Skip to main content

Digital Trends may earn a commission when you buy through links on our site. Why trust us?

The best new Windows apps, according to Microsoft

Microsoft is acknowledging many of its top applications and developers in a new Microsoft Store App Awards.

The brand has announced winners, runners-up, and finalists of various awards categories, split between Community Choice Awards that were nominated by users and Microsoft Store Editor’s Choice Awards that were selected in-house.

ShareX is a Microsoft Store App Awards winner.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

While the prizes are unknown, the awards are meant to bring awareness to the range of applications available on at the Microsoft Store.

The Community Choice Awards include: 

The Microsoft Store Editor’s Choice Awards include:

Microsoft’s editor team also gave special recognition to the app Talk for Me, a text-to-speech and speech assistance application.

Having revamped the Microsoft Store on Windows in 2021, the app store has faced some criticism for not having sufficient compatibility with a number of applications. Microsoft recently added its own Microsoft Teams application to the Microsoft Store with support for Windows 10 and Windows 11 in mid-May.

Soon following, the brand confirmed at its recent Build conference, the ending of the wait-list program for Win32 apps in the Microsoft Store. This will allow even more applications compatibility with the Microsoft Store, in particular those that run on C++, WinForms, WPF, MAUI, React, Rust, Flutter, and Java – as long as they run on Windows.

Many publications noted that the Win32 program was oddly exclusive in the past, favoring third-party apps like Discord, Firefox, and Zoom, while several commonly used applications, such as Google Chrome and Steam, were not allowed on the Microsoft Store. It will be interesting to see which apps will now come to the app store with the restrictions lifted.

It will also be interesting to see how future Microsoft Store App Awards will pan out when more Win32 programs are added to the app store.

Editors' Recommendations

Fionna Agomuoh
Fionna Agomuoh is a technology journalist with over a decade of experience writing about various consumer electronics topics…
Sorry, Microsoft — I don’t want Copilot+ reading my DMs yet
Microsoft introducing the Recall feature in Windows 11.

Microsoft is kicking off a new era of PCs -- the Copilot+ era. It's a new category of device designed and built around AI, and the key selling point of a Copilot+ PC is the new Recall feature. I'm not quite on board with it yet, however.

Recall is a collection of several small language models that run on your device all the time. These models track everything you do, from messages and emails you send to where you navigate within Windows 11. And, as the name suggests, Copilot can recall this information whenever you need it, using it as bedrock context for how you interact with your PC.

Read more
Microsoft just kicked off a new era of PCs with Copilot+
Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella announces updates to the company's Copilot artificial intelligence (AI) tool.

Microsoft is introducing an entirely new category of PCs, and they're all centered around Copilot+. Amid bold claims of AI PCs from industry leaders like Intel, AMD, and Nvidia, Microsoft is kicking off the era of the AI PC with a new set of hardware requirements and software features that allow your PC to go beyond an AI chatbot.

The idea behind Copilot+ isn't to have a few AI features. Instead, the dedicated Neural Processing Unit (NPU) on a Copilot+ PC will run several language models in the background of Windows 11 -- all the time. The models will scan you through everything you do on your PC to provide context when you want to prompt Copilot properly. Microsoft calls the feature Recall and says it's like a "sensor for AI."

Read more
If you use a VPN, don’t skip this important Windows 11 update
Microsoft Surface Laptop Go 3 rear view showing lid and logo.

It's not you; Windows is causing the issues this time. If the VPN on your Windows 11 or Windows 10 computer is having a hard time connecting, it is likely because of Microsoft's April security updates for Windows 11 (KB5036893 for) and Windows 10 (KB5036892), which have been reported to be the cause of the problems.

But there's good news. According to Microsoft, a patch is now available to fix the VPN problems users are experiencing.

Read more