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Microsoft Hoping for Vista in January

WebHostingGuy writes "Bill Gates said Tuesday there was an 80 percent chance the company's next-generation operating system, Vista, would be ready in January. He is also hopeful that the next version of Office will ship in December. The holdup, he says, is due to constant revisions due to beta tester feedback." From the article: "'We've got to get this absolutely right,' Gates said. 'If the feedback from the beta tests shows it is not ready for prime time, I'd be glad to delay it.' He said Microsoft was investing $8 billion to $9 billion in developing Vista and the company's next version of Office, its key cash-generator. He said the company's software partners, in developing and adapting their own products for the two launches, would invest 20 times as much as Microsoft."

26 of 424 comments (clear)

  1. Credible odds? by lecithin · · Score: 4, Funny

    Gates says 80% chance that it will be a go in January.

    Mr Gates, how much do you want to bet?

    I'd really like to see what kind of odds the Vegas bookmakers would give it.

    "The holdup, he says, is due to constant revisions due to beta tester feedback."

    Well duh, Just quit testing!

    --
    It could be worse, it could be Monday.
    1. Re:Credible odds? by eln · · Score: 5, Funny

      What he really meant was that it would be 80% DONE by January. That means, if they release it in January, it will be the most complete and stable OS ever released by Microsoft.

    2. Re:Credible odds? by morgan_greywolf · · Score: 4, Funny
      Well duh, Just quit testing!


      Right. Testing will be 80% done by January, making Windows Vista the most thoroughly tested Microsoft operating system ever.
    3. Re:Credible odds? by mrchaotica · · Score: 4, Insightful
      which he deserves some credit for, regardless as to how people feel about this company

      It depends. Do you think his charity is enough to make up for all the harm Microsoft has done to the economy over the years, between the predatory business practices, viruses, stifling non-Microsoft technologies, etc.? I'd say it's entirely possible that, if Microsoft had never existed, we might be so much more prosperous today that all that money would still be going to charity, and more.

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    4. Re:Credible odds? by tomstdenis · · Score: 4, Insightful

      No no no no no.

      The linux driver situation is not a mess. You just bought a product where the developer doesn't care about you, the customer.

      There is no technical reason why the camera doesn't work in Linux. It's not the job of OSS developers to be on the leading edge of every device on the planet. If your device manufacturer doesn't want to write drivers and doesn't want to document the interface how is this a failing of Linux?

      btw with libgphoto a lot of USB cams work just fine in Linux [including the Canon Powershot series].

      Tom

      --
      Someday, I'll have a real sig.
  2. Will there be by remembertomorrow · · Score: 4, Insightful

    a reason to actually upgrade to it by then?

    Last I heard, all the features were being removed, and that it required an insane machine to run.

    --
    Registered Linux user #421033
    1. Re:Will there be by Danse · · Score: 4, Funny
      Last I heard, all the features were being removed, and that it required an insane machine to run.

      Dude, what are you talking about?! Vista is gonna have some sweet new DRM! We can finally quit messing around with our PCs and just let Microsoft run them for us! Think of all the time we spend on the computer that we can now spend doing... umm... other stuff? I think there's supposed to be other stuff we can do anyway... not real clear on that...
      --
      It's not enough to bash in heads, you've got to bash in minds. - Captain Hammer
  3. At this point... by jZnat · · Score: 5, Funny

    At this point, even Debian has a more reliable release schedule!

    --
    'Yes, firefox is indeed greater than women. Can women block pops up for you? No. Can Firefox show you naked women? Yes.'
  4. Re:couple of observations by Explodo · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Any time a widely used OS is significantly changed, everyone will have to invest some amount of time with testing, and possibly refreshing, their software. Since there are so many companies that might have to do so, there's a significant software expense in doing so. If there's a large shift in KDE, to make it more future-oriented, then a very large amount of time will be spent by a large number of developers to update software. While they may not be getting paid to do it, their time still has value. Ol' Bill apparently realizes that software development is done by lots of people in lots of ways, unlike you.

  5. Re:couple of observations by gravyface · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Once again, Microsoft leaves the heavy lifting to others. What a crock. What exactly is Microsoft supposed to do, reverse-engineer everyone's applications for them so it will run under Vista? I'm no Windows programmer, but clearly the partners are going to have to make changes if their software is incompatible with Vista.

    --
    body massage!
  6. Doesn't matter by eebra82 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    There is no real need for a Vista release anytime soon, really. Judging from what we've heard so far, people complain about the hardware requirements. Microsoft should not have had a public release date on this product and it seems people are upset only because they missed it. Well, guess what, Windows XP is still here and I doubt anyone in here can actually give me a good reason why we HAVE TO get Vista right away. I wouldn't mind waiting another year.

    1. Re:Doesn't matter by ZachPruckowski · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Well, guess what, Windows XP is still here and I doubt anyone in here can actually give me a good reason why we HAVE TO get Vista right away. I wouldn't mind waiting another year.

      Every month that goes by without Vista is another month for Linux to improve, and is another month for Apple to work on Leopard (and maybe beat Vista out with it). Point is, MS has competition, which is picking up speed. MS wants to cut that off as soon as possible, and regulate them back to 1-2 percent each.

    2. Re:Doesn't matter by SpaceLifeForm · · Score: 4, