diff --git a/windows/application-management/sideload-apps-in-windows-10.md b/windows/application-management/sideload-apps-in-windows-10.md index 5ab1d678f5..2895977bac 100644 --- a/windows/application-management/sideload-apps-in-windows-10.md +++ b/windows/application-management/sideload-apps-in-windows-10.md @@ -27,15 +27,17 @@ Sideloading apps is when you install apps that aren't from an official source, s When you sideload an app, you deploy a signed app package to a device. You maintain the signing, hosting, and deployment of these apps. Sideloading was also available with Windows 8 and Windows 8.1 -Starting with Windows 10, sideloading is different than in earlier versions of Windows: +Starting with Windows 10, sideloading is different than earlier versions of Windows: - You can unlock a device for sideloading using an enterprise policy, or through the **Settings** app. - License keys aren't required. - Devices don't have to be joined to a domain. -To allow these apps to run on your Windows devices, you might have to enable sideloading on your devices. This article shows you how to: +To allow these apps to run on your Windows devices, you might have to enable sideloading on your devices. -- **Turn on sideloading**: You can deploy using Group Policy or a mobile device management (MDM) provider. Or, you can use **Settings** apps to turn on sideloading. +This article shows you how to: + +- **Turn on sideloading**: You can deploy using Group Policy or a mobile device management (MDM) provider. Or, you can use the **Settings** app to turn on sideloading. - **Install the app certificate**: Import the security certificate to the local device. This certificate tells the local device to trust the app. - **Install the app**: Use Windows PowerShell to install the app package. @@ -75,7 +77,7 @@ If you use Group Policy, use the `Computer Configuration\Administrative Template - Allows development of Windows Store apps and installing them from an integrated development environment (IDE) - Allow all trusted apps to install -By default, the OS might set these policies to **Not configured**, which means app sideloading is turned off. If you set these policies to **Enabled**, users can sideload apps. +By default, the OS might set these policies to **Not configured**, which means app sideloading is turned off. If you set these policies to **Enabled**, then users can sideload apps. ### MDM @@ -100,4 +102,6 @@ This step installs the app certificate to the local device. Installing the certi ## Step 3: Install the app -From the folder with the `.appx` package, run the Windows PowerShell `Add-AppxPackage` command to install the `.appx` package. For more information on this command, see [Add-AppxPackage](/powershell/module/appx/add-appxpackage). +From the folder with the `.appx` package, run the Windows PowerShell `Add-AppxPackage` command to install the `.appx` package. + +For more information on this command, see [Add-AppxPackage](/powershell/module/appx/add-appxpackage).