Figure 6-17: A web-based landing page for a Windows 8 app directs users to Windows Store.
The Store app catalog is literally indexed by search engines, so anything that’s in the store is available from these services.
For you, this feature is useful because Windows 8 app listings are available to search engines. So you can visit Google Search, Bing, or whatever other search engine and find the apps you’re looking for using the searching methods you’re already familiar with. We suspect that many will do just that.
The final way in which you can find apps from the web is a bit more subtle—OK, a lot more subtle—and it requires you to be using the Metro version of Internet Explorer. When you browse to the website for a Windows 8 app, that site can optionally provide an entry in IE’s Page Tools button menu, and can indicate this availability by placing a cute little plus (“+”) sign on the button. When you click the Page Tools button, you’ll see a menu item, Get app for this site, as shown in Figure 6-18. Clicking this item will cause the app’s landing page to load in Windows Store.
Figure 6-18: An app switch button in IE 10 for Metro
If you already have the app installed on your PC, that menu item will let you open the app instead.
Downloading, Installing, and Updating Apps
OK, so you’ve found the app of your dreams. Now what?
As you may recall, Windows Store supports three basic types of apps: free, paid, and trial, the latter of which are a reduced functionality (or time limited) version of a paid app. These app types will be reflected in the button or buttons you see on the landing page of the app you intend to download. As an example, consider Figure 6-19. Here, we see a single Install button.
Figure 6-19: An app landing page can have buttons for Install, Buy, or Try.
Install is just one of several buttons that can appear here. The complete list included:
• Instalclass="underline" There are two reasons you might see an Install button. First, you have previously downloaded/purchased the app, so Windows Store is making it available to you now on another computer or device. Or second, the app is free.
• Buy: Click this to purchase a paid app.
• Try: Click this button to download a trial version of a paid app.
When you click any one of these buttons, the app begins downloading immediately. This is indicated in two ways: Windows Store navigates back to the homepage and displays a subtle installing message in the top right of the screen, followed by the notification shown in Figure 6-20.
Figure 6-20: Downloading and installing an app
If you’re quick enough, you can click (or tap) that initial download message and view the Installing Apps screen. This screen, shown in Figure 6-21, provides a progress bar for the app download and install process.
Figure 6-21: The Installing Apps screen
When the download completes … nothing happens. That is, if you stay on the Windows Store homepage, the installing message simply disappears. And if you do navigate to the Installing Apps screen, that’s not much help either: It simply reports that you aren’t installing any apps right now. Right.
As it turns out, the Metro-style app install process is so seamless that most installs take just seconds, and none require any hand-holding, User Account Control prompts, reboots, or the other nonsense that often accompanies a traditional Windows application installation.
On the other hand, a little guidance would be nice. But it’s not difficult: To find your app, you need to visit the Start screen. When a new app is installed, it’s placed on the end of the Start screen, so you may need to scroll to the right. In Figure 6-22, you can see our newly installed app, ready to go.
Figure 6-22: Newly installed apps appear at the end, or far right, of the Start screen.
Sometimes, if an app update is important and required, the app will actually notify you to download the update. The full-screen, modal notification will explain that a newer version of the app is required to continue using it.
By default, Windows Store will automatically download any app updates in the background and then notify you—albeit in very subtle ways—when updates are ready for installation. There are two such prompts. The first appears on the Windows Store live tile. If you have one or more pending updates to install, this tile will display a number notification on its surface, indicating how many apps need to be updated, as shown in Figure 6-23.
You can also manually check for updates, though this isn’t usually necessary since the process is automatic. However, if you’ve disabled the automatic download of app updates, you can find out how to manually check for updates in the section “Configuring Accounts and Preferences” later in this chapter.
When you navigate into Windows Store, you’ll see a similarly subtle message in the top right of the screen indicating that updates are available. (See Figure 6-24.)
Figure 6-23: The Windows Store live tile indicates whether you have pending updates.
Figure 6-24: A subtle message indicating there are updates
Click this message to navigate to the App updates screen, where you can trigger the download and installation of these pending updates. You can see the available choices in Figure 6-25.
Figure 6-25: Windows Store prompts you to install one or more app updates.
To install all of the pending updates, simply click the Install button.
Once you’ve used Windows Store for a while, or across a few PCs and devices, you may find it useful to view all of the apps you’ve downloaded and purchased. You can do this through the Your apps interface. To find this, display the Windows Store app bar and choose Your apps. After a bit of thinking, you’ll see a display much like that in Figure 6-26.
Figure 6-26: The Your apps interface provides a handy front end to, well, your apps.
As with other areas of Windows Store, you can filter this view, in this case in two unique ways. You can view all of the apps you’ve downloaded or just the ones you downloaded on a particular PC. And you can sort by apps that aren’t installed on the current PC, by date, or by name.
Want to install all of your apps? Just click the Select all button in the bottom left of the screen and then click Install.
To install an app, simply select it and then click the Install button that appears in the app bar at the bottom of the screen as in Figure 6-27. You can also click View details to learn more about a selected app.
Getting the Core Microsoft Apps
Thanks to regulatory and antitrust-related agreements around the world, Microsoft is no longer free to bundle as many useful applications (or, in this case, apps) with Windows as it did in the past. For this reason, Windows 7 was often accompanied on new PC installs by related products like Windows Live Essentials and Zune that Microsoft said completed the Windows 7 experience. These applications didn’t technically come with Windows, but they were available separately, for free, and PC makers were free to bundle the apps on their PCs alongside Windows. So the net effect for most users was the same as if Microsoft had included them in Windows 7.