Windows 10 machines running on ARM will be able to emulate x64 apps soon

Windows 10 machines running on ARM will be able to emulate x64 apps soon

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This addresses one of the biggest problems with Windows machines on ARM.

Samuel Axon

  • The Surface Pro X with optional Slim Pen and keyboard.

  • Storage for the pen lies within the keyboard, which charges the pen wirelessly.

  • It’s a slightly thinner device than the Surface Pro 7 by a little over a millimeter.

  • The Surface Pro X keyboard and pen are sold separately.

Windows laptops and convertibles running ARM aren’t exactly the bulk of the market at this point, but there are several of them there—including Microsoft’s own updated Surface Pro X, which was just announced today.

One of the reasons that not every consumer has made the plunge is that running traditional x86 apps on these Windows 10 ARM machines poses significant limitations. Among the biggest: there’s no support at all for running 64-bit x86 applications in emulation, only 32-bit.

Today, Microsoft announced in a long-winded blog post that that limitation will soon change, as emulation of 64-bit Windows applications is going into a public-testing phase soon. That addresses one of the biggest complaints about the platform—complaints that have only grown as more popular applications have converted to 64-bit-only as the months have gone by.

Microsoft also announced several new, app-specific developers for ARM-native apps. Visual Studio Code “has also been updated and optimized for Windows 10 on ARM,” it said.

The announcement noted that Microsoft is “making Microsoft Edge” faster on ARM and improving its impact on battery life as well. Additionally, the company announced that a Windows on ARM-native Microsoft Teams client is around the corner.

While Windows on ARM has been a relatively slow mover, that hasn’t stopped competitors from going forward with ARM plans. Apple is expected to launch the first ARM-based Mac later this year.

macOS already completely dropped support for 32-bit applications somewhat recently, and Apple will offer Rosetta 2 to emulate 64-bit macOS apps on ARM Macs (which the company calls “Macs with Apple Silicon”).

However, whether (and how) Mac users will be able to virtualize Windows x86 applications on Apple Silicon Macs remains unknown. x64 emulation will first be introduced to ARM Windows machines via the Windows Insider Program next month.

Listing image by Microsoft

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