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Microsoft releases a new Windows app called Windows App for running Windows apps

arstechnica.com

Microsoft releases a new Windows app called Windows App for running Windows apps

27 comments
  • To save people the click

    Microsoft announced today that it's releasing a new app called Windows App as an app for Windows that allows users to run Windows and also Windows apps (it's also coming to macOS, iOS, web browsers, and is in public preview for Android).

    On most of those platforms, Windows App is a replacement for the Microsoft Remote Desktop app, which was used for connecting to a copy of Windows running on a remote computer or server—for some users and IT organizations, a relatively straightforward way to run Windows software on devices that aren't running Windows or can't run Windows natively.

    The new name, though potentially confusing, attempts to sum up the app's purpose: It's a unified way to access your own Windows PCs with Remote Desktop access turned on, cloud-hosted Windows 365 and Microsoft Dev Box systems, and individual remotely hosted apps that have been provisioned by your work or school.

  • Remote Desktop clients for Linux got good enough that they felt the need to replace it with a new protocol with no linux clients?

    • You mean standard RDP clients? This is a VDI client to connect to an azure instance for example. It replaces another azure client named "Remote Desktop" (yeah...i know). It's different from the native by default rdp client you run by typing mstsc.exe. they suck with naming.

      • I see. Sort of. They do say it's (also) a complete replacement for "Remote Desktop Connection" which does appear to be about connecting to PCs. I don't know anything about MS products, just thought it odd that they chose to support "macOS, iOS, and Android."

27 comments