- Asus VivoTab with Windows RT gets $50 price cut; free keyboard
- Download the First BitTorrent Client for Windows RT and Surface RT
- Security Update for Microsoft .NET Framework 4.5 on Windows 8, Windows RT and Windows Server 2012
- How to Enable Flash Websites on Windows RT and Surface RT
- How to Create Shutdown and Reboot Tiles on Windows 8’s Start Screen
- Microsoft shows you why the Asus VivoTab RT is better than the iPad in new video
- New Surface RT commercial emphasizes features
- Dell now selling the XPS 10 Windows RT tablet for $299.99
- HTC allegedly preps high-res R7 and R12 Windows RT Blue tablets for Q3 launch
- Acer waits for Windows RT 8.1 to make tablet decision
- How to Easily Add Websites to the Flash Whitelist on Windows RT
- Microsoft, The Web Is No Longer Good Enough; Windows RT Needs Apps And Fast
- Email for Windows RT: Help is on the way
- Windows RT Whitelist Tool Provides Quick, Easy Way to Enable Flash for Certain Sites
- Comprehensive Guide to Microsoft Surface (and Windows RT) with 50+ Tips and Tricks
- Hacking Windows RT Journal: Part 1
- You can run legacy apps on jailbroken Windows RT and will be able to use a third-party app store (soon)
- You Can Now Run x86 Legacy Windows Apps On Surface / Windows RT
- Hack Enables x86 Applications to Run on Windows RT
- Windows RT Jailbreak Tool Still Available, Microsoft Seems to Ignore It
Windows on ARM - Windows RT
Here's my 21-minute highlights video of the Windows 8 on ARM "Consumer Preview" event keynote at Mobile World Congress in Barcelona. After the presentation, I was able to ask a few questions to Steven Synofsky and Michael Anguilo, here are some of those replies that I got:
- Desktop apps on Windows Store and Windows Store for ARM: They'll clarify it to my email later. Steve Synofsky says it's clear in the blog post. Windows Store is for Metro apps but there is a "parallel thing" (paraphrasing) for Desktop apps, the whole Third Party Desktop Apps for Windows 8 are not to be previewed on the Consumer Preview release yet.
- Multi-booting other OS when secure boot is in use. Steve Synofsky says that is up to the OEM. Secure Boot is a feature Microsoft provides as an option. The whole point of Secure Boot is that people cannot just "boot stuff from their garage". But he did not seem to dismiss that OEMs can dual-boot for example Android or Ubuntu on the same device.


