Microsoft Store is getting a much needed boost (and ads) – Ghacks

During Build 2022, Microsoft highlighted some of the improvements that it plans to roll out to the virtual Microsoft Store. The Store, which the company introduced in Windows 8 and refined in Windows 10, has seen ups and downs since its first release.
For the first five years of Windows 10’s existence, it was not really something to brag about. Microsoft’s focus on universal platform apps and the ignoring of traditional desktop programs had the result that many developers and users ignored it.
The opening up of the store for traditional Windows apps and the release of Windows 11 improved the availability of apps and programs on the store. The store is now home to popular apps, including Firefox, OpenOffice, Epic Games, or Discord. While it still lacks many apps, it is an improvement over previous years. Microsoft rolled out an update to the web interface as well.
Microsoft plans to use the momentum to further improve its virtual store. Besides opening the store to all Win32 developers, Microsoft announced the following improvements to its store:
The ability to restore apps is probably the main new feature from a user perspective. While it has been possible to restore individual apps ever since the Store was released, it never has been possible until now to restore apps in bulk.
If you work on multiple devices or want to migrate from one device to another, you’d end up restoring individual apps. If you have installed dozens or even more, you’d spend a long time doing so.
The new restore apps feature of the Microsoft Store improves that. It enables users to restore all apps or select applications using the Store interface, on all of their devices. Third-party solutions, such as the Windows Package Manager, may also be used to install apps in bulk.
When users type the name of an app in Search, it may not be returned right now if it is not installed. Windows Search may list web results, if these have not been disabled, but there is no direct call to action available at the time.
The search integration highlights available applications when users type in the search field. There is a direct “get from Store” option for returned applications to improve the discoverability.
The feature lands in Windows Insider builds soon according to Microsoft.
Microsoft Store Ads are available to developers who have published at least one application in the Microsoft Store. Developers may create ad campaigns to target specific users on the device. Microsoft explains that a developer of a music making app could advertise the app to Windows users who like music or make music. Ads are displayed in the Microsoft Store, e.g. when users search for applications.
Now You: do you use the Microsoft Store? What do you think about the announced features?
> Now You: do you use the Microsoft Store? What do you think about the announced features?
Yes for the free AV1 and HEVC codecs and my windows terminal. Finally the excessive telemetry makes sense, after all “they” want to know what software you use and how “they” can improve your “””experience”””.
The problem with the new Microsoft Store is they have removed the two main reasons why I want to use it in the first place:
1) Developers are now able to use their own payment methods. However, I don’t want to give personal and payment details to a whole bunch of individual developers for every single piece of software I buy. I would rather just one entity having my personal and payment details.
2) Developers are now able to use their own software updating mechanism. However, I don’t want a whole bunch of application updaters running in the background doing their own thing – I want all the software to automatically update through the Microsoft Store.
By conceding these two things, the Microsoft Store in pretty pointless.
Ferry valid points @ECJ.
Because of those reasons, I am still trying to avoid the Microsoft store as much as possible.
Also, I very much miss the feature of being able to remove an app from “My library” – there’s apps in there I tried and didn’t like, and apps for devices I no longer use.
There supposedly once was a menu entry to remove these apps from the list, but they’ve scrapped it in the last re-design – WTF?
#Leak
They were never removed. Microsoft is making “accounts” of your device and uploads them to their servers without user consent. Not even Google has ever gone that low.
That’s why even if you format your pc and open microsoft store the library finds what apps you had before the format. It was just a gimmick, that entry was just hiding them and they were shown again after a format. They removed it because more people have being finding out what Microsoft really does.
Microsoft store is still useless as it was in Windows 8. I don’t use it or know anyone who uses it. Its always just pinned on the average user taskbar but they never opened it.
I don’t use the store and am not sufficiently educated to understand how store apps function, including why some of those in that come pre-loaded are not listed by any uninstall program and use so many folders. For example, ZuneMusic and ZuneVideo have 14 folder between them totalling in C:Program FilesWindowsApps.
More in C:Program FilesWindowsAppsDeletedAllUserPackages
and more in C:ProgramDataMicrosoftWindowsAppRepositoryPackages
Neither exists as a findable program on the computer. No wonder Windows computers gradually grind to a halt over time!
If there are so many leftovers when you uninstall (even using a 3rd party app that goes through the motions of ferreting out leftovers) I don’t want store apps.
Aaaaand disabled/gone from my user account.
I don’t want a store, I don’t need a store and I don’t intend to ever use the store. I just need a secure operating system with a good file manager and a straightforward interface without telemetry, tracking and/or ads which allows me to use the software I want to use without jumping through hoops. Hell, if I have to I’ll even live without stickers.
Someday there may even be such a thing.
There is such a thing.
Microsoft Windows 10 LTSC 2021 Enterprise IoT (10 years of support)
Will never use the store out of principle. Resist getting cozy in Microsoft’s walled garden.
@Trey yeah sure, you probably have a phone, and you probably upgrade it every year and of course you won’t use a store to get apps
I mean, like bank apps, you don’t even use them? yeah sure, I am sure you will find those apps in a downloadable apk in the bank website /s
Maybe people should start being honest and stop talking crap they aren’t really doing. You are using stores, only because you don’t use Microsoft one, it doesn’t mean you aren’t using 20 more stores.
And Microsoft doesn’t have a ‘walled garden’ maybe you should find the definition of that, Microsoft hasn’t stopped anyone from installing through the store, many developers would opt to use the store because of automatic updates for example like mpv.net guy or someone like Paint.net who uses the store as a way of people to support the project.
Funny how people like you talk crap, but many developers have even started to offer msix and stuff like that not even having to use the store to install Universal apps, also there is Winget to manage Store apps and Desktop apps.
So maybe you are ignorant about the definition of ‘walled garden’ but I am sure nobody forced Blender guys to upload their app to windows store and they won’t stop offering the exe/msi or portable package in their website, like many other developers. It is actually more opened than what you would get in your many android phones, but I don’t expect non-ignorance on the internet.
The problem with Windows Store is the way its cache and other registry entries, so you an install and uninstall an app 20 years later and it will show up in the registry, and that always sucks, that’s why I started using normal portable installable apps, easier to clean registry after installing them.
Also the problem with Store is how you can’t remove apps when you get them, unlike in Google or Steam where you can do it and then at least you won’t have some ghost apps you might not install ever.
Those are my two complaints, if it wasn’t for those two, I would use Store more, specially when Winget can easily manage them.





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Ghacks is a technology news blog that was founded in 2005 by Martin Brinkmann. It has since then become one of the most popular tech news sites on the Internet with five authors and regular contributions from freelance writers.

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