WSA was literally the only reason I upgraded to Windows 11. What is going on there at Amazon and Microsoft?
They also dropped support for the Audible app for Windows last year, so now the only way to use it will be through the useless website that blasts it at 100% volume with no control.
Thank you, Microsoft, for continually yanking genuinely useful features and shoving shit down our throats that we neither want nor need, but that some marketing grunt figured was the new shiny.
WSA seems to be at least partially open source (the Kernel is available), so hopefully there is enough of a community around it to continue development and support. This seems like bad news for the closed source components, though, like the interface.
I really enjoyed playing with WSA and thought it had great potential as a means to run archived mobile games and applications. It was far more seamless than using a development Android emulator, and the state of game-oriented Android emulators is disastrous.
kaetemi|2 years ago
They also dropped support for the Audible app for Windows last year, so now the only way to use it will be through the useless website that blasts it at 100% volume with no control.
frumper|2 years ago
sydbarrett74|2 years ago
Thank you, Microsoft, for continually yanking genuinely useful features and shoving shit down our throats that we neither want nor need, but that some marketing grunt figured was the new shiny.
ChrisArchitect|2 years ago
localghost02|2 years ago
I really enjoyed playing with WSA and thought it had great potential as a means to run archived mobile games and applications. It was far more seamless than using a development Android emulator, and the state of game-oriented Android emulators is disastrous.