Windows 8 on ARM: What it Will Look Like

Last week was big for Windows 8 news (given the relative secrecy around the whole project).  At the beginning of the week we learned that the Consumer Preview (a.k.a. the "Beta") of Windows 8 will be released at the very end of the month in concert with the Mobile World Congress (MWC) conference in Barcelona. Then on Thursday, Windows and Windows Live Division President Steven Sinofsky uploaded an 8,600-plus-word post to the Building Windows 8 blog detailing Microsoft's plans for Windows on ARM (i.e. Windows for devices using the same low-power processor designs used in virtually all smartphone and tablet devices today). It's probably worthwhile to deconstruct these two developments a little, as I think they are two sides of the same coin.

The first thing to note is that Microsoft launched the Beta of Windows 7 at the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in January 2009. But for Windows 8 in 2012, Redmond decided to wait until February and do it at the MWC instead. Part of the reasoning behind this may have been that the Beta wasn't ready in early January, but I think another part -- or maybe all -- of the reasoning is based on Microsoft's understanding that PCs are going mobile.  Perhaps Microsoft doesn't view where we are as the "post-PC" era, but that really comes down to semantics, as the tablet-style devices that Microsoft continues to call PCs seem to be the "hero devices" for the new version of the Windows operating system.  Hence the showcase at MWC for Windows 8 and this week's white-paper-as-blog-post on Windows on ARM (WOA).

The WOA news was pretty big, so let's just cut to the chase: WOA will feature a Windows desktop mode, but the only things you'll be able to run there are applets that are part of Windows itself, Internet Explorer 10 (which, arguably, is one of those applets anyway) and the forthcoming version of Office, codenamed "Office 15." There won't be other apps there, and browser plug-ins, as Sinofsky revealed in his interview with All Things D's Ina Fried, will not offer a workaround...because even the desktop version of IE 10 in WOA won't support them. That means no Flash on WOA, and no Silverlight on WOA either -- at all.

Is this nuts? Honestly, I don't think so. If you read Sinofsky's post, you'll see there was some pretty methodical thinking behind this, and most of it has to do with power efficiency and reliability of the WOA experience. Windows Desktop applications are built with an assumption of always-on AC power, or the laptop-style DC power that emulates it. Desktops and laptops aren't like phones. They're not devices; they're machines.  People use them as machines, people expect them to work like machines, and developers build machine-oriented apps for them. That's not a bad thing; in fact, it's required.

But tablets are devices. Interactions with them are fast and discrete, like a stand-up meeting rather than an all-morning whiteboard session. Get in, get out, and go forth. That's why WOA will be installed on the device when you buy it. That's why all updates will come from the Windows Update system, and why all apps will come from the Windows Store. That makes sense. WOA products are different products, and will face different expectations. In 2002, Bill Gates wrote one of his watershed all-personnel memos, titled Trustworthy Computing. While much of the memo was focused on security, Gates had this to say toward the conclusion of the memo: "Systems will have to become self-managing and inherently resilient. We need to prepare now for the kind of software that will make this happen, and we must be the kind of company that people can rely on to deliver it." Ten years later, Windows 8, and especially Windows on ARM, seem poised to fulfill this goal.

So why call WOA devices PCs? While part of this is due to the politics and semantics alluded to above, I think another part of it has to do with productivity. Microsoft sees PCs, in addition to being leisure devices, as things (machines or devices) with which people get work done. And that's why, I believe, Microsoft is allowing one non-OS application suite to run in the Desktop mode: Office. Take a look at this video with Scott Seiber, featured in Sinofsky's post -- particularly at the 3:46 time marker -- and you'll see what I mean.  I haven't used Office 15, so I don't know how productive it really is with touch, but it looks good. I have used iWork on the iPad, and I know that, for me at least, it's not productive at all.

So here's where we are with Windows 8: The Intel platform will offer a full Desktop mouse-and-keyboard experience and will feature a split personality, allowing Metro-style apps to run as well, sometimes with touch. Windows on ARM devices will offer the Metro-style touch-first experience first and foremost, and still provide the productivity of Office without forcing users to switch to a machine, like the iPad does today. Intel PCs for Windows 8 will be machines with device capabilities. Windows on ARM "PCs" will be devices with "in-a-pinch" Windows desktop capabilities, including the platform's crucial desktop productivity apps, optimized for touch and power conservation.

