![]() ![]() I experimented with my Windows Phone and Continuity and it worked quite well. Similar keyboard/touchpad accessories exist for those iPadOS devices. ![]() Word/Excel/Outlook/Office 365 etc have already been ported to iOS and Android.Except a 12.9" iPad Pro is not a small touch screen, and a regular iPad is the same size as a Surface Go. So I am left wondering who this is for? Folks who need a Windows PC already have a Windows PC. Naddy69 said:"If you think about it, the idea of a Windows app for iOS and Android makes perfect sense if the goal is to move Windows to the cloud for everybody." Word/Excel/Outlook/Office 365 etc have already been ported to iOS and Android. And - as noted above - desktop Windows apps are going to range from very difficult to impossible to run on a small touch screen over the internet. a Windows PC) then you have no need for a Windows PC in the cloud. ![]() "Įxcept that if you already have a "Windows device" (A.K.A. "Now that the Windows app exists, Microsoft can launch a consumer version of Windows 365 and allow anyone to subscribe to a Windows PC in the cloud, accessible at any time regardless of whether they have a Windows, iOS, or Android device. ![]() But throw in "over the internet" and this is just not going to be practical. The pipe dream idea of doing this with a Windows Phone, running all Windows apps locally, was bad enough. Who is going to connect a large screen, mouse and keyboard to a phone in order to run Windows apps over the internet? "If you think about it, the idea of a Windows app for iOS and Android makes perfect sense if the goal is to move Windows to the cloud for everybody."Įxcept that Windows - and more importantly, the apps that run on Windows - are not designed for small touch screens. ![]()
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