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Windows 7 To Be Released Next Year? 561

KrispySausage writes "A recently-released roadmap for the next major Window release — Windows 7 — indicates that Microsoft is planning to release the new operating system in the second half of 2009, rather than the anticipated release date of some time in 2010. This quickly-approaching release date would seem to be at least partially verified by news of a milestone build available for review by an anonymous third party." We've previously discussed the upcoming new OS version, as well as its danger to Vista.
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Windows 7 To Be Released Next Year?

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  • windows7 (Score:3, Insightful)

    by wwmedia ( 950346 ) on Tuesday January 22, 2008 @08:42AM (#22136934)
    itll probably end up being a minor change, Vista SP2 with new name?

    they are taking a leadt out off Apples book again, "release often and charge alot for overglorified service packs"
    • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

      by Jhon ( 241832 ) *
      Windows Vista is the new Windows ME.

      Maybe it's like Star Trek movies -- only the even numbered ones are good (in this case, odd numbers).
      • Windows Vista is the new Windows ME.
        Oh god no. Does that mean bash.org is gonna be flooded with a whole slew of Vista quotes?!
      • Re:windows7 (Score:5, Funny)

        by eat here_get gas ( 907110 ) on Tuesday January 22, 2008 @09:06AM (#22137170) Homepage
        "Maybe it's like Star Trek movies -- only the even numbered ones are good (in this case, odd numbers)."

        so it's not like Star Trek at all then?
    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by BECoole ( 558920 )

      itll probably end up being a minor change, Vista SP2 with new name?
      Hopefully more like Windows XP SP4.
    • Re:windows7 (Score:4, Insightful)

      by colmore ( 56499 ) on Tuesday January 22, 2008 @09:41AM (#22137480) Journal
      Nah, if they were going to copy Apple, they'd also needlessly break backwards compatibility.

      I like Macs, best UI stuck on a Unix out there, but there's a lot to hate about the cult and what it gets away with.
    • Re: (Score:2, Redundant)

      by rbanffy ( 584143 )
      "itll probably end up being a minor change, Vista SP2 with new name?"

      And, most important, with a price tag.
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by GregPK ( 991973 )
      I disagree, I believe that they are learning from thier mistakes and the realization that Apple is taking away thier market share very quickly has been a swift kick in the pants to get the latest release out.
    • Re:windows7 (Score:4, Interesting)

      by I8TheWorm ( 645702 ) * on Tuesday January 22, 2008 @10:45AM (#22138254) Journal
      I understand the importance of getting the FP, but really... is google that difficult a tool to use?

      One of the probably features of Windows 7 include MinWin, which is a much lighter kernel (25MB footprint on disk, 40MB footprint in RAM). Another is the likelyhood of MS's heirarchical filesystem that was pulled in the Vista release.

      There are other features being discussed such as extensive touch interface ability, etc...

  • by somersault ( 912633 ) on Tuesday January 22, 2008 @08:43AM (#22136938) Homepage Journal
    Windows 7 - because Vista sucked
    • by rvw ( 755107 ) on Tuesday January 22, 2008 @08:52AM (#22137038)

      Windows 7 - because Vista sucked
      7 of 2009 says: Hasta la Vista!
      • I thought she said

        "Not enough resources to complete this task, close some running applications and try again?

        Accept | Deny
      • by goombah99 ( 560566 ) on Tuesday January 22, 2008 @10:04AM (#22137726)
        Windows 7 will remind us all of the movie Seven.

        We'll have

        glutinous Bloatware
        Sloth
        greedy pricing
        DRM lustfully controlling all media.
        Proud non-interoperability
        and mac -envy

        oh and you get the wrath, like in the movie ending where you find can't take back what is in "the box" because you opened the EULA.

        Balmer will play the Kevin Spacey role.

        personally I had to leave the theater.

