Windows on Arm is arguably as successful as it has ever been—you can buy multiple Arm-powered Windows laptops and tablets, and those devices can run nearly the entire range of available Windows apps thanks to x86-to-Arm code translation. That said, Windows on Arm still accounts for just a fraction of the entire Windows ecosystem, and native Arm apps for the platform are still relatively rare.
At its Build developer conference Tuesday, Microsoft made a few announcements aimed at bolstering Windows on Arm. The first is Project Volterra, a Microsoft-branded mini-desktop computer powered by an unnamed Qualcomm Snapdragon SoC. More relevant for developers who already have Arm hardware, Volterra will be accompanied by a fully Arm-native suite of developer tools.
According to Microsoft’s blog post, the company will be releasing ARM-native versions of Visual Studio 2022 and VSCode, Visual C++, Modern .NET 6, the classic .NET framework, Windows Terminal, and both the Windows Subsystem for Linux and Windows Subsystem for Android. Arm-native versions of these apps will allow developers to run them without the performance penalty associated with translating x86 code to run on Arm devices—especially helpful given that Arm Windows devices usually don’t have much performance to spare.
Previews of these tools will begin to be available “in the next few weeks.”
As for the Volterra hardware, what we know is that it’s running a Qualcomm SoC with a built-in neural processing unit (NPU), “best-in-class AI computing capacity,” and support for Qualcomm’s Neural Processing SDK. Microsoft is pushing it as a solution for testing AI and machine-learning apps, although depending on the other specs it could also be a good general-purpose development box for Windows on Arm apps.
Microsoft’s reveal video made it look like Volterra uses a standard NVMe SSD and that it will include an active cooling fan, suggesting a bit more expandability and performance than we’ve seen in other Windows on Arm dev boxes. It also appears to have a decent selection of ports for its size, with three USB-A ports, a mini DisplayPort, an Ethernet port on the back, and two USB-C ports on the side. Its stackable black enclosure is also made of “recycled ocean plastic,” like the Ocean Plastic Mouse the company introduced last year.
Project Volterra will be available “later this year” for an…
Read More: Microsoft announces a brand-new Arm-powered desktop PC and Arm-native dev tools