windows 10, Windows Phone, HoloLens and more, officials said, when selling the UWP vision. The downside: UWP apps would work on Windows 10-based devices only. Developers would have to do work to get their apps to be UWP/Store-ready. And Win32 apps wouldn’t get UWP features like touch and inking. Arguably, [Kevin Gallo, Corporate Vice President of the Windows Developer Platform] told me, “we shouldn’t have gone that way,” meaning creating this schism. But Microsoft execs — including Gallo — continue to maintain that UWP is not dead. Over the past year or so, Microsoft has been trying to undo some of the effects of what Gallo called the “massive divide” between Win32 and UWP by adding “modern desktop” elements to Win32 apps.

“By the time we are done, everything will just be called ‘Windows apps,'” Gallo told me. “We’re not quite there yet.” But the ultimate idea is to make “every platform feature available to every developer.” In short, Microsoft’s new goal is to try to make all features available to all of the Windows frameworks. Saying that Microsoft is dropping or deprecating any of the Windows frameworks seems to have been declared from on-high as a big no-no. Instead, Win32, UWP, Windows Presentation Foundation are all “elevated to full status,” as Gallo told me. What about the Microsoft Store? Gallo says it’s not dead. In Gallo’s view, “the Store is about commerce. It’s another channel for distribution.” But it’s not the only way Windows users will be able to get apps. “You can trust apps differently. They don’t need to be in the Store. People really just want to know if Microsoft considers an app good,” he said. ZDNet’s Mary Jo Foley says “it sounds like Microsoft may be moving toward a model of getting apps Microsoft-certified and trusted and then allowing Windows developers to decide how best to distribute them — via the Microsoft Store, the Web or other methods of their choosing.”

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Source:: Slashdot