Windows 8 Consumer Preview is out! Ready to write an app?

February 29th marked the release of the Windows 8 Consumer Preview and it was downloaded over a million times in the first 24 hours alone.  If you’re a developer you have probably been playing around with the Developer Preview we gave out during Build.  The Consumer Preview (CP for short) represents an impressive body of work with over 100,000 code changes since the Developer Preview!  Now is the time to start getting serious about writing your apps.

 

Where do I start?

First, check out the below Youtube video from Jensen Harris that goes over many of the new features in this release.

 

If you have the time (about 90 mins worth) you can also watch the full Windows 8 Consumer Preview event here.

Win8ConsumerPreview

 

 

Where do I get the Bits?

 

Everything you need to get started is over at Preview.Windows.Com.  You can download 32 or 64 Bit versions, exe installable or as well as ISO formats.

Win8ConsumerPrev

Note: If you miss the ISO Product Key on the Download Page here it is: DNJXJ-7XBW8-2378T-X22TX-BKG7J

 

 

Where do I get the Developer Tools?

Both Visual Studio 11 and the Windows SDK Samples have been updated for the Consumer Preview release.  You can grab all of the goodies off MSDN here.

toools

 

 

So what has changed since the Developer Preview?

For a high level overview head over to the Windows 8 Official Blog…

Welcome to Windows 8 – The Consumer Preview Steven Sinofsky

Today is a big day for the Windows team. At Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, Spain a few moments ago, we unveiled the Windows 8 Consumer Preview to our partners and press. Based on a broad range of feedback, we have made over 100,000 code changesand the Consumer Preview represents a refined product ready for broad and daily usage by those of you willing to test a pre-release OS. You can download the Consumer Preview starting now at https://preview.windows.com. If you tried the Windows 8 Developer Preview, then you are going to be delighted to see a broad range of product changes and improvements based on a feedback from many sources.

Windows 8 reimagines Windows, from the chipset to the experience. With the Developer Preview we focused on presenting the new APIs and amazing new tools for developers. Today’s Consumer Preview is focused on a broader audience, and along with improvements to the WinRT APIs based on developer feedback, we are introducing the full user experience, the Windows Store for apps, and early previews of some first- and third-party apps.

With so much to dive into, let’s talk about what is different in the Consumer Preview at a high level:

  • Broad range of product changes and improvements: Since the Developer Preview in September, designed to preview the programming platform, Windows 8 has progressed across every dimension. From completing the user experience for touch, keyboard, and mouse, to refining the development platform, to improving performance, quality, and reliability across all subsystems as well as new features, the Consumer Preview represents a complete view of the capabilities of Windows 8.
  • Windows Store with an “App Preview” of new apps: The Windows 8 Consumer Preview marks the opening of the Windows Store for testing. You’ll see a variety of new Metro style apps from both third-party developers and Microsoft. During the Consumer Preview, these apps are available to try and experience at no cost to users. Please note, these apps and the set of preinstalled apps are at an early stage of development and are available as an early App Preview, and will be updated via the Windows Store. In addition, the Store will offer personalized recommendations, and Windows 8 gives users the ability to take their apps and settings with them across multiple PCs, making it easy to discover and try new apps while offering developers the greatest opportunity of any platform
  • Connecting to the cloud across Windows PCs and Windows Phones: You’ll experience seamless integration with the content across your web services. Optionally signing in with a Microsoft account provides access to features including the ability to roam all settings, use cloud storage, communicate with email, calendar, and contacts, and connect to a broad range of services. Your connection to the cloud works across your Windows PCs and your Windows Phones. You’ll also experience early previews of the Metro style apps for Mail, Calendar, People, Messaging, Photos, and SkyDrive.
  • Internet Explorer 10 Platform Preview 5: With IE10, we reimagined the browser to create a new experience designed specifically for Windows 8 devices. It provides an edge to edge interface that is all about less browser, and more web. Fast and fluid, IE is hardware-accelerated to enable web performance. The same rendering engine and high-performance script engine is available on the Windows desktop as well.

We’ve detailed many features in this blog across all the subsystems of Windows 8. From the kernel, networking, file system, graphics, and the user interface across all of those. There’s no easy way to enumerate the depth and breadth of Windows 8 in a post. The best thing to do is experience it yourself. We encourage everyone to check out our demo video, and all the videos and information on https://preview.windows.com. From there you can also download the Consumer Preview for x86/64. For developers, there is also a beta of Visual Studio 11.

We’ll publish a quick look at system requirements for this release, but the short version is that your Windows 7 logo PC is the perfect place to start as the system requirements have not changed. You can upgrade from the Developer Preview or from Windows 7, or install cleanly (we strongly recommend a hardware installation and not a VM install if you are looking to experience the release as the vast majority will experience it, and please keep in mind the minimum screen resolution required is 1024x768). We will be updating the release with various quality updates and drivers over the coming weeks/months just to exercise our overall update and telemetry mechanisms. Please keep in mind that this is a test release of a product still under development.

We’ve got a lot more blogging to do. So stay tuned for details of the changes we made and the features we haven’t had a chance to talk about yet. This blog continues to be a big part of the development process. Now that we have this shared experience, we expect folks commenting on posts to be running the Consumer Preview so we’re all sharing the same context. We know there will be a lot of feedback—that comes from reimagining a product used by a billion people!

Happy downloading and testing!

--Steven on behalf of the Windows 8 team

Then check out the new Windows 8 App Developer Blog!  There are already a couple posts up covering the changes.

Then check out the IE Team Blog for what’s new in for the Web Platform in this release

There is also a neat little insider interview from the Windows 8 Team on what it was like working on this release.  You can check that out over here.

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Will my Visual Studio 2010 Windows Azure Developer Tools work on the Consumer Preview with Visual Studio 11?

Yes.  But there are a few gotchas you should be aware of.  Head over to Azureland here for details.

 

Can I install the Windows Azure SDK on Windows 8?

Yes but you need to configure a few things manually. Head over here for details.

 

Will the Windows Phone Developer Tools work on the Consumer Preview?

Yes.  But you will need to debug locally on a device for now as the way OS Emulation works in Windows 8 has changed.  So the Windows Phone Emulator will not be able to run right now.  An update is in the works and you can get more details over on the Windows Phone Dev Blog here.


What is new in Visual Studio 2011?

Check out the new Channel 9 video - Visual Studio Toolbox: Visual Studio 11 Beta with Jason Zander.  Jason gives us the inside scoop on a lot of the new changes. 

VS11New

New IDE ([04:15])

Blend support for HTML ([10:15])

Improved XAML Designer ([13:45])

Unit Test Explorer and automatic running of unit tests ([18:45])

Hosted TFS ([24:00])

Metro app development ([29:00])

 

 

Any additional Goodies?

Ed Bott has an overview of some of the preview apps you can check out here.

NewApps

He also has found some “Shortcuts and Surprises” in the new Consumer Release.  You can check it out here.

eb-win8cp-screen-capture

 

Adam Kinney has also create a great info graphic of the new AppBar Icons available to Metro Style Apps.  Check it out here.

appbaricons_preview

 

The Bing Maps Team announced support for Metro Style you can get all the details here.

1452.maps image.jpg-550x0

 

Finally, for all of you keyboard and mouse hotshots The Verge has a video comparison of both controls you can watch here.

 

KbdMouse