
It was promised, and it wa recently announced that the Windows Insider build would pick up 64-bit support in November, with a public release expected in Q1 2021. X86 64-bit emulation was not supported at launch. But in the main your 32-bit legacy apps would still be available.
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These would run on the Pro X albeit drawing more power from the battery, potentially running slower than on an Intel machine such as the Surface Pro 7, and in some cases obscure drivers would not be supported.
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As the Pro X launched, Windows 10 on ARM could emulate x86 32-bit apps. Microsoft is not in the habit of standing up and saying ‘we’re dropping all support for 32-bit apps, good luck’.

But what about the countless number of legacy apps many of which are business critical apps in the enterprise situation. Naturally ARM apps are going to run on the ARM computer.


Was the software? Here’s where it gets interesting, because there are three broad flavours of Windows 10 apps to consider… those compiled directly for ARM, those compiled for older Intel-based x86 Windows machines using 32-bit code, and those compiled for the Intel x86 machines using 64-bit code. Was it the finished package? The hardware certainly was - even though I don’t agree with the removal of the 3.5mm headphone jack and SD card expansion slot.
