Sci/Tech OneCore to rule them all: How Windows Everywhere finally happened

tom_mai78101

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The Windows 10 Anniversary update, due later this summer, represents a major landmark for Microsoft. As well as being a significant update for Windows 10 on the desktop and Windows 10 Mobile on phones, the release is also coming to the Xbox One. For the first time, the Xbox One will be running essentially the same operating system as desktop Windows. Critically, it will also be able to run many of the same applications as desktop Windows.

In a lot of ways, this represents the realization of a vision that Microsoft has been promoting for more than 20 years: Windows Everywhere. Always important to Microsoft's ambitions for Windows as a platform, the Windows Everywhere ideal has a renewed significance with Windows 10 and CEO Satya Nadella's promise that Windows 10 will have one billion users within the first three years of its availability. The purpose of that promise is to send a message to developers that Windows is a big platform, a platform that they should still think about and create software for.

But if it is to have a hope of hitting that one billion target, Microsoft needs more than just PC users to get on board, which makes it important for Windows to run on more than just PCs. Hence the need for Windows Everywhere.


Microsoft can now credibly speak of having one operating system (with Windows 10 as its most familiar branding) that can span hardware from little embedded Internet of Things devices to games consoles to PCs to cloud-scale server farms. At its heart is a slimmed down, modularized operating system dubbed OneCore. Windows 10, Windows Server, Xbox 10, Windows 10 Mobile, Windows 10 IoT, and the HoloLens operating system are all built on this same foundation.

It took a long time to reach this point. Along the way, Microsoft built three major operating system families, killed two of them off, and even reorganized the entire company. In the end, all that action was necessary in order to make building a single operating system practical. Apple and Google will probably do something similar with their various operating systems, but Microsoft has managed it first.


Read more here. (Ars Technica)

3 full pages of the article. Interesting read.
 

Accname

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I am actually confused they didnt do it earlier because thats kind of obvious from a software developers point of view. Problem is: I dont like what I am hearing of windows 10. Its supposed to be full of build-in spy tools. Could be crazy peoples talk of course, but I believe this kind of scam is not unlikely for microsoft.
 

tom_mai78101

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Staff member
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I am actually confused they didnt do it earlier because thats kind of obvious from a software developers point of view. Problem is: I dont like what I am hearing of windows 10. Its supposed to be full of build-in spy tools. Could be crazy peoples talk of course, but I believe this kind of scam is not unlikely for microsoft.

Most of what you've heard are just baseless rumors. Note, I said most. There are some rumors that distorted the truth, and /r/Windows10 were very quick to point them out, saying those can be turned off and such.

It is really up to you to believe what you think it is, but it wouldn't make any sense if all 3,200 Microsoft employees were insistent on implementing all of those.
 
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