Microsoft has started letting developers build and release applications for Windows Phone 7 using Visual Basic, potentially opening the door to more applications on the new smartphone platform.
The release is limited for now. Developers must use Visual Studio 2010 Professional or higher. Visual Studio 2010 Express for Windows Phone is not supported.
In addition, developers can only use Visual Basic for Silverlight WP7 apps. That means that Visual Basic developers can’t build WP7 apps in the XNA Framework, which is Microsoft’s gaming runtime environment.
In a blog post about the Visual Basic add-on, Microsoft’s Larry Lieberman called the announcement an initial release, indicating that the company could in the future include support for the XNA Framework.
Opening WP7 app development to Visual Basic developers could help Microsoft quickly grow the number of apps available in its Marketplace since there is a broad base of Visual Basic developers.
There appears to be some demand for more applications on WP7 devices. Last week three developers released software that lets WP7 users “sideload” applications. With ChevronWP7, users can load applications that are not approved by Microsoft in its Marketplace.
Nancy Gohring covers mobile phones and cloud computing for The IDG News Service. Follow Nancy on Twitter at @idgnancy. Nancy’s e-mail address is Nancy_Gohring@idg.com