Windows 8 core app updates due tomorrow
Microsoft
is starting to roll out major updates to its Mail, Calendar, and People
apps for Windows 8 and Windows RT. What other updates are coming and
when?
Microsoft executives announced today that starting tomorrow, they'll make available via the Windows Store significant updates to the Mail, People, and Calendar apps that are built into Windows 8 and Windows RT.
For a list of all the new features that will be part of this push, check out my ZDNet colleague Ed Bott's post on the Mail/Calendar/People updates. Like many early Windows 8 and Windows RT users, I'm happy to see Mail get updates like the ability to create and delete folders and the ability to search for mail on the server, among others. Supposedly performance of all three apps is improved, even on low-power Surface RT devices.
But what about the other "core" Windows 8 and Windows RT apps -- especially Xbox Music, which has felt half-finished since it debuted as one of the bundled apps Microsoft delivered last October with Windows 8 and Windows RT? Today's blog post from the Windows services team is solely about Mail/Calendar/People. But according to one of my sources, who mentioned the coming March core-app updates, Xbox Music and the Bing AppEx applications were supposedly going to be refreshed this month, too.
There are still six more days in March, so it could happen. Or maybe these won't actually roll out until April.
The Bing AppEx team apps -- Weather, News, Sports, etc., which shipped preinstalled on Windows 8 and Windows RT -- may be poised for new updates. So far, no word from the Bing team on that, however.
Late last week, some of us took the appearance of a list of Microsoft-developed apps in the System Log on our machines to mean that the expected refreshes of all the core Windows 8/Windows RT apps were set to arrive imminently.
It turns out this may be unrelated, as Martin Geuss from drwindows.de noted over the weekend. Geuss said that all core apps are listed in the event entry on Windows 8 and Windows RT systems because all of these apps have received at least one update since Windows 8 and Windows RT were released.
Event-entry relevance aside, the expected and (hopefully) useful core-app updates are on their way.
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