The next version of Microsoft Windows will depart from its
predecessors in a number of ways, one of the most important of which will be
freeing the operating system from the x86 straightjacket that it has been in
for years. Among the flavors in the new
Windows 8 lineup will be Windows
RT. "RT" stands for RunTime, the development platform introduced by
Microsoft last year to create apps for its Metro interface, which is expected
to usher in a new generation of apps that fully exploit cloud productivity, Web
connectivity and touch tactility. Unlike past Microsoft offerings, Windows RT
will support processors based on ARM architecture. Because of its small
footprint and power-sipping qualities, ARM has been a favorite of smartphone
makers for years. It has even made some inroads into the server space, a development that
Microsoft, no doubt, has noticed and is on somebody's pinboard for future
review. Moreover, ARM seems tailor-made for the next generation of notebook
computers. Although ARM-based laptops would compete with the emerging Ultrabook
platform being championed by Intel, the Redmond crew appears to have ARM
notebooks, as well as tablets, in mind by baking into Windows RT devices new touch-enabled
versions of Office and OneNote.
That, by the way, doesn't
bode well for Office fans salivating for a version of the suite on the iPad.
Office exclusivity on a Microsoft tablet would be a major carrot for the suite's many users who might
be shopping for a tablet. There's a downside to Windows RT, however. Legacy
Windows applications, which are written for chips based on Intel's x86
architecture, won't run on it. That's a big barrier to adoption, especially in
corporate environments where legacy apps are a staple. Another aspect of RT
that might irk business is the absence of support for Storage Spaces. Storage
Spaces was added to Windows 8 to help small businesses address their
growing storage needs. On the plus side, however, RT supports encryption of all
the data on the device it's running on. That's particularly important in the
mobile space, where devices like phones, tablets and thin-and-light notebooks
may be misplaced, or worse, stolen. "[W]e have re-imagined Windows from
the chipset to the experience -- and bringing this re-imagined Windows to the
ARM processor architecture is a significant part of this innovation,"
Windows president Steven Sinofsky recently wrote in a Microsoft blog. "Expanding
the view of the PC to cover a much wider range of form factors and designs than
some think of today is an important part of these efforts," he continued.
"Windows on ARM enables creativity in PC design that, in combination with newly
architected features of the Windows OS, will bring to customers new,
no-compromise PCs." By adding RT to the Windows lineup, Microsoft is
sending a strong message to its fans and foes alike that it will be in a strong
position to compete in the so-called "Post PC Era," where the PC is
no longer the center of personal computing.
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