![]() ![]() Even after porting, they will want to test it a ton and that costs $$$. ![]() ![]() TL:DR You can do it, but I wouldn't do it and it's probably not worth the effort.īanks, brokerage firms, etc., are extra catious about security. They seem to hate Windows phone enough that they might even sue someone for reverse engineering their app, even if you're doing it for your own use. Snapchat, for instance, I'm sure you could get the app to load on your phone, but who know what would happen if they analyze the user data (I assume they send your phone information somewhere in their app) and see this. Also, depending on the app, you would likely run into some issues. Don't quote me on any of the numbers, I'm working from memory on something I don't plan on doing lol. Then (I forget exactly what it is in WM10, developer mode maybe) shwitch your phone to allow side loaded apps and I think you can install like 20 without issue. That would sort of be possible (although still illegal) Lets say you want to do that, you would have to get the file, and decompile it (not the easiest thing to do, but for iOS you can pretty much guess what compiler is used for it) You would then submit the code, get the translated code back and make the needed changes. The final version of Windows Bridge for iOS will be released later this fall. The code will be updated later to support Windows 10 apps that run on ARM-based processors. The code is now available to download on GitHub, and currently supports turning iOS apps into ones for Windows 8.1 and Windows 10 that run on x86 and 圆4 processors. We welcome any and all participation in building this bridge." And, for the really ambitious, we invite you to help us by contributing to the project, as community contributors - with source code, tests, bug reports, or comments. Regardless, we'd love for the interested and curious to look at the bridge, and compare what we're building with your app's requirements. Given the ambition of the project, making it easy for iOS developers to build and run apps on Windows, it is important to note that today's release is clearly a work-in-progress - some of the features demonstrated at Build are not yet ready or still in an early state. "We're releasing the iOS bridge as an open-source project under the MIT license. In a blog post, Microsoft explains why they released this preview version of Windows Bridge for iOS as an open source project: ![]()
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