    • by Daimanta ( 1140543 ) on Tuesday January 22, 2008 @09:03AM (#22137148) Journal
      This is EXACTLY how they approach sales. They say the previous version sucked in certain aspects and swear that this version is going to be über.

      And we all know how that ends out.
      • by mdwh2 ( 535323 )
        This is EXACTLY how they approach sales. They say the previous version sucked in certain aspects and swear that this version is going to be über.

        Isn't that true of most companies?

        E.g., "PowerPC is much better than Intel" ... "Actually, Intel is great".

        Or any company that brings out a new model, and tells you how much better it is over the previous version.
      • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

        by TheHorse13 ( 908512 )
        Hey Charlie Brown, I *promise* I won't yank the football away *THIS* time.
    • by smittyoneeach ( 243267 ) * on Tuesday January 22, 2008 @09:14AM (#22137248) Homepage Journal
      I'm concerned about the return to numerical versioning.
      They went from 3.11, to year-based (98), to cheesy acronyms (ME), to acronyms containing the Mighty Letter "X" (XP), to the vaguely multi-cultural (Vista). Now they're going back to whole numbers. All the joy of 3.11, half the perfomance.
      They haven't really cribbed Apple's Roman Numeral approach, so let's work with that.
      Vista...VII-STA...VII: Something To Avoid.
    • Windows 7 - Quit bitching, it cames "free" with your PC.

      Windows 7 - Your last chance before we start again in C#.

      Windows 7 - Because we know where you live.

    • Re:Marketing Slogan (Score:4, Interesting)

      by Fred_A ( 10934 ) <fred@ f r e dshome.org> on Tuesday January 22, 2008 @10:07AM (#22137754) Homepage

      Windows 7 - because Vista sucked
      And yet everyone will be "I don't want this crappy bloated new Windows 7, I'll stick with Vista, it worked well enough for me so far"...

  • by vagabond_gr ( 762469 ) on Tuesday January 22, 2008 @08:45AM (#22136962)
    given the delays of Vista I would schedule the next version for tomorrow, and hope to deliver some time in 2010.
  • 1 - Microsoft says they learned from their mistakes, and have been deconstructing Windows to remove bloat, and make the whole thing run faster. Windows Server can even run sans-GUI now, and they're building up from a minimalist stack. This is a really good thing.

    2 - There were some neat concepts that were promised with Vista and never delivered, like the file abstraction stack, or WinFS. Now they might have time to do it right.

    3 - Vista was a total bomb. There is no denying it at all. So why bother? Admit your mistake and move on quickly. All in all, this sounds like a surprisingly smart move on their part.
    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by rbochan ( 827946 )

      1 - Microsoft says they learned from their mistakes, and have been deconstructing Windows to remove bloat, and make the whole thing run faster. Windows Server can even run sans-GUI now, and they're building up from a minimalist stack. This is a really good thing.

      Be realistic, remove bloat? This is Microsoft you're talking about.


      2 - There were some neat concepts that were promised with Vista and never delivered, like the file abstraction stack, or WinFS. Now they might have time to do it right.

      They've been p
    • by draevil ( 598113 ) on Tuesday January 22, 2008 @08:59AM (#22137108)

      I found it hard to continue reading your post after point 1 began with "Microsoft says". As you rightly point out in point 2, MS-says with respect to what we-got in Vista didn't quite match up. MS promised a lot and users got an OS that felt to many like a regression.

      MS has a habit of "promising" features that it doesn't know how to deliver; its useful if you want to discourage investment in potential competitors. After all, why go and develop a new fs technology if the company with a 90%+ monopoly in the OS sector is going to integrate it into their product?

      "Windows 7" will be an incremental change to Vista with some bug fixes and a desire to gain a better image in the market than the ironically sullied Vista has. How can MS develop features in less than 1 year that they couldn't manage to make in 4?

      • by weicco ( 645927 )

        I found it hard to continue reading your post after this very speculative line:

        "Windows 7" will be an incremental change to Vista with some bug fixes

        You've got a crystal ball at your home or is this just another case of "The pot calls the kettle black"?

    • by mgblst ( 80109 )
      Well, make up your mind. Are they going to remove bloat, or are they going to add new features. The only way they can do both is to break backwards compatability in a big way.

      Has Microsoft changed internally that much that we can hope for something better than Vista?
    • by eshefer ( 12336 ) on Tuesday January 22, 2008 @09:46AM (#22137532) Homepage Journal
      "Microsoft says they learned from their mistakes"

      they always do. that's why they repeat them so well.
  • Such optimism? (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Richard.g.k ( 1215362 ) on Tuesday January 22, 2008 @08:47AM (#22136984)
    Hopefully it will end up being like windows ME -> windows XP, with vista being ME, and the new OS representing XP. Contrary to peoples constant whining, vista is a reasonable enough O/S, the only problem i've seen with it is the resource intensiveness. Rarely do i ever have crash problems. But this will turn into another 300 comment microsoft hate-o-thon just because of story that is an unverified RUMOR about an operating system that nobody responding has even SEEN yet.
    • by timster ( 32400 )
      ME to XP happened solely because Microsoft had a solid platform (NT) ready to replace the 1993-era Win9x platform that ME was built on. Where is Microsoft's new platform now?
      • by ExE122 ( 954104 ) *

        ME to XP happened solely because Microsoft had a solid platform (NT) ready to replace the 1993-era Win9x platform that ME was built on. Where is Microsoft's new platform now?

        Exactly! Windows XP has already extended their EOL, but even that will go away soon... and then what supported O/S will be left? Only Vista?

        I think this sudden announcement is just a mad scramble for an alternative O/S, but without a solid platform to build off of, it's not looking too promising...

      • by PJ1216 ( 1063738 ) *
        I say they should just re-use XP.
      • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

        by PoliTech ( 998983 )

        Where is Microsoft's new platform now?

        What about SCO [sco.com]?

    • Re:Such optimism? (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Enderandrew ( 866215 ) <enderandrew@gmSTRAWail.com minus berry> on Tuesday January 22, 2008 @08:57AM (#22137096) Homepage Journal
      Problems with Vista include:

      * UAC - annoying and not remotely secure. People will be trained to always click yes, or just disable it. Further more, it prevented me from installing legit software, and copying files in certain directories.
      * Drivers - People say an OS is only as good as the software for it, and I'd argue an OS is only as good as the drivers. If you can't support your hardware, then software isn't even an issue. Now all drivers MUST be signed, yet many signed drivers don't work very well, if at all. I think it would be a good idea to have all drivers in one central repository (like the Linux kernel) so you won't have to worry about tracking down drivers for old hardware, but make sure the drivers work. And here is an idea, make the drivers modular. Drivers cause more BSODs and crashes than anything else. Don't let a single driver bring down a system. This is just basic common sense.
      * Design for productivity, and not looks. Sexy is sexy, and we all like sexy things. In the long run however, I want my computer to enable me to work, not prevent me from doing so. Usability studies have shown that Vista's UI slows people down performing the same tasks. Scrolling in the Start Menu? Again, the writing was on the wall here. Look at the UI changes in Windows Media Player, and you'll see a program that has become less user friendly, while prettier. Why should we expect Vista to be different?
      * Performance is piss-poor. Again, people like fast computers. Installing Vista is just a bad decision.
      * Vista's worst enemy is not OS X or Linux (as much as I love me some Linux). Vista's worst enemy is XP, which post-SP1 has been a pretty decent OS. For the end user, Vista provides no real benefits or new features besides better looks, while slowing your PC down considerably. And with projects like the Vista Transformation Pack, you can make XP look like Vista. Why would someone want Vista?
      • by nwoolls ( 520606 )
        "Why would someone want Vista?" Because all of the crap you just copied and pasted from bandwaggoning bloggers above is only believed by those who haven't actually used the OS, and prefer to just regurgitate that same BS over and over.

        People will be trained to always click yes with UAC, but not sudo right? MS is now in charge of writing drivers too? Why would anyone scroll the start menu when they can just start typing... You're worried about performance, but you'd still rather install a slew of third party
      • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

        And here is an idea, make the drivers modular. Drivers cause more BSODs and crashes than anything else. Don't let a single driver bring down a system. This is just basic common sense.

        It is common sense, but PC hardware currently makes this hard to achieve. Give a device driver access to I/O memory and it can hang the PC in numerous ways - eg. writing to another device, accidentally performing DMA to a random bit of memory, putting the device into some state where it grabs the PCI bus and never release

      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        I don't think the driver complaint is fair because there HAS been support for modular drivers since Windows 2000 via WDM. Hardware makers are just releasing terrible drivers. It took a really long time for hardware makers to start supporting WDM, and it really didn't catch on until they were forced to when XP became the OEM standard. I had a Kensington webcam that had promised Win2K/XP support, then after a year they rescinded their beta driver while blaming Microsoft for making drivers too hard to write. I
    • Re:Such optimism? (Score:5, Informative)

      by morgan_greywolf ( 835522 ) on Tuesday January 22, 2008 @09:39AM (#22137470) Homepage Journal
      Too many people misread the whole Windows ME thing. Microsoft's goal since the days of Windows NT 3.1 was always to eventually migrate people from the old DOS/Windows codebase to the new NT codebase. In order to do that, they had to get the APIs synched.

      Windows NT 3.1 had Win32 and Windows 3.1 had the older 'Win16' API. So they released Win32s for the older DOS/Windows platform, then Windows NT 4.0 with the new user interface. With the Chicago project -- Windows 95 (based on the new UI for NT4) -- was to be the first of the old codebase with the a full version of the new (NT) API, Win32. With that in hand, they had planned to do one more update to each version -- Nashville became Windows 98, and Daytona became Windows 2000. There was supposed to be a combined release of an operating system called 'Cairo' after that, where they finally dropped the whole DOS/Windows thing, but they got sidetracked because they were under pressure to produce a desktop OS for the low-end of the market. So the result was Windows ME, which was rushed out the door at the last minute and annointed as the last of the DOS/Windows line.

      Cairo, which was promised to be totally 'object oriented' -- files would be stored as objects in a big database (sound familiar?), but it never happened. So instead, we get, as the first OS of the newly merged OS lines, Windows XP. And yes, XP looks like the greek letter "Chi" and "Ro", of course XP doesn't end up having anything promised in Cairo.

      The Cairo promises were to be fullfilled with Vista, but that never happened because the schedule got pushed more and more and they were under pressure to do SOMETHING since competition from Apple and Linux stepped in to fill the void of 5+ years with no new Microsoft OS. So they pushed Vista out the door with none of the promised features and a bunch glitz stolen from Apple. (The last time they stole from Apple, it went exceedingly well, so what the heck, right?)

      Windows 7 -- if it's true -- sounds like it could be what Vista was supposed to be. Of course, by now no one will care. It'll be too little, too late, IMHO.
  • two thoughts (Score:4, Insightful)

    by techpawn ( 969834 ) on Tuesday January 22, 2008 @08:47AM (#22136990) Journal
    ME was out HOW long before the next OS?

    and WIN98 SE maybe this is Vista SE...As long as they cut some bloat and give me back admin controls in less than convoluted places, I'm cool.
    • Perhaps MSW7 would be the equivalent to what win2k was over ME? It might actually be a decent product then (of all them, 2k was a shining star in many ways), but I'd imagine that if this is the case a *lot* of those who bought Vista (or machines with Vista) are going to be royally pissed.
  • by hengdi ( 1202709 ) on Tuesday January 22, 2008 @08:48AM (#22136998)
    From TFA:

    "The system is very responsive, using barely 480MB of memory after boot."

    I've obviously been in *nix land for too long, I'm still of the impression that 256 Mb is pretty much all one needs for most tasks. Even EMACS!
    • My A1200 was fine and responsive with 16MB of memory, I found that comment rather funny too. The operating system itself should simply manage resources rather than freaking consume them all.. how can you justify 480MB even with all of your necessary drivers/DLLs/whatever loaded into memory? And that was even without the Aero interface wasn't it?
    • by martinmcc ( 214402 ) on Tuesday January 22, 2008 @09:13AM (#22137242) Homepage
      Indeed, that is a ridiculous number to boast about. That is not much under 512 MB, which many machines out there are still using. If you have 2 Gigs, which should be more than plenty for an average desktop system, then 1/4 of the memory is used before you even do anything. It just emphasises that there is no such thing as a windows upgrade, it just expands to fill the resources available (much like a fart in a room). Personally, when I have a 2Ghz Dual core 64Bit system with 4GB of RAM on my desktop, I want it to be _slightly_ more responsive than the 8Mhz 8086 system with 640 KB I started my PC experience on.
      • by BoomerSooner ( 308737 ) on Tuesday January 22, 2008 @10:56AM (#22138420) Homepage Journal
        So long as you're running the same programs on it I don't see why it would be any less responsive. Just install DOS, VisiCalc, and your dot matrix printer, and ZOOM!
    • by mchawi ( 468120 ) on Tuesday January 22, 2008 @09:21AM (#22137302)
      If you follow the links on the other article though, where they talk about redoing the kernel to what they are calling MinWin - it ran on 40 MB of memory and only had 100 files.

      So it might be interesting where they draw the line between the kernel at 40 MB and 'the system' with 480 MB of memory. It sounds like mainly applications running that you could probably parse down.

      A move in the right direction at least.
    • by _KiTA_ ( 241027 ) on Tuesday January 22, 2008 @09:30AM (#22137390) Homepage

      From TFA:

      "The system is very responsive, using barely 480MB of memory after boot."

      I've obviously been in *nix land for too long, I'm still of the impression that 256 Mb is pretty much all one needs for most tasks. Even EMACS!


      Bloat is relative. Compared to Vista, 480MB is freaking Calista Flockhart-level of skinny.
    • by ledow ( 319597 ) on Tuesday January 22, 2008 @09:32AM (#22137408) Homepage
      Holy cow. I can remember when my HARD DISK was 480Mb. And that was 10 times bigger than the first hard disk I bought. And even THAT was an upgrade that cost nearly 25% of the computer again.

      And, as you point out, that's BEFORE you do anything but actually turn the computer on and wait ten minutes. God knows what happens when you actually WANT to work. XP can boot fairly comfortable for low-to-mid-end users in 256Mb - it ain't fast, it'll swap, but on network managed machines without the usual startup cruft you'll get work done without in-app pauses and for a basic Office suite you won't even notice (I tend to find silent-hard-disk computers are percieved as "faster" by users, even when they are swapping more). 512Mb makes for a nice XP system and anything more is a bonus - I've run networks with hundreds of machines on XP and none of them ever needed more than 512Mb for adequate performance, unless they were doing high-end stuff like CAD - more important is to keep your startup entries clear than put more than 512Mb into an "office" XP machine. But having to have 512Mb before you can even boot the thing up?

      total used free shared buffers cached
      Mem: 254296 249912 4384 0 1288 75964
      -/+ buffers/cache: 172660 81636
      Swap: 473908 41000 432908

      170Mb used out of 256. That's with a full KDE GUI (commonly referred to as bloated by a lot of people who obviously don't get out into retail stores and buy Windows much), an Opera process collecting mail from dozens of accounts and browsing hundreds of webpages each day with memory caching, and that's been running for about 26 days now.

      total used free shared buffers cached
      Mem: 222712 218960 3752 0 126832 40760
      -/+ buffers/cache: 51368 171344
      Swap: 1140604 0 1140604

      And THAT's a proxy/filter/cache for a school, with transparent bridging that hasn't rebooted in months. 50Mb in use, admittedly no X-Windows running at the moment. Even most of that is Samba, Squid memory cache, Apache and other miscellaneous programs running on it, not all of which are critical to its operation but provide nice web or GUI interfaces to the admins.

      Seriously, I know that things move on and you can't stay on a 386 but what benefit does the actual end-user get for all that bloat? What can you do on a 512Mb "Windows 7" machine that you can't on a 512Mb Vista machine, 512Mb XP machine, 512Mb Linux machine? Can you even BOOT with just 512Mb on this new version? More worrying, how many Gigs of rubbish that load on startup does it come with to fill up 480 Mb before you get into the machine? And what does that do to your minimum installation size and baseline CPU use?

      I switched, personally, to Linux at home, Linux in work where appropriate (i.e. everything but network-managed desktops, because of the amount of legacy Windows software required) at around the same time that a Linux machine with 256Mb could do the same things as an XP machine with 512Mb, all other things being equal.

      I've got a salesman coming tomorrow to try to sell the school Vista, two months after we put in a brand new XP network replacing the previous XP network. They aren't even going to be able to sell us that because I've done my research, which they don't expect smaller schools to do. Too high requirements, too many unnecessary features, too much rubbish, no practical advantage. How are MS going to sell an OS that's going to need literally Gigs of RAM once it's combined with Office and all the usual bundled offering?

      This same salesman will be selling Windows 7 in a few years, of course he will, but what do you get for your money? I've seen people selling Windows Vista "digital signage" (i.e. scrol
    • Heh. I just realized a month ago that my workhorse Ubuntu machine had 512MB ram. Serving a small website, streaming audio within the house, light photo editing, internet browsing all at the same time with pretty good performance.

      From a hardware standpoint, we've hit the point of diminishing returns for the average user. So long as we use a reasonable OS, that is.
  • Microsoft roadmaps (Score:2, Interesting)

    by olman ( 127310 )
    Two words:
    Yeah. Right.

    And same goes for the feature list. I haven't been arsed to check but do they have the new filesystem there once more? Someone has been working on the new Windows filesystem for about 14 years now (since chicago). Must be really rewarding to have it axed time after time.
  • Good news for Linux (Score:3, Interesting)

    by BlueParrot ( 965239 ) on Tuesday January 22, 2008 @08:51AM (#22137026)
    If the screenshots are anything to judge by then Microsoft are changing user interfaces AGAIN ( and as usual it is a partial clone of Apple ). Wonder what will happen when people find that switching to Linux is an easier learning curve than upgrading windows...
  • by ozmanjusri ( 601766 ) <.moc.liamtoh. .ta. .bob_eissua.> on Tuesday January 22, 2008 @08:52AM (#22137042) Journal
    It will be interesting to see if the new focus on a "clean, lean" Windows 7 can be sustained, given Microsoft's deeply bureaucratic [blogspot.com] development structure.

    Each team was separated by 6 layers of management from the leads, so let's add them in too, giving us 24 + (6 * 3) + 1 (the shared manager) 43 total people with a voice in this feature. Twenty-four of them were connected sorta closely to the code, and of those twenty four there were exactly zero with final say in how the feature worked.
    The quote is from one of the people in the Vista shutdown menu team. It will be hard to winnow the cruft in that sort of environment.
  • by apathy maybe ( 922212 ) on Tuesday January 22, 2008 @08:53AM (#22137048) Homepage Journal
    I remember reading an article in 2001 in a computer magazine about the marvellous things that were going to be in Longhorn (now Vista). A wonderful new database-like file system, brilliant UI and other great things. I thought how wonderful this system was going to be compared to WinXP (which had just come out).

    Then later I read about how the new file system (WinFS) was based on something called 'Cairo' and about how that too had been scrapped.

    At that stage I was using Mandrake Linux (I switched to Ubuntu at the start of 2007), and wanted something better.

    Anyway, so this chain of thought ends in, well now I am using Ubuntu, it does keep getting better all the time. I don't use MS Windows really at all now on my computers. Why do I care?

    Meh, lets try and get back to where I stared. Can we expect a new file system? Can we expect radical 'new' technologies? Perhaps even voice commands? (Computer: open http colon slash slash slash dot dot org)
  • by EnsilZah ( 575600 )
    This strengthens the impression that Vista is the second iteration of Windows Me which was also replaced by a new OS rater quickly (about a year) after being found to suck donkey balls.
    • I agree with this, it does seem awfully soon to start mentioning this stuff, it reminds me a lot of the ME days.

      My opinion? Vista is shit, plain and simple, it's not fast enough on high end hardware (no I didn't say too slow, not fast enough) it's ugly in classic mode and intrusive and the list goes on and on.
  • by Sirch ( 82595 ) on Tuesday January 22, 2008 @08:54AM (#22137062) Homepage
    ... can be found here [istartedsomething.com].
  • by darkvizier ( 703808 ) on Tuesday January 22, 2008 @08:56AM (#22137082)
    Microsoft may have blundered, but they're not dumb. I'm pretty sure they wrote Vista in such a way that it's extensible. So people didn't like Vista, so what? Some people have paid for it, enough at least that they've gotten feedback on how to polish it up. Then they release their next OS, and life goes on. One product failure is not enough to kill MS.
  • "A recently-release roadmap for the next major Window release -- Windows 7 -- indicates that Microsoft is planning to release the new operating system in the second half of 2009, rather than the anticipated release date of some time in 2010."

    Given Micro$oft's track record that means if they say it's going to be out in 2009, it's on track for release in late 2010 or 2011. Nice to know that it's on schedule.
  • Insiders say, it's gonna suck!
  • by A Friendly Troll ( 1017492 ) on Tuesday January 22, 2008 @09:07AM (#22137184)
    If someone only bothered to spend two more minutes investigating...

    Windows Seven with a build number of 6.1.6519.1? The Windows Seven that is currently in the kernel-only, text mode, MinWin phase?

    This was probably some kind of a Vista SP2 build, something that will be released next year and is in heavy development. That, or the guy was given a modded/themed current version of Vista and was fooled.
    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by tdanecker ( 1223662 )
      It really looks like the Article's Windows 7 is not the same as the "MinWin" Windows 7. MinWin is only 64-bit but the article states the OS will be shipped as 32- and 64-bit version - No chance with MinWin.
    • by DigitlDud ( 443365 ) on Tuesday January 22, 2008 @10:14AM (#22137828)
      Uhh, Windows 7 is just a codename, the version number always refers to the version of the NT kernel. Vista was 6.0, 2003 was 5.2, XP was 5.1, 2000 was 5.0. Apparently Windows "Seven" will be NT 6.2 signifying that it contains minor kernel changes.
  • Why is it.... (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Lumpy ( 12016 ) on Tuesday January 22, 2008 @09:16AM (#22137268) Homepage
    That Microsoft cant do what others can?

    I just got a copy of OSX 10.5 for my really old and outdated mac. Specifically to get a working copy of dashcode as I write OSX widgets for Crestron control. I was expecting the worst as installing the latest OS on a old PC never is a good thing.

    10.5 makes my machine faster. I kind of looked at it skeptically but it actually boots faster and has a more responsive feel, even NeoOffice opens faster as well as Final Cut.

    Why is Apple able to deliver an OS that is faster instead of slower? It's got as much eye candy as vista.

    Maybe microsoft needs to have all their programmers re-trained?

    FYI: Single processor G4 with only 784 meg of ram, and a crappy laptop video card.
    • by Shados ( 741919 )
      Microsoft had to add all the security stuff. There's a reason DOS was so fast...no checking whatsoever anywhere. So obviously now this would be slower. Unixes did it already, so you can improve on performance there. But Vista -is- indeed the result of extremely poor management decisions, the same kind of constraints that produced the RRODing Xbox360s... and i expect most products of Microsoft that were thought of during that period to have similar issues. Next batch should be better.

      That being said, your co
    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      Why is Apple able to deliver an OS that is faster instead of slower? It's got as much eye candy as vista.

      And Compiz on Linux offers eye candy as well, also with fewer resource requirements. But the reasons for this are fairly clear:

      • Microsoft isn't competing with OS X or Linux. It has a guaranteed monopoly market share. No reason to outdo the other players on technical merit.
      • Microsoft makes most of its Windows money from sales of new computers. The question is then, how do you convince them to buy a new one. It could be because the old computer is full of viruses, or because the new OS (which you must h
    • by MrNemesis ( 587188 ) on Tuesday January 22, 2008 @10:56AM (#22138414) Homepage Journal
      That's an easy one to explain, OSX was initially designed to be deliberately slow and they've just taken out increasing amounts of sleep() calls from the code with every major release so that they can claim they've magically made it faster.

      As further testament to the genius of Jobs, he then sold all the sleep()'s to the project lead for Vista under the guise of a "technology partnership" contract.

      ;)
  • ...Microsoft MUST start its wide beta program within the next few months. That could indicate we may see the first wide beta release out probably around late March to early April of this year.
  • Does this mean that we can expect Longhorn in less than 2 years?

    Guys! Guys! Microsoft is finally releasing Longhorn in less than two years' time!
  • by NotQuiteReal ( 608241 ) on Tuesday January 22, 2008 @10:13AM (#22137810) Journal
    It will really be version 6.66 - use at your own risk.
  • by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Tuesday January 22, 2008 @10:26AM (#22137980)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • by Vellmont ( 569020 ) on Tuesday January 22, 2008 @10:31AM (#22138068) Homepage
    So Microsoft has basically admitted that Vista is a flop, market wise. So what do they do? Announce a successor Real Soon Now.

    They know they can't possibly get anything worth a damn out that quickly.. but that's not the goal here. The goal is to stave anyone figuring they might as well think about switching to Linux or OSX, cuz "Microsoft is going to fix Windows Real Soon Now".

    In reality the product will actually be released in the middle of 2010. It may be good, it may be another bomb. How long can Microsoft keep up the "But the next one is going to be just GRRREEAAAT!"? Stay tuned...
  • by Bertie ( 87778 ) on Tuesday January 22, 2008 @11:55AM (#22139272) Homepage
    Man, Microsoft have been doing this for as long as I can remember. "Yeah, OK, you got us, this version stinks to high heaven, but we'll nail it next time, just you wait and see. Don't go running off to the competition, 'cos you'll only be sorry when you see what we've got in store just round the corner." This time they're starting the rumour mill extra-early, well before any sign of an announcement, presumably because Vista's gone down like a turd in a hot tub.

    And then one by one the whiz-bang features they promised at the time of announcing the product disappear, and it turns up late and full of bugs.

    Every time.

    Sad thing about it is that people still fall for it.

    Every time.

    Why? How many times do you need to be disappointed by them before you decide that enough's enough? I swear, it's like an abusive marriage. They're the drunken husband in the string vest - they beat you up, then they promise you they love you and they'll change, only for it to happen again. And again. And again. And you, the battered wife, are convinced you're lost without them.

    Seriously, folks, pack your bags and get out of there. He's a brute and he'll beat you again. Because you let him.

"Being against torture ought to be sort of a multipartisan thing." -- Karl Lehenbauer, as amended by Jeff Daiell, a Libertarian

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