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        Microsoft Brings Windows 10 Start Menu to Windows RT
        
        
        
			- By Kurt Mackie
- September 16, 2015
Windows RT users are mostly shut out of the new features available in Windows 10, but they can at least  take advantage of Windows 10's Start Menu.
Microsoft this week issued an update for Windows RT  8.1 that replaces    Windows 8.1's Start Screen with a Start Menu that's somewhat similar to   the one  in Windows 10. The update is free and accessible via Microsoft's Windows Update  service.
The new Start Menu will display a header for the user's name  and   image next to a power button. The user's picture now can be added in a    circular frame in that header. The Start Menu also has a list of pinned   apps, a  section for most frequently used apps and an all apps button.   The Start menu  also includes a search box and a large grid area for   pinning Win32 apps, according  to Microsoft's description in its Knowledge Base article 3033055 (see image).
 New Windows RT Start Menu. Source: Microsoft KB article.
   New Windows RT Start Menu. Source: Microsoft KB article. 
Typically, Windows RT machines can only run the few Win32  apps shipped   by Microsoft with the OS, such as Internet Explorer. The machines  are   mostly confined to running Windows Store Apps (also known as  "Metro"   apps).
Microsoft had promised in a Q&A announcing  Windows 10 that this Windows RT update would arrive in September. But the  Q&A   also noted that Windows RT users can't upgrade to Windows 10. They are    at a dead end in terms of Microsoft's OS development strategy going   forward.
The new Start Menu released this week is a kind of a  consolation for   Windows RT purchasers. Windows RT users are out of the loop as    Microsoft diversifies across device form factors with Windows 10 and   rolls out new  features on a monthly basis with its "Windows as a   service" push. 
Microsoft only provided the Windows RT operating system through    hardware manufacturers, which preinstalled the OS on the machines they   sold. However,  today the hardware makers of these ARM chip-based   devices seem to be  nonexistent. 
Microsoft Surface and Surface 2 devices once were available  running   Windows RT. However, that's all ended now. Microsoft's current Surface  3   and Surface Pro 3 product line are just Windows 10 based. Dell was the   last Microsoft  OEM partner that made Windows RT machines. Dell dumped   Windows RT about two  years ago.
Microsoft used to make Nokia Lumia devices running Windows  RT, but an official of the company told The Verge in February that it  stopped making the Lumia 2520 Windows RT tablet.
While there appear to be no more new Windows RT devices  coming,   Microsoft's support for the dead-end OS will be continuing for almost   eight  years, providing that users have upgraded to Windows RT 8.1.   Windows RT has "the  same lifecycle policy as Windows 8 with support   ending 1/10/2023," According  to Microsoft's product  lifecycle page.
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Kurt Mackie is senior news producer for 1105 Media's Converge360 group.