IT Home, February 12 — Tech media Windows Latest published a blog post yesterday (February 11), stating that after testing multiple mainstream applications, application compatibility on ARM version Windows 11 is no longer a major obstacle.
The media pointed out that the ARM version of Windows faced setbacks due to the failure of Surface RT, but with Qualcomm releasing Snapdragon X Elite / Plus series processors and Microsoft continuously improving system maturity, the situation has significantly improved.
A key breakthrough is the Prism compatibility layer jointly developed by Microsoft and Qualcomm, which allows applications originally only able to run on x86/x64 processors like Intel or AMD to now run on ARM architecture devices.
The Prism emulation layer supports direct execution of un-recompiled traditional applications, nearly achieving “out-of-the-box” usability, though it introduces increased CPU and memory usage, which may lead to performance degradation and shorter battery life. In contrast, native applications compiled specifically for ARM64 architecture do not require the emulation layer and can deliver optimal performance and battery efficiency.
The media editor tested Microsoft Surface Laptop 15 for a year in daily office use, equipped with Qualcomm Snapdragon X Elite CPU and 32GB of RAM, and found it fully capable of web browsing, productivity, multimedia applications, and even some light development work.
IT Home has compiled the following list of mainstream productivity software, professional applications, and tools tested by the media:
Emulation or Native
Runs Properly
Remarks
Productivity
Microsoft Office
Native
Runs smoothly
No issues
Adobe Acrobat
Emulation
Runs smoothly
Some features run slowly
Microsoft Edge
Native
Runs smoothly
No issues
Google Chrome
Native
Runs smoothly
No issues
Mozilla Firefox
Native
Runs smoothly
No issues
Slack
Native
Runs smoothly
No issues
Private Internet Access
Native (beta)
Runs smoothly
No issues
Proton VPN
Native
Runs smoothly
Some features missing
SurfShark VPN
Native
Runs smoothly
No issues
Multimedia
VLC
Native (beta)
Runs smoothly
No issues
Screenbox
Native
Runs smoothly
No issues
Cinema 4D
Emulation
Runs smoothly
No issues
Adobe Premiere
Native (beta)
Runs smoothly
No issues
Adobe After Effects
Native (beta)
Runs smoothly
No issues
Audacity
Native
Runs smoothly
No issues
Professional Applications and Utilities
AutoCAD
Emulation
Runs smoothly
Not officially supported, but functional
SolidWorks
Emulation
Not fully
Not officially supported, some features malfunction
MathCAD
Emulation
Runs smoothly
No issues
Matlab
Emulation
Not fully
Some features malfunction
Powertoys
Native
Runs smoothly
No issues
Games
Steam
Emulation
Runs smoothly
No issues
Fortnite
Emulation
Runs smoothly
No issues
World of Warcraft
Native
Runs smoothly
No issues
VR Chat
Emulation
Runs smoothly
No issues
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Foreign media first explore ARM version of Microsoft Win11; application compatibility is no longer a pain point
IT Home, February 12 — Tech media Windows Latest published a blog post yesterday (February 11), stating that after testing multiple mainstream applications, application compatibility on ARM version Windows 11 is no longer a major obstacle.
The media pointed out that the ARM version of Windows faced setbacks due to the failure of Surface RT, but with Qualcomm releasing Snapdragon X Elite / Plus series processors and Microsoft continuously improving system maturity, the situation has significantly improved.
A key breakthrough is the Prism compatibility layer jointly developed by Microsoft and Qualcomm, which allows applications originally only able to run on x86/x64 processors like Intel or AMD to now run on ARM architecture devices.
The Prism emulation layer supports direct execution of un-recompiled traditional applications, nearly achieving “out-of-the-box” usability, though it introduces increased CPU and memory usage, which may lead to performance degradation and shorter battery life. In contrast, native applications compiled specifically for ARM64 architecture do not require the emulation layer and can deliver optimal performance and battery efficiency.
The media editor tested Microsoft Surface Laptop 15 for a year in daily office use, equipped with Qualcomm Snapdragon X Elite CPU and 32GB of RAM, and found it fully capable of web browsing, productivity, multimedia applications, and even some light development work.
IT Home has compiled the following list of mainstream productivity software, professional applications, and tools tested by the media: