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>But you can't run a Metro app that anyone else has compiled.

It's metro - who cares? You get more functionality with the desktop.

On a less snarky note, yes you can. All that's necessary is your system has to trust the CA that signed the app - which is itself a few mouse clicks away.

http://blogs.msdn.com/b/windowsstore/archive/2012/04/25/depl...

I've personally done this to load a leaked Skype beta for Metro. Put the requisite commands in a powershell batch file and it becomes so easy your gran can do it.



1. It matters because metro is a core part of the new OS and what microsoft is focused on.

2. I didn't realize you could set up sideloading on non-enterprise versions. As long as that is intentional and not a side-effect of implementation, I take back my complaints about windows 8.


Re: 2, you can't. It's the enterprise editions only, I'm afraid. The preview was the one I did my experiment on.

That said, there's nothing saying you can't use the enterprise version at home...




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