Precarious entire world of Windows7
It will be 25 years given that Microsoft announced the improvement of Windows 1.0. It faces a stiff problem maintaining the momentum on the product line with its forthcoming release of Windows7, reports Tom Pullar-Strecker.
Microsoft will make a second try to persuade XP users to throw out their computers and move on in the operating method when it releases Windows7 in January 2010.
The hype that precedes the launch of all Microsoft running programs hasn't really begun to build, but that may change when Microsoft releases an early version for testing by the public next month.
Windows7 is best regarded as an enhancement to Vista, and like all Microsoft products, it has emerged from a methodically prepared pipeline.
It was codenamed Windows Vienna when NZ InfoTech first reported on its advancement two years ago – a month before Vista's kick off – speculating that it would be a "hybrid running procedure, with one foot on customers' PCs and another on the web".
That "foot" on the web has shrunk to a couple of toes. Some applications previously bundled with Windows, such as Mail, Movie Maker and Calender,
Office Standard 2007, will be made available via Windows Live for download over the web, rather than included in the shrink- wrapped version.
This has helped Microsoft build a smattering of new features on to Windows7's Vista core – such as support for iPhone-like multi-touch screen technology and a taskbar that makes it easier to manage multiple open windows – without increasing the running system's hardware requirements.
A toolkit to support the integration of sensors such as GPS, light sensors and accelerometers could spawn a mini-industry for developers making new applications for Windows7.
Microsoft New Zealand Windows business group manager Ben Green says the innovations in Windows7 that will appeal to corporate consumers include "branch caching" – a feature that will let staff who are connected to a local area network easily share, from a cache,
Windows 7 Code, files that have been downloaded by others on the network.
He says that in branch offices which have limited bandwidth connecting them to a head office where files are stored, that "really rockets that local performance".
Mr Green says there will be other new features which are still under wraps and won't be included in next month's Beta version.
"There are a lot of features we have announced, and there are some we have still to announce."
Possibly of more interest to most computer users than the new bells and whistles is Microsoft's promise that Windows7 will address some of Vista's shortcomings and irritations. Microsoft promises Windows7 will be faster to boot up and shut down, and consumers will be able to decide for themselves how often they are warned about process changes.
Although Windows7 will be designed to run on Vista-capable hardware,
Windows 7 Key, it will require a bare minimum of at least a gigabyte of memory and most XP end users will need to buy new PCs to run the operating product well.
Whether there will be enough in Windows7 to encourage businesses that weren't tempted by Vista to upgrade is a moot point, given that they will face all the same application integration issues that are involved in migrating to Vista.
Microsoft is fond of noting that Vista has had the fastest take-up of any Microsoft running procedure, but staffers have admitted this is because there are far more personal computers in the earth than there were when XP was released seven many years ago. The speed at which large corporates, in particular, have embraced Vista is best described as glacial.
Telecom's Gen-i, an early enthusiast, piloted Vista with about 500 staff in a roll-out that was completed in June. Technology manager David Spratt says no decision has been made about a wider deployment and demand for Vista from corporate customers has been slow.
"We have not had a significant uptake among our enterprise clients." He says its a little early to say whether they will jump at Windows7.
But ACC manager Rutger Keijser probably sums up the mood of many. "We have not been eager to look for the next generation desktop, because we are happy with XP with the way it runs," he says.
Mr Green points out that by the time Windows7 debuts, Vista will have been on the market for more than three many years and he says that by then most companies should have computer systems powerful enough to run either operating process.
"New Zealand companies hold on to their hardware for between three and five decades."
But he accepts it's a "big topic" whether those three-to-five-year replacement cycles are still acceptable to businesses and consumers.
"You can look at it from a philosophical point of view – is it right for the planet and everything – but one aspect to think about is that what PCs do today is not the same as what they did five or 10 a long time ago."
Much may depend on the length and depth on the current recession.
Analyst IDC has warned that the computer hardware industry will be one with the main casualties on the current downturn. "Refresh cycles will get longer and there will be pressure on chief information officers to continue to operate ageing fleets of PCs,
Cheap Office 2010," it said in a research note published in October.
Gen-i's Mr Spratt accepts one reason why businesses replace their pcs so frequently is to take advantage of new operating systems – the benefit of which is the very question that is now in doubt – but he points out that there are other drivers.
Computers' performance and reliability will deteriorate over time, and if the carrot doesn't do it, there is always the stick. Some businesses may be persuaded to move off XP when standard support ends next year, although Microsoft will not withdraw extended support for XP until April 2014.
Microsoft's Windows product line turned 25 on November 20, and while there will be a Windows8 and Windows9 whether Windows7 sinks or swims, there is less certainty about its future than at any time during its adulthood.
Microsoft has been working on a project to design a new greenfield desktop working program in the ground up considering the fact that 2003. Initially a research project,
Microsoft Office Standard 2010, codenamed Singularity, reviews suggest it will spawn a commercial working strategy, codenamed Midori.
Its speculated that it will provide some form of backward compatibility for existing Windows applications, but it will be a "virtualised" operating method built from entirely modular software components.
That could allow Microsoft to create future running techniques without having to build on the multilayered and sometimes bug- ridden foundations of the past, on which Windows7 will sit perched somewhat precariously.
- The Dominion Post