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Windows Operating Systems Software

Windows Longhorn Beta for June Release 460

An Anonymous Reader writes "According to CNET, the Windows Longhorn Beta 1 is supposedly set for release this June. The Register has commentary on the delays the new OS has faced." From the article: "Longhorn was originally supposed to ship in 2004. In May, this year release was pushed back to 2005. This week Longhorn's availability has been delayed even further, with Microsoft execs declining to say when exactly the operating system might ship, eWeek reports."
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Windows Longhorn Beta for June Release

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  • Credibility (Score:5, Interesting)

    by fembots ( 753724 ) on Tuesday February 08, 2005 @07:18PM (#11612569) Homepage
    So what makes this June Release by one Microsoft executive more believable than other announcements?
    • Re:Credibility (Score:5, Informative)

      by Swamii ( 594522 ) on Tuesday February 08, 2005 @07:24PM (#11612649) Homepage
      So what makes this June Release by one Microsoft executive more believable than other announcements?

      The 4 month beta deadline, maybe? All previous announcements have been almost a year ahead of time.
    • by Gr8Apes ( 679165 ) on Tuesday February 08, 2005 @07:25PM (#11612652)
      I believe they'll probably release something - the time line's too short to miss it by 4 years as they've done previously. Besides, they don't want the actual release of Tiger to have the limelight by itself, now, do they?

      Heck, Cairo was announced, what? 14 years ago? Longhorn was the new Cairo, now delayed to Blackcomb, as "Cairo" wasn't getting any more press. After all, "we're writing about Cairo again?

      • Re:Credibility (Score:5, Insightful)

        by Tackhead ( 54550 ) on Tuesday February 08, 2005 @07:30PM (#11612717)
        > Heck, Cairo was announced, what? 14 years ago? Longhorn was the new Cairo, now delayed to Blackcomb, as "Cairo" wasn't getting any more press. After all, "we're writing about Cairo again?

        Database-driven filesystems are sorta like nuclear fusion.

        Marketing time to release is a constant in the range of 10-15 units of time. Actual time to release is the same -- but you use the next higher unit.

        That is, WinFS has been 6-12 months away for about 15 years, and fusion power has been about 5-10 years away for at least the past 5 decades.

        • Re:Credibility (Score:2, Insightful)

          by Anonymous Coward
          No, sustainable marketable Fusion is and has always been 25 to 30 years away from the day you first seriously dedicate your resources and time to it, since the 1970s. The ITER is only a stepping stone to saleable fusion and should reduce that to 10 to 15 years away once it is constructed and experience gained.
          We know Fusion can work, but politicians are not committed to the longterm economy.

          WinFS on the other hand is a marketting thing and not a science. Its arrival is as late as possible to slow the pa
        • by cortana ( 588495 ) <sam@robots[ ]g.uk ['.or' in gap]> on Tuesday February 08, 2005 @08:03PM (#11613085) Homepage
          Hey, that also works for Debian! Sarge has been ~1 month away for... 12 months. :(
      • Re:Credibility (Score:4, Interesting)

        by Monkelectric ( 546685 ) <{slashdot} {at} {monkelectric.com}> on Tuesday February 08, 2005 @07:46PM (#11612870)
        Cairo never existed... it was a scare tactic to get people to skip upgrading to novels new netware product. I believe they have pretty much admitted this?
        • I am confused. Does your sig mean you think we need to transition to an economy based no longer on magic fish? Or does it mean you think we need to transition to an economy based on fish with no inherently magical qualities? Thank you in advance for your clarification. PS OT I know.
          • Re:Credibility (Score:3, Informative)

            There's a GREAT SNL skit from the late 80's I want to say with the phil hartman cast... There's a town meeting describing that the towns economy is based on finding "magic fish" that grant wishes. The townspeople are coplainig that the fish are getting harder and harder to find, and the ones that do the quality of them is rotten. If I remember correctly, someone says, "I caught a magic fish the other day, and I asked him for a golden rocketship with diamond windows to take me to the moon! You know what t
      • I believe they'll probably release something - the time line's too short to miss it by 4 years as they've done previously. Besides, they don't want the actual release of Tiger to have the limelight by itself, now, do they?

        Agreed. I woudln't be surprised if they had the beta out by june. Of couse Windows XP 64 for AMD64 processors has been in beta for how long and we still haven't seen it hit the shelves?

        I'm not really sure it should be news if the beta DOES come out by June... final product still won't c
    • Re:Credibility (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday February 08, 2005 @07:27PM (#11612674)
      Considering the rate Longhorn is shedding features, I don't see why it can't ship on time.

      Simply put, the shipping date approaches zero as the number of new features approaches zero.
    • If you guys could see the current state of the Longhorn Alpha...
      It's not near ready for Beta yet...
  • by __aaitqo8496 ( 231556 ) * on Tuesday February 08, 2005 @07:18PM (#11612572) Journal
    "We are at war with Eastasia. We have always been at war with Eastasia."
    "Longhorn will be released next year. It has always been planned to be released next year."

    Much like the war in Orwell's 1984, Windows will never be complete. It's been a long time since the last major overhaul. Maybe they need to just make Windows a perpetual upgrade. Each release will have a major component update.

    Windows XP: Unified Home/Pro editions
    Longhorn: Avalon & Indigo
    Blackcomb: WinFS

    Now that Windows is `for the most part` on a standardized framework (.NET), they should be able to just release updates based on this framework, whether it be for current major release or retroactively. If you need some component installed, just make sure it's prereq's are there. Oh wait - this sounds a lot like Linux.

    Yes? No? Who the hell cares?
    • by Swamii ( 594522 ) on Tuesday February 08, 2005 @07:22PM (#11612623) Homepage
      If you need some component installed, just make sure it's prereq's are there. Oh wait - this sounds a lot like Linux.

      We tried that. It was called DLL Hell.
      • by irokitt ( 663593 ) <archimandrites-iaur@@@yahoo...com> on Tuesday February 08, 2005 @07:32PM (#11612730)
        Your thought was the same as mine. Windows machines get a lot of diverse, funky software thrown on them.

        I'll withhold judgement on Longhorn until I get to play with it. Maybe the changes will be worth the money to upgrade, maybe not. Maybe the graphics will look cheesy (a la XP) and maybe not. Either way, my Slackware box will fill the balance. I think an open mind is a good thing here.

        That said, I can foresee (via the Slashdot palantir) a lot of people looking at their screens and wonering if all years of hype and buildup really just produced this. Think Doom 3 here: Yeah, it was entertaining, but it wasn't worth all the years of salivating and my $50.
        • Despite it being modded as funny, my original post was meant to be taken seriously. Using versioned components on Windows has already been attempted and failed quite miserably, something Microsoft has aimed to change with .NET's global assembly cache.

          Irokitt, I like your thinking. You have a suprisingly opened mind, which is something truely refreshing here on Slashdot. I have to agree that with all the hype built up over several years, will it truely be worth it? As a developer coming from a programming s
    • Windows XP: Unified Home/Pro editions

      Longhorn: Avalon & Indigo
      Blackcomb: WinFS

      Sort of like Debain:

      • Stable
      • Testing
      • Unstable

      I like it. GNU/Debian/Windows

    • Oh, for Pete's ...dude, seriously. Can't we get through one damn story without somebody making an Orwell analogy? Especially one as lame-ass as this one?

      We could solve all the world's energy problems if we could just hook Orwell's corpse up to a generator to capture all the rotational energy that's currently being wasted on postmortem outrage.
    • Oh wait - this sounds a lot like Linux.

      Strange that no one seem to mention the benefits of the new Linux kernel development model, when the Windows vs Linux debade is brpought up.

      The 3 years of development has now disappered (for now) meaning that on average Linux has gained something like 1.5-2.0 years on its competitors.

      This in addition to being on a much faster improvement trajectory than the Windows / *nix.

      Apple is somewhere in between as they release somewhat often pretty much when they have e

  • June.... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by 1010011010 ( 53039 ) on Tuesday February 08, 2005 @07:18PM (#11612576) Homepage
    ... to beat "Tiger" to the punch.

    • Re:June.... (Score:3, Insightful)

      by jdwest ( 760759 )
      or simply to steal thunder, press, mindshare.
      • "Pay no attention... (Score:2, Interesting)

        by Anonymous Coward
        ...to that spyware and virus free (so far), shipping operating system that you can buy today! Look over here, at this great stuff we'll be selling Real Soon Now!"

        Hopefully Tiger will appear sooner than currently expected, to prevent this.
    • Re:June.... (Score:3, Interesting)

      by bonch ( 38532 )
      Not that it will matter. Longhorn won't even be shipping with WinFS, while Tiger already has Spotlight. Let Microsoft release a "developer beta." Apple is still going to get all the positive press.
    • I wonder... (Score:5, Interesting)

      by michaeldot ( 751590 ) on Tuesday February 08, 2005 @07:40PM (#11612816)
      Does Microsoft actually care about Mac OS X at all, whether as a competitive threat or even a comparative yardstick?

      At a recent university talk, Gates claimed that the only OSes that would be around in 10 years would be Windows and Linux. Now that could simply be a snub to Jobs, or it could indicate that he doesn't even consider Mac to be on the radar anymore. With less than 2% marketshare, Mac OS X is pretty much inconsequential in both the predominantly Windows consumer market, or Windows/Linux enterprise market.

      The ironic thing is, that if Mac OS X *were* to be around in 10 years, Microsoft would likely to be making far more money off it than if it disappeared. Why? The high gross margins (80+%) from Office mean that Microsoft often makes more money from a Mac bought with Office than Apple does (the gross margin on a Mac is 20+%).

      With only Linux as an alternative OS, Microsoft would likely make nothing, unless Microsoft plans to start selling software for Linux...

      Personally I think Microsoft does actually pay attention to Apple and uses them as a sort of free R&D lab. However, publicly, Gates seems to deny they're relevant now, and not at all in the future.

      Interesting...
      • Re:I wonder... (Score:5, Interesting)

        by Leo McGarry ( 843676 ) on Tuesday February 08, 2005 @08:12PM (#11613186)
        With less than 2% marketshare, Mac OS X is pretty much inconsequential

        Check your figures again, please. There's no definition of "market share," either percent-of-sales-per-unit-time or percent-of-total-installed-base, for which that statement could be true. IDC consistently puts Apple around 4%, with an installed base set to exceed 40 million units during the first half of this year. (There are rumors that IDC's next projection is going to uptick sharply on the strength of the Mac mini.)

        When you're talking about a market valued in the tens of billions, the difference between "less than 2%" and the actual figure of four percent is huge.
      • by Nice2Cats ( 557310 ) on Tuesday February 08, 2005 @10:35PM (#11614545)
        Does Microsoft actually care about Mac OS X at all, whether as a competitive threat or even a comparative yardstick?

        I would certainly think so, because OS X shows people what can be done with computers -- it shows them that viruses, trojans, and other malware aren't acts of God, but a preventable result of bad technology; that computers don't have to crash; that drag'n drop can do so much more; that Plug and Play can be more than an empty marketing slogan; and finally that computers can actually look cool. In short, Apple makes Windows machines look bad by comparison, and with the iPod and Mac mini actually penetrating the mainstream, this can't be good for Microsoft.

        Futhermore, I think your comment

        With less than 2% marketshare, Mac OS X is pretty much inconsequential in both the predominantly Windows consumer market, or Windows/Linux enterprise market.

        shows a widespread but flawed view of the computer world: Market share is all that matters. In fact, look at Porsche: Pissy market share, but great cars and -- more important -- great financial performance of the company. Apple's stock is doing just fine, thank you, while Microsoft's is starting to underperform to the point where they are now paying dividend. Comparing Microsoft to Apple makes just as little sense as comparing GM to Porsche and then saying that Porsche is hopeless because they don't have a large percentage of the mass-market.

        In fact, at least up to the Mac mini, that was exactly the point.

    • by timealterer ( 772638 ) <{moc.emitgniretla} {ta} {todhsals}> on Tuesday February 08, 2005 @07:44PM (#11612853) Homepage
      A June beta release from Microsoft may or may not beat Apple's June final release, but Tiger's punch was the beta DVDs that went to all Worldwide Developers' Conference attendees LAST summer.
    • tigers been hyped up for a long time now.. some ms beta at the same timeframe ain't going to do much to it.
    • It says a lot about the current state of the Apple/Microsoft relationship that Microsoft would be concerned about beating Apple to the punch. Before OS X in general and Panther specifically, not many people outside of the Mac sphere of interest gave the MacOS much attention. Now you read articles about MacOS in IT magazines, on Slashdot, and even in the mainstream press quite frequently.

      I'm sure Microsoft isn't going to say a word about Tiger, but my guess is they're no longer considering Apple the 98-lb.

