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Various people have asked us for a port of PuTTY to Windows RT so that it could run on the "Metro" side of Windows 8 and thus on Microsoft's ARM-based "Surface" tablets. A WinRT port of PuTTY would be a lot of work. The platform independent code would probably work mostly unmodified, but you would have to implement all the platform-specific parts of PuTTY (the networking abstraction, user input, terminal display and settings GUI) in terms of the WinRT API. Not impossible, and probably easier with PuTTY than with many other applications, but still a lot of work. Also, all applications to work on ARM WinRT devices have to be certified by Microsoft and have to be `sold' through the Windows App Store. That's likely to be a lot of faff, and Microsoft would probably want to gouge some money from us for the privilege. (Also I wouldn't bet on a PuTTY port passing any kind of MS certification.) It's something we'd like to see, but there's nothing imminently happening. (This isn't to say that the existing PuTTY cannot run on the "desktop" side of Windows 8 on Intel systems; as far as we know this should be fine. A couple of people have reported that the Windows 8 "compatibility wizard" or some such is flagging PuTTY as incompatible with Windows 8. We don't know what this is about; the same people who've reported this have gone on to use PuTTY regardless, without noticing any actual problems.) A third-party port called "Metro PuTTY" exists and can be found on our Links page.