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Windows 10 IoT Core Insider Preview for Raspberry Pi 2

ms-iot.github.io

45 points by tomh- 11 years ago · 15 comments

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ubercow 11 years ago

I wonder what the story will be for devices that Microsoft hasn't "blessed". Will there be some way to create our own images with drivers needed for different SoCs? There's a whole bunch of awesome ARM dev boards out there and it would be a shame to limit it to the popular ones.

slipstream- 11 years ago

Fun fact: after downloading it and looking around, this is definitely based on Windows Phone.

matmann2001 11 years ago

The demo they show is how to write a LED blinker program. I don't need an operating system (especially Windows) to do that. I could do that with a 555 timer and save $40.

I thought this partnership was going to enable running Windows software on a Pi.

  • stinos 11 years ago

    Erm, isn't LED Blinking like the Hello World of talking to digital outputs on any type of hardware? By your logic you can get rid of a lot of the rPi/ARM dev board/basically aything with GPIO/... samples all together, and no-one except people with experience would be able to get LEDs blinking. Which especialy in case of the rPi defeats it's purpose as a learning tool.

    • matmann2001 11 years ago

      You've misinterpreted my point.

      Blinking LEDs is the Hello World of embedded systems. But if I have to develop all of the software myself that I want to run on the Pi, I'd rather just use Linux.

      The only benefit I see about having Windows running on the Pi, is so actual Windows applications can be downloaded and run on it.

      If that functionality exists, there should be a demo where you boot up the Pi, access the Windows store, and download/run a real application.

  • mohamedattahri 11 years ago

    I don't see demos. I only see samples. And I think it does exactly what you're asking for. It lets you run Windows software on a Pi. If you were thinking full scale Windows application, then Windows IoT Core is not what you're looking for.

    • asdfaoeu 11 years ago

      One of the earlier press releases[1] about this didn't mention anything about IoT Core. I think many people expected this would be something like the existing Windows RT.

      [1]: https://dev.windows.com/en-US/iot/RaspberryPi2Support

      • tdicola 11 years ago

        The messaging about Windows 10 on the Pi 2 a few months ago was pretty bad and many people assumed it was the full Windows 10 desktop experience because so little info was released at the time. Only if you dug into the details released at WinHEC a month ago could you start to see that it's a shell for running simple Windows universal apps.

      • MikusR 11 years ago

        There are 7 (seven) mentions of IoT on that site. Eight if you include URL.

  • NeutronBoy 11 years ago

    > I thought this partnership was going to enable running Windows software on a Pi.

    That's how the tech sites (mis)reported it. It was never about running full Windows, it was about embedded devices and IoT

  • dekhn 11 years ago

    Maybe you aren't the intended target for this, then?

    I tried to learn electronics with 555 timers and leds about 10 years ago. Failed miserably- there was a ton of back-knowledge I didn't have. Systems like Pi make it a lot esier to work with and debug systems to gain the level of confidence where you can assemble a 555-based system.

higherpurpose 11 years ago

Is this going to be another repeat of the Windows XP ATM mess?

rasz_pl 11 years ago

Its totally not like Windows CE or 95!

>Wait for a few minutes and the board will automatically restart

oh, 2015 and M$ still wants me to reboot. At least its only once after install and thats it, right?

> If Visual Studio cannot connect to your Windows IoT Core device, try rebooting the device.

oh. Not restart the debugger, just reboot, you know, turn it off and on again like Apu told you over the phone. After all you are just some random idiot, not a person trying to develop on this platform.

>familiar tools, including sfpcopy.exe

when I think of copying I think sfp! wait what? Why would I be familiar with a copy utility which name doesnt start with word "copy", and is not even shipped standard on Windows platforms (at least not on Win7/Win8/8.1)?

Can I at least SSH to the box? or telnet? anything standard and open?

>Enter-PsSession

no?, oh :(, and apparently to be an admin on your Pee you need to start powershell in admin mode on your client computer too, why? At least its painless and reliable

>Note: there is a known issue with PS that can cause a StackOverflowException on the PS client machine. To work around this type the following line

client as in my laptop where I just started powershell as an admin? splendid!

>Commonly used utilities

grep? cat? no :(

>notice how we leverage the new WinRT classes in the Windows.Devices.Gpio namespace

wasnt WinRT send to the farm with the rest of stupid ideas M$ had recently?

btw headless led blinking sample has logo and a splash screen :)))) but its still less painful to look at than the Erlang one from few days ago :)

All in all Im impressed. It looks slick and well put together, and Im sure it looks straightforward and simple for the winapi folks. I can imagine some very enthusiastic young people working on it at Redmont (people that never touched Linux/unix and are slowly reimplementing it? :P). Its not bad, +1 from me.

  • joshuapants 11 years ago

    > wasnt WinRT send to the farm with the rest of stupid ideas M$ had recently?

    WinRT and Windows RT are two separate things. WinRT is the runtime that Windows Store apps run on. Of course, you'd know that if you spent 15 seconds googling the answer instead of grasping for more things to complain about.

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