  • hmm (Score:4, Insightful)

    by FinestLittleSpace ( 719663 ) * on Tuesday February 08, 2005 @07:19PM (#11612579)
    I like the 'different ways of distributing throughout large corps' thing... in the way that it's basically code for "we're going to try another convoluted way of stopping corporate editions from being pirated. COUGH"
  • Hello? (Score:5, Funny)

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday February 08, 2005 @07:19PM (#11612587)
    What's Longhorn? Bill Gates name for his...?
  • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday February 08, 2005 @07:21PM (#11612619)
    Methinks Microsoft is out to keep the next version of OS X, which is believed to be shipping at around the same time, from getting too much press.
    • I wouldn't be surprised if Apple bumped up the Tiger release by a few weeks to the beginning of June to stick it to the "developer beta 1" of Longhorn.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday February 08, 2005 @07:22PM (#11612624)
    If someone makes a Duke Nukem joke, I'm going to shoot myself.
    • by Anonymous Coward
      If someone makes a Duke Nukem joke, I'm going to shoot myself.
      I hear Longhorn will be required for Duke Nukem Forever.

      Oh, you said that to DISCOURAGE DNF jokes? My bad.
  • As a *nix geek I was excited about Longhorn: Maybe this new OS wouldn't suck? Free software is great, but if I can't get it than software that doesn't suck is the next best thing. It shouldn't like a solid top-down software that head been thought through.. then they kept removing things. With every cut I got more and more disappointed and now am afraid this will turn into a nasty kludge just to make an earlier shipping date... am I the only one who thinks "take your time but don't ship it till it's right?"!
    • Re:Shorthorn? (Score:5, Interesting)

      by nuclear305 ( 674185 ) * on Tuesday February 08, 2005 @07:39PM (#11612802)
      I do agree. I'm tired of seeing less-than-spectacular releases in the Windows line. WinME? That was pointless.

      How about Longhorn being the "browserless OS?" If they hold true to that it means we'll probably be even more vulnerable to IE exploits--like hijacking our desktop background instead of just our browser homepage.

      I don't understand why Microsoft doesn't redesign their product to focus on 3 things: the kernel, the GUI, and the rest of the apps they ship with Windows.

      The one thing I love about Linux is the fact that the kernel is almost always stable. It rarely crashes. (with the exception of the use of alpha-release drivers or bad system memory) Yes, X may sprout some problems eventually but it doesn't take the whole system down.

      The other thing they need to do is stop integrating software into the OS. I can't stress this enough. I don't want to have to worry about my entire OS being vulnerable because IE has been integrated into every possible aspect of my GUI. Keep it simple, keep it segmented in modules.

      If they could ship an OS that had a rock-solid kernel, with a nice GUI shipped with it, and a few apps (IE, OE, etc) shipped as extras on the cd/dvd then I think they would finally have a worthy product on their hands.

    • then they kept removing things. With every cut I got more and more disappointed

      What has been cut? WinFS from the initial release, sure, cry me a river. But Avalon, Indigo, the new WinFX API, NGSCB, 64 bit support, just to name a few, are all still scheduled to make the final cut.
  • screenshots (Score:2, Informative)

    by Coneasfast ( 690509 )
    we all love screenshots [google.com]
  • by Tuxedo Jack ( 648130 ) on Tuesday February 08, 2005 @07:23PM (#11612633) Homepage
    That Longhorn will ship with the full retail version of Duke Nukem Forever.
  • Proof. (Score:2, Funny)

    by inertia187 ( 156602 ) *
    Here's proof [mac.com] they intended a 2004 release. Well, maybe it's fake. I found it in 2002.
  • They are trying their best to get that new desktop environment integrated. You know, the Duke Nuk'em Forever Desk'top. It blows viruses away, melts system freezes, and liberates both Gen Failure and Gen P. Fault from the communist zombie insurgent terrorists.

    Is there any wonder that it is taking longer than expected?
  • The point is, these pushbacks have given open source the chance to make major innovation, and there isn't long left to take this major opportunity.

    My gut feeling is that Longhorn will knock the socks off whatever is out there at the time, unless developers really plan ahead, and come up with innovative features etc.

    Some would say the pendulum is swinging towards Open Source on the desktop at the moment, but I worry that Longhorn could stop that in its tracks.
  • XP (Score:5, Insightful)

    by mboverload ( 657893 ) on Tuesday February 08, 2005 @07:26PM (#11612666) Journal
    XP seems fine to me. All my utilities, programs, and games are in working order and I have never had a problem with security. Why exactly should I udgrade? The only reason I stay on Windows is for the games, and unless Micosoft has some magic optimizations it pulls out of its ass, I dont see a new operation system on here anytime soon.
    • As a matter of fact it does have a lot of games optimisations, in one of the key note speaches the Microsoft guy demonstrated running 12 DirectX demo applications and Quake3 at full speed at the same time, where he also showed WinXP died after 4 of the same demo where running and no Quake3. Whever this means anything to games performance is questionable, but it does indicate that Longhorn will play friendly with DirectX far more than XP.
      • The question of course: were the XP machine and the Longhorn machine identical? Same memory, processor, video card, etc.?
    • Re:XP (Score:5, Interesting)

