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Microsoft Weekly: Mostly mobile, corporate callout, and more

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Welcome to another weekly roundup of the news out of Redmond. This week, we have lots of mobile app news, as well as an update on the what happened in the boardroom. Oh, and Windows 10, as always.
Lots of news out of Redmond this week, especially the company earnings report for Q4 and fiscal 2017. There was also plenty of news about Windows 10, including it now being the most installed Microsoft OS in the world. And if you plan on watching the Super Bowl tomorrow in the United States, Xbox One gamers can dream about their own version of a winners’ ring.
Let’s get started. Here’s the Microsoft news for the week of January 27 to February 2.
Microsoft paid a lot of attention to its apps for mobile devices this week, namely iOS and Android (sorry Windows Mobile users). Android’s Microsoft Launcher, previously the Arrow Launcher, got plenty of customization improvements in its newest update, while Launcher beta testers now get a chance to play with Cortana. The digital assistant was just added to the newest beta build.
Here’s a breakdown of the different apps that got some love, by platform:
iOS and Android
iOS
If you are at all interested in the financials of Microsoft, then you were probably tuned in to its earnings call earlier this week. Revenue was up 12% in Q4 from the same period last year. Gaming revenue and Windows OEM was up 8% and 4% respectively, while Dynamics was up 10% as well. Most of the other divisions also saw growth, except for poor Windows Mobile, which we know is on its deathbed. The latest earnings report listed revenue for the product as «immaterial.»
Other big corporate news this week was the company’s purchase of PlayFab, a cloud gaming service. The move looks to bolster Microsoft’s cloud strategy, previously just related to the more business-oriented Azure. How Microsoft will actually use the acquisition in the gaming space is still unclear, but we can expect the company to give us more details when it knows how it will use the service.
Finally, while this isn’t exactly related, those in the boardroom are probably happy to know that Windows 10 is now the #1 installed Microsoft OS worldwide as of January, surpassing Windows 7, according to statistics analysis group StatCounter. While the United States, the UK, Oceania, and Europe are firmly Windows 10, Asia, Africa, and a few other regions still aren’t budging from the Windows 7 camp. However, the shift continues toward Windows 10, which is good news for Redmond.
Windows 10 was active this week, with build 16299.214 seeing its official release. It was a cumulative update for those running the Fall Creators Update. Most of it had to do with fixes for Spectre and Meltdown, and was the third version of 1709 to come out since January’s Patch Tuesday.
Along the same lines, MS released an optional update last weekend aimed at users who have Intel processors. If you had updated with Intel’s first fix, this patch rolled that fix back, as Intel asked vendors to stop patching the processor until it fixed a flaw related to the last update. Got that?
The first Bug Bash for Redstone 4 — aka the next Windows 10 update — kicked off yesterday, and users had to create an S Mode for Windows 10 Home. There has been an S Mode for Pro, and one was announced for Enterprise, but one for Home was new. However, the quest didn’t work right, so it may have been an error.
Other Windows 10 related releases this week included the IoT Core and SDK preview build 17083, while Microsoft also confirmed that it would not be releasing ISOs for build 17074, meaning no clean install of Redstone 4 with the latest build.
And in a continued show of support for Windows 10, the support window (heh) for Enterprise and Education versions 1607,1703, and 1709 was extended an extra six months to allow businesses a chance to properly upgrade.
Finally, if you want to use Office 2019 when it comes out, you better have Windows 10, as that is the only OS that will be supported by the upcoming suite of products when it launches later this year.
Gaming
Other tidbits
There are plenty of things we could have used to close out the column this week, but there is something about a $10,000+ Super Bowl-style ring going to a random Madden NFL 18 streamer that just seemed to scream «Put me in the spotlight!»
Yes, indeed, the Xbox team has created a ring with 188 diamonds and 46 green tsavorite stones in a white gold setting. Some lucky individual who streams a winning game of Madden on Mixer will get chosen at random for the prize. If you didn’t know about this, you can still fire up your Xbox One and try to win a multiplayer game while streaming until the night of February 5, when everything will end.
Good luck, and TTFN.
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