Evidence That Windows 8 Won't Be Another Windows Phone

metro_ie
Soon, Internet Explorer 10 won't be the only Metro-style browser in Windows 8 Town.

The most often cited complaint about Windows Phone is that platform's supposed lack of apps, and many critics are looking ahead to the similarly architected Windows 8 and wondering if this is going to suffer a similar fate. While the nearly 100 apps that appeared in the Windows Store at the launch of the Consumer Preview last month should have put those fears to rest, I'm looking at a more pragmatic measure of what we can expect. And it's good news.

That measure is third party web browser support.

You probably know that the top two desktop web browsers, Google Chrome and Mozilla Firefox, are not available on Windows Phone. In fact, Mozilla was curiously vocal in its opposition to Windows Phone, (incorrectly) citing that platform's lack of support for "native code." (The truth is, Microsoft will work with any major developer to create native Windows Phone apps. I'm guessing Mozilla never bothered to ask.)

Fast forward to early 2012 and, guess what? Both Chrome and Firefox are coming to Windows 8, in Metro app form and they're working on this support at a very early time.

This is interesting for a number of reasons.

Metro versions of web browsers are bound by specific rules that are complex and contrary to how everything else works in Windows 8. I'm writing about this situation in Windows 8 Secrets, but I previously hinted at some of the issues in my article Windows 8 Consumer Preview: Internet Explorer 10 Secrets, which was the first to reveal the strange relationship between Metro-style browsers like IE 10 and desktop browsers, especially when you change the default browser. (For example: If you choose a non-IE browser as your default in Windows 7 and then upgrade to Windows 8, you won't even be able to find the Metro version of IE 10.)

Metro-style apps are unproven, from both usability and API perspectives, and while I'm sure Google and Mozilla will continue to develop desktop versions of their browsers, a Metro "skin" is essentially a whole different product. So these folks are both taking on a completely new platform, essentially, while also developing the traditional Windows products. That's a big burden and responsibility.

Metro-style browsers cannot support add-ons, so they must rely on web standards for virtually everything. This means that they will be, by design, less capable than desktop browsers in some ways, in order to be more secure and reliable, and offer better performance. But they will also need to interact in some way with their desktop cousins. IE Metro 10, for example, shares browsing history, typed addresses, settings, HTML/JS/CSS engines, and security/privacy features like SmartScreen, XSS filtering, and InPrivate browsing with desktop IE 10. How well Google and Mozilla implement this interaction will be a key to their relative successes on Windows 8, I think.

You can read about Mozilla's efforts to develop a Metro version of Firefox in the post Building Firefox for Windows 8 Metro on Asa Dotzler's blog. Google's efforts are highlighted in a report from Mashable.

 

Discuss this Article 9

rwalrond
on Mar 13, 2012
Being a Windows 7 tablet user I have long complained about touch support on the desktop. There was no reason why Windows 7 applications had to have terrible touch performance. In Windows 8 IE10 is awesome with touch on the desktop and as an added bonus, Chrome and Firefox will now have to follow. Even on my tablet I spend more time right now at the desktop. I suppose that will change as more Metro applications become available.
ModernDislocation
on Mar 13, 2012
So now the rubric of success for mobile platforms is the number of web browsers that are available? Paul, this is desperate even for you.
PierreHenriK
on Mar 13, 2012
Metro-style browsers can support add-ons. They will likely be scripts that the browser interpret (ala GreaseMonkey) which means that they will be less powerful, but still, there are ways to extend Metro-style apps.
trieste
on Mar 13, 2012
This is evidence in the same way having watertight compartments was evidence that the Titanic wouldn't sink.
nim81
on Mar 14, 2012
There may be 100 apps but they're 95% junk. The majority seem to be cut-down versions of various websites - take the Wordpress or Endomondo apps which are much less functional than their respective websites and virtually useless. The only decent app I've come across on the store so far is the Evernote one. I do have to say though that the Remote Desktop client is really great - this is something that works really well with the Windows 8 UI and is a more streamlined way of working than in Windows 7 when you are working in both a local and remote environment. Sorry Paul, I'm sure there's better to come but what's on offer so far is very far from putting my fears to rest.
MikeM132
on Mar 14, 2012
Are you early commentors predicting Windows 8 will have 1% market share like Windows Phone? I don't really need to say Windows is the 800 pound gorilla, and if you want ANY market share as a browser, you'd better get onboard early. Window 8 is going to sell well no matter what. Just bundling this OS with new computers is going to drive it way up in sales---past any other non-MS OS immediately upon release. Like it or not, it's going to happen. The only competition for Windows 8 is going to be Windows 7. I use and like Windows Phone, but any comparison to that system is like comparing Zune to iPod (I have a Zune, too!). People buy and write for the dominant stuff, obviously, so iPhone has more apps and Windows has more programs (and browsers). This is hardly new.
glenn.gilbert@b...
on Mar 14, 2012
> Metro-style apps are unproven, from both usability and API perspectives Best thing you've written for ages. On a tablet, full screen's fine. On a desktop, particularly one with a big screen, it's utterly useless. We'll wait for the jury to decide. At the moment all I can hear is advocates and the fanbois chanting outside the courtroom.
Mike84
on Mar 14, 2012
Windows 8 Secret: Pressing the Windows keyboard key is the fastest way to get rid of Metro haha I don't know - lets face it - right now it's cr@#py. With time am sure it will get better, but I have a 'gorgeous' 27inch Apple screen: I feel like I'm violating it with space wasting and inefficient ugly metro apps.
aretzios
on Mar 21, 2012
Why would I want full-screen phone (or tablet) simplified apps on my 30'' inch display or my 15'' inch display in my laptops is a mystery to me (and many others) but it has not dawned on Microsoft. This OS mongrel called Win8 will have a very short life (Windows Me revisited). Microsoft's telemetry (about low screen resolutions) is a crock. Businesses may be buying laptops with basic resolutions but all of those are attached to docking stations with large monitors (and I would bet that MS is not collecting secondary monitor telemetry). Metro is going to fail miserably in the tablet space too. It already is behind the curve in hardware support compared to the iPad and Android and it would fare even worse when it is released. This smells to me like Windows Phone revisited.

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