Microsoft has released Windows Phone SDK 7.1.1, which allows
developers to customize their apps for cheaper Windows Phones with less
memory and also run the development kit on Windows 8 machines, the
company said in a blog post on Monday.
Initially,
all Windows Phone devices had 512MB of RAM. The first to ship with just
256MB will be Nokia's Lumia 610, which will cost $252 and be available
in the second quarter, Nokia said when the phone was announced at
Mobile World Congress in February.
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But
the downgrade comes with a cost as well as a saving: Microsoft has
identified that 5 percent of existing applications will not run
properly on devices with 256MB of RAM, it said in February.
To
see how applications perform, the new SDK has two emulators: one for
phones with 512MB of memory and one for phones with 256MB of memory,
according to Microsoft.
Microsoft has also blogged about what to think about when developing apps for the phones.
Developers
that don't want their application made available on phones with 256MB
of memory can indicate this in the manifest file describing the app's
properties, Microsoft said. The company has already blocked the apps it
determined wouldn't run well on low-memory phones.
The Windows
Phone SDK 7.1.1 can also run on the Windows 8 Consumer Preview release.
That will allow them to develop mobile apps using the Windows Phone SDK
and Windows 8 apps using Visual Studio 11, with both development
environments running side by side on the same PC.
Visual Studio 11 is also under development, and Microsoft released a beta version in February.
While
the SDK runs on the consumer preview of Windows 8, it won't be
officially supported until the final version of the operating system is
released, Microsoft said. It also warned that developers are likely to
see a performance degradation in the emulator if they have enabled
Hyper-V.
Officially, Microsoft isn't commenting on when Windows 8
will arrive, but the operating system is expected to be released this
year.
The development kit is available for download now from Microsoft's Download Center. Developers can choose between 10 languages including English, Spanish, Chinese (both traditional and simplified), and Russian.
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