Microsoft wants to make the Windows Store better. Not only for end-users but for developers too. Changes are coming that will improve how apps get onto your machine and also how you find them in the first place. Microsoft is also pushing ahead with its Amazon Appstore preview, which will be available outside of the US by the end of the year, although only in France, Germany, Italy, Japan and the United Kingdom.
Microsoft will be testing out new features on the Windows Insider channel(opens in new tab) soon, including automatically restoring previously used apps to a new Windows device. This will only affect apps that have been installed from the Microsoft Store, but it's still a potentially useful upgrade from the current system of trying to find specific apps from scratch.
This is much like you what get with Android smartphones, which give you the option of setting up a new phone to have all the apps you had on the previous phone so you don't have to mess around finding your faves.
The whole point is that this makes the new PC experience a more seamless endeavor, which I can definitely get behind. The only problem here is that plenty of us are still only installing a handful of apps from the Microsoft Store, so it doesn't offer much of a time-saving. Still, anything that makes using the Store easier has got to help.
Microsoft is also going to be integrating Microsoft Store results into the Windows Search. This allows you to quickly install an app that you know the name of direct from the Start bar. If you try this in Windows 11 right now you'll often find you'll end up at the Microsoft Store after visiting the developer's website, so this should save some time.
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