I don't know if Microsoft can beat Apple with this approach, but it looks like the only logical way forward. A logical approach plus a lot of perseverance can be a winning strategy. It has been with a great number of Microsoft's other products.

Posted by Andrew J. Brust on 02/13/2012 at 8:49 AM


Reader Comments:

Tue, Feb 28, 2012 Doug

People have been saying things like such and such "will lead to nothing less than the death of Microsoft" for years and yet, funny thing, Microsoft isn't dead, nor is it anywhere close to being dead. Microsoft is innovating, that is the point of the Metro interface. It is a total departure from the bland, stuck in the past grid of icons. It is very intuitive and I love it on my Windows Phone. The UI is designed with touch in mind. Those who say that Microsoft isn't innovating are stuck in the days of the D.O.D. hovering over their shoulder nit picking everything they do. Microsoft continued to pour money into their R&D during that period and it's beginning to pay off. I for one am excited to see what Microsoft does over the next few years to change the way we interact with computing devices. If the videos coming out of Microsoft Research are any indication, it will be nothing short of spectacular as they implement their 3 screens (now 4 with tablets) vision. Way to go Microsoft!

Sun, Feb 26, 2012 Mike New Zealand

"But Microsoft is forcing us to use an OS designed for the "Device" on the PC" - No they are not. Windows for ARM will only run on ARM devices. Full windows 8 is NOT designed just for mobile devices, it's designed for desktop computers as well.

Fri, Feb 17, 2012

There are thousands of websites using Flash....not having access to them is a real handicap...considering other mobile OS support Flash Microsoft is really going the wrong way. About the only thing I don't like on my WP7 phone is the lack of Flash support.

Tue, Feb 14, 2012 Kirk Davis Bangkok, Thailand

Since I had already read the monster-blog-post, the main thing I want to thank you for is the link to the video, which I somehow hadn't seen. Office 15 for WOA looks great - and I do think the strategy of including that on WOA tablets is going to be a HUGE win for Microsoft; there are many, many small businesses, and employees at larger businesses, who do the great majority of their work (90% or more) on a mix of Word, Excel and PowerPoint. For those people, having those apps available (especially to use with a mouse & keyboard by popping the tablet in a dock, or using a Bluetooth keyboard/mouse kit) this will make WOA actually a real alternative to having a laptop. In fact, I suspect that's one reason Microsoft isn't making Silverlight or Flash plug-ins available for WOA desktop IE - it might cannibalize sales of the (more profitable) Windows on x86/64. I wonder whether Microsoft will do as Apple did, and allow larger customers to deploy desktop applications (compiled for ARM)? This seems very likely to me - for companies that have just one or two main LOB apps, having them available on WOA would ease the transition a lot (and if not, how long before hackers find ways to deploy newly-compiled ARM apps to WOA devices anyway?) So far, so good. My wife, who works almost solely with MS Office (on her ThinkPad) already covets my //build/ tablet, which, while light and thin for a "full" x86 PC, is going to look fat and heavy next to the ARM SoC tablets that will be out this fall.

Tue, Feb 14, 2012 Tom

I disagree. It is not logical. Not logical at all. There is a saying in business: Innovate or die. This is copying Apple - nothing more, nothing less - and it will lead to nothing less than the death of Microsoft; at least in the mobile arena. If they REALLY wanted to win, they would differentiate themselves, not copy. Back in it's formative years, one of the best differentiators was to be more open than it's competitors. Go back to your roots Microsoft. Buck the system and force open the closed ecosystem of ARM devices, or copy and die.

Tue, Feb 14, 2012 Australia

As you said...

"Desktops and laptops aren't like phones. They're not devices; they're machines. People use them as machines, people expect them to work like machines, and developers build machine-oriented apps for them. That's not a bad thing; in fact, it's required.

But tablets are devices."

But Microsoft is forcing us to use an OS designed for the "Device" on the PC. When I need a spreadsheet I don't use Word; And when I need a document I don't use Excel - or is Microsoft developing Woxel?

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