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Let’s balance them better,” said Ballmer, summing up user feedback.
The result is the reinstatement of the ‘start’ button, and easier ways to find and access applications, along with a highly improved search function, some of which was announced last month.
Ballmer also promised a “rapid release cycle” for Windows in future, abandoning its previous policy of making new versions of Windows every three years, in an effort to match Apple Inc and Google Inc.
The response from the thousands of developers at the conference in San Francisco was broadly positive, although attendees tend to be Windows die-hards.
“Of course, they’re playing some catch up (with Apple and Google). They have been lagging behind for years now,” said Jorgen Nilsson, a manager at UK-based Aveva AB, a firm that makes computer-aided design software applications. “But this release is driving it forward instead of catching up and making it work for business and personal use. This is looking really good now.”
Part of Microsoft’s problem has been persuading developers to create apps for Windows 8 and the little-used Windows Phone, given that almost all smartphone and tablet owners are using Apple’s iOS or Google’s Android system.
Microsoft also said Wednesday that Facebook Inc had finally agreed to work on an app especially for Windows, which should be available this autumn. That is one factor that attract the more than one billion Facebook users to Windows-based tablets.
“I feel like Microsoft can actually seriously compete in the mobile ecosystem now,” said Manav Mishra, director of engineering at the Barnes & Noble Inc (BKS.N) unit that makes apps for its Nook e-reader. “Windows 8.1 finishes the journey Windows 8 started and I think it evens the playing field for Microsoft quite a bit, which wasn’t the case before.”
But not all developers are convinced that Windows or Windows Phone are worth the trouble, given the massive built-in audience using iPhones, iPads and Android devices.
“I haven’t really considered it, No,” said Sam Redfern of Psychic Software, maker of the ‘Let’s Break Stuff!’ game, available on Android, iOS and even the BlackBerry PlayBook, when asked about developing for Windows. “It never seemed like a particularly worthwhile undertaking, in terms of potential revenue.”
Markus Persson, developer at Mojang, whose ‘Minecraft - Pocket Edition’ is a top-seller on both iOS and Android, agreed, saying Microsoft’s market was too “tiny. Both Symbian and Blackberry have more users than Windows Phone.”
Neither man attended Microsoft’s developer conference.
Ballmer said on Wednesday that the Windows Store was approaching 100,000 apps. Meanwhile, Apple is nearing one million, with Android not far behind.