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Microsoft admits drawing WinGet inspiration from AppGet

2 min. read

Updated onOctober 4, 2023

updated onOctober 4, 2023

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Key notes

The recentlaunchof WinGet in preview was largely successful, except for the controversy regarding where Microsoft drew inspiration for its new Windows Package Manager.

WinGet enables developers to quickly locate and install their devtools, but it’s not entirely an original Microsoft idea. So, the company has finallyadmittedto borrowing some critical functional concepts for the app from rival AppGet.

Microsoft copied some WinGet ideas from AppGet

Microsoft copied some WinGet ideas from AppGet

AppGet is also a Windows Package Manager that serves them same goal as WinGet.

But after Microsoft released WinGet, AppGet creator, Keivan Beigi, published apostclaiming that the company had stolen his ideas without giving him proper credit.

To support his claims, the developer gave a detailed account of email correspondence between him and Microsoft.

Apparently, the company had shown interest in his open-source AppGetproject on GitHub. The two parties were even in discussions that should have led to the developer working for Microsoft.

Instead, the company stopped engaging Beigi at some point, only to announce later that it was launching a rival app.

Beigi says that he expected people to borrow his ideas, and that’s why he put the entire project code on GitHub. But he also anticipated recognition, especially if the party copying his inventions is a tech giant like Microsoft.

Acknowledgment from Microsoft

Well, the Redmond-based company has finally acknowledged the role Beigi played in building WinGet.

They’ve even gone ahead and listed specific app features that borrow heavily from how AppGet fundamentally functions. These are:

Microsoft has also thanked Beigi, who is now pulling the plug on AppGet.

It’s not uncommon for tech giants to render third-party apps obsolete by copying them and building their core functionality into their bigger and more popular flagship platforms.

What do you think about established technology firms like Microsoft undercutting third-party apps this way? Feel free to share your thoughts in the comments section below.

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Don Sharpe

Tech Journalist

Don has been writing professionally for over 10 years now, but his passion for the written word started back in his elementary school days. His work has been published on Livebitcoinnews.com, Learnbonds.com, eHow, AskMen.com, Forexminute.com, The Writers Network and a host of other companies.

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Don Sharpe

Tech Journalist

Don has been writing professionally for over 10 years now, simplifying the tech universe for the mases.