      by ADRA ( 37398 ) on Tuesday February 08, 2005 @07:41PM (#11612827)
      I say the same thing, but for Windows 2000. I have yet to find a show stopper at home to upgrade to XP. I don't see myself leaving 2000 on my desktop unless its to Linux (Which is already on file server/laptop).
      • by yamla ( 136560 )
        You'll have to upgrade soon, Windows 2000 hits end of life [microsoft.com] in June. Though you do get another five years of extended support, and this may be sufficient for you.
      • Once you use XP you'll go back to Win2k and find it annoying as hell. Off the top of my head:
        • The start menu doesn't keep track of my most commonly used apps.
        • My Computer isn't on the start menu.
        • There's no tab completion on the command line.
        • Some stuff about add/remove programs that I don't remember.
        • Some other stuff about the services control that I don't remember.

        So if you're happy with 2k I strongly suggest you never agree to use an XP box for an extended period of time (say, at your work) cause yo

      • Re:XP (Score:3, Informative)

        by jalefkowit ( 101585 )

        I say the same thing, but for Windows 2000. I have yet to find a show stopper at home to upgrade to XP.

        Me neither -- I'm still running Win2K at home quite happily too. However, it's worth noting that Microsoft has at least one potential "show stopper" in the works for us: according to Microsoft's Windows lifecycle roadmap [microsoft.com], "mainstream support" for Windows 2000 Professional will be discontinued on June 30 of this year. After that date only "extended support" will be available (through 2010).

        What's t

    • Re:XP (Score:3, Interesting)

      by bonch ( 38532 )
      It's an interesting problem for Microsoft. There was a reason to switch to OS X over the classic MacOS, but the transition from Windows XP/2000 to Longhorn will seem entirely superfluous. Most of the changes will be under the hood, like the new .NET foundation which will also add performance overhead.

      The interface, called "Aero Glass" (I don't supposed that means it will have shiny highlights on the tops of the widgets, does it? Been there, done that), is supposed to be full 3D-accelerated DirectX visua
    • You miss the point (Score:3, Interesting)

      by rewt66 ( 738525 )
      The point isn't users. The point is developers. Developers, developers, developers, developers...

      /me winces at the sudden karma-dectomy...

      Anyway, the point of Longhorn is, with Indigo and Avalon, to make it easier to develop cool new stuff. Then more cool new stuff gets written for Windows, and so more people buy Windows.

      Want to pre-empt Longhorn? Make some slick open-source developer tools for XML-based user interfaces (can't remember the X-acronym at the moment - XUL or XAML or some such) and web s

  • by femto ( 459605 )
    Another improvement will come in the way businesses are able to install Windows on large numbers of machines. Today, mass deployment is done through a process known as "ghosting" an image of the operating system. An improved method will come with Longhorn, Montgomery said.

    Hey, Microsoft is ripping off APT!

  • by QuantumG ( 50515 ) <qg@biodome.org> on Tuesday February 08, 2005 @07:40PM (#11612812) Homepage Journal
    When the world wakes up and sees that Microsoft is asking them to upgrade yet-again they will either 1) jump at the chance or 2) ask what was wrong with XP. I think we need to be there to tell them.
    • by Richard_at_work ( 517087 ) on Tuesday February 08, 2005 @08:04PM (#11613097)
      When XP came out, I dont recall any announcement from Microsoft about having to upgrade?! Infact, I recall that the vast majority of 'upgrading' to XP just happened during the normal course of buying a new system as and when required - Win2k or 98 didnt suddenly stop working (did 98 ever start working?). Longhorn will be the same, natural upgrade with new hardware for normal users, those that follow the 'cutting edge' will be buying OS upgrades, and everyone will get on with life.
  • by uujjj ( 752925 ) on Tuesday February 08, 2005 @07:42PM (#11612831)
    Did anyone notice that the Register story is dated September 2003? Explains how it is talking about "May this year"
  • Yippee!!!!!! (Score:3, Interesting)

    by zmollusc ( 763634 ) on Tuesday February 08, 2005 @07:44PM (#11612848)
    I am as poor as a church mouse whose wife has run off with another mouse, taking all the cheese with her. I am looking forward to Longhorn because then lots of people will upgrade their kit and i get to inherit some newer stuff.
    My most recent hand-me-downs were from guys updating graphics cards for doom3 and HL2.
  • What do you think will be officially released first:

    Longhorn or Sarge?

