So what exactly did
Steven Sinofsky reveal about Windows 7? I'd boil it
down to three things:
1. Timing
Despite what
Bill Gates said in Miami,
Windows 7 is
timed to come out by the end of January 2010, not "in the next year or so".
Here's what Sinofsky, Windows engineering head, had to say on the matter.
"The timing of it depends a lot on what we wanted to achieve, and you've
certainly heard us, and we've been very clear, and will continue to say that the
next release of Windows, Windows 7, is about three years after the general
availability of Windows Vista, and we're committed to that, and we've signed up
publicly to do that," he said in our interview.
2. Kernel
Windows 7 is an evolutionary improvement to the kernel in Windows Vista and
Windows Server 2008, not a wholly new MinWin kernel that has been
under development.
"We're very clear that drivers and software that work on Windows Vista are
going to work really well on Windows 7; in fact, they'll work the same,"
Sinofsky said. "We're going to not introduce additional compatibilities,
particularly in the driver model. Windows Vista was about improving those
things. We are going to build on the success and the strength of the Windows
Server 2008 kernel, and that has all of this work that you've been talking
about. The key there is that the kernel in Windows Server '08 is an evolution of
the kernel in Windows Vista, and then Windows 7 will be a further evolution of
that kernel as well."
3. Features
OK. we didn't learn a lot here. As Microsoft had previously indicated,
Windows 7 will be available in 32-bit and 64-bit flavors. Sinofsky did suggest
that Windows 7 will build on the architectural changes in Vista, suggesting that
many of the changes may be the kind of features that are available out of the
box, as opposed the kind that take years as developers build them into their
products.
"There will be a lot of features in Windows 7," Sinofsky said. "It's a major
release. I talked about the kernel and driver compatibility and (application)
compatibility, but there is a lot more for us to talk about. We'll certainly be
in touch."
The other thing that Sinofsky talked about at length is his approach to
revealing information. He explained why things have been so quiet and (my read
here) why we will continue to hear less about Windows 7 early on than we did
about Vista or Windows XP.
Microsoft clearly feels it was burned with saying too much about "Longhorn"
early on in development. It's not just the bad press, Sinofsky said. By
announcing plans and then changing them, he said that developers just decided to
wait until Vista finally shipped to start taking it seriously. That's a bad
thing, particularly when many of Vista's changes were the under-the-hood kind
that required developer support to make them pay off.
That's not to say we won't hear anything until it hits the beta stage. In
fact, from what I understand, we might hear a little bit more as soon as Tuesday
night, when Bill Gates and Steve Ballmer speak at the D: All Things Digital
conference in Carlsbad, Calif.
Via
CNET News Blogs
To post comments, you need to become a member. It's FREE.
vin8tan
2010 ?? Mac OS X anyone ???
May 29, 2008 16:28