- Device Manufacturer ID
- DeviceExtendedProperties.TryGetValue(“DeviceManufacturer”, out someObject);
- example: “HTC”
- Device ID
- DeviceExtendedProperties.TryGetValue(“DeviceUniqueId”, out someObject);
- requires ID_CAP_IDENTITY_DEVICE in the app manifest which will trigger a warning to users when they install the app
- a byte[], converter to a string will looks like
“12345678901234567890123456789012345678901234567890123”
- Anonymous Windows Live ID
- A 32 character subset at offset 2 of the results of
“UserExtendedProperties.TryGetValue(“ANID”, out someObject) - requires ID_CAP_IDENTITY_USER in the app manifest which will trigger a warning to users when they install the app
- looks like “00FF00FF00FF00FF00FF00FF00FF00FF”
- A 32 character subset at offset 2 of the results of
However, if you just need any unique identifier (not necessarily a device ID), you can always set and store a new global unique identifier using:
Guid.NewGuid();
which will return a 128-bit integer that will look something like this:
“e81644f1-46b6-4994-2903-1d1f1440c130″
This will not cause warnings to appear when the app is downloaded because it isn’t a constant identifier to that specific device.
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