    Of course, Sarge as it is is already relatively stable and bug free (I had an uptime of 35 days before rebooting to use a new kernel); while I bet that Longhorn will have lots of problems for at least the first six months.
  • by snuf23 ( 182335 ) on Tuesday February 08, 2005 @07:45PM (#11612866)
    How come when a game company like Blizzard says "it will be released when it's ready" everyone applauds their restraint, yet when Windows release dates are up in the air everyone slams Microsoft?

    Oh, maybe it's because Windows still won't be ready when it's shipped...
    • Because microsoft don't say 'it'll be out when it's ready'. They give date after after date, breaking them each time.

      And people who've bought the three year subscription 'upgrades free' licences feel like mugs because they listened to microsoft PR and got nothing out of it.
  • Hey, the Red Sox won the World Series. Doom3 and Halo2 were released. Heck, even the Hurd kernel passed a milestone. But I would call down to Hell first and ask if they've had a blizzard recently.
  • by fireman sam ( 662213 ) on Tuesday February 08, 2005 @07:47PM (#11612878) Homepage Journal
    Is this exactly not what happened in the episode of the Simpsons episode where Lisa creates a doll called "Lisa Lionheart" only to be knocked out at the last minute with the "New" Malabu Stacy, which was the old Malabu Stacy, but with a hat.

    I guess Microsoft's sales of Malabu Stacys (Windows) is slowing. I guess it is time for them to release a new version "NOW WITH A HAT"

    "(Burns) Hello Smithers, you're quite good at turning me on" - Smithers' computer

    "(Gates) Hello Steve, you're quite good at turning *Windows NT GPF*" - Steve Balmer's computer
  • Uh? (Score:3, Insightful)

    by modifried ( 605582 ) on Tuesday February 08, 2005 @07:47PM (#11612881) Homepage
    Did anyone look at the date of the article? Even in the /. snippet it shows that 2005 is not written in present tense.

    Microsoft delays Longhorn. Again
    By John Leyden
    Published Tuesday 2nd September 2003 10:55 GMT
  • Mono's implementation of System.Windows.Forms is very very close to a usable state. I'm really thrilled to see the development taking place around Mono. I think Mono's S.W.F.-initiative is more likely to bring Windows applications to Linux than Wine.

    This makes me wonder regarding the status for System.Windows.Forms in Longhorn. Is System.Windows.Forms still the recommended GUI-framework in Longhorn? Is the release of its replacement post-poned?

  • Misleading Summary (Score:5, Informative)

    by Morgahastu ( 522162 ) <bshel ... fave bands name> on Tuesday February 08, 2005 @07:52PM (#11612931) Journal
    The article linked to, and quoted, was published in September of 2003. There is no new delay to speak of.
  • If Windows is still in C:\WINDOWS\system32, my programs still in C:\Program Files, or my documents still in C:\Documents and Settings\Devin\My Documents I wont be upgrading. What a hamper on user interface... Give me /System, /Apps, and /Home PLEASE!
  • by AlgUSF ( 238240 ) on Tuesday February 08, 2005 @07:54PM (#11612955) Homepage
    I bet this will be the most open and secure operating system ever.
  • Why release an OS, when releasing the Beta gets your stock to go up, and people to stop talking about all the bugs in your current release? Releasing the finished version will just create all kinds of market-damaging disappointment, instead of all that nifty, marketable hope.
  • I wonder if it will have antivirus and anti-spyware bundled in the default install. They bought Giant not so long ago, and now they're getting Sybari. http://www.iht.com/articles/2005/02/08/yourmoney/ m sft.html [iht.com]

    If they're having trouble finding a "gee whiz" selling point to entice buyers to the new system, this might be it. It would also be a good answer to the pirates - a solid reason why your OS would phone home and reactivate itself every few hours.
  • by generationxyu ( 630468 ) on Tuesday February 08, 2005 @08:02PM (#11613069) Homepage
    Half Life 2 is due out this... Oh. Wait...
  • by Tim C ( 15259 ) on Tuesday February 08, 2005 @08:02PM (#11613075)
    That article is from September 2003, yet the way it's quoted in the summary makes it sound like Longhorn has been delayed again this week, which is not the case.
  • by amichalo ( 132545 ) on Tuesday February 08, 2005 @09:45PM (#11614118)
    A Preview of Longhorn is available here [wikipedia.org].

    A rather thorough documentation of the future featureset is available
    here [apple.com].

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