Kevin Gallo, Corporate Vice President of the Windows Developer Platform, tweeted about the 1.0 release, noting “Windows App SDK 1.0 Stable release is live! The WinAppSDK is focused on empowering developers to build the most productive apps on Windows and we’re looking forward to your feedback!” Also: Windows 10 is a security disaster waiting to happen Microsoft is counting on the Windows App SDK to help the company undo some of its past mistakes created by its “Universal Apps/One Windows platform strategy,” which relied on UWP to supplant Win32 and for developers to do some heavy lifting to bring their existing apps to that platform. When Windows 8 fizzled and developers balked at moving to UWP, Microsoft officials shifted gears. In 2019, Gallo outlined the plan to try to unify Microsoft’s Windows developer platforms and create a situation where developers could and would simply build “Windows apps,” rather than Win32 or UWP ones. In May 2020, Microsoft released previews of the first two official Reunion components: WinUI 3 and WebView 2. WinUI 3is the new native UI framework for Windows 10. WebView 2 is a control for integrating web content into an app. In March 2021, Microsoft hit the 0.5 milestone with Project Reunion. With the 1.0 release, Microsoft supports WinUI 3 for use by full WinUI 3 apps. In a future release, Microsoft will also support WPF, WinForms and other apps with WinUI 3 via XAML Islands. The 1.0 release supports text rendering, resource management, app lifecycle, and windowing for both packaged apps and unpackaged apps as well. Push notification support is slated for a future Windows App SDK release, according to the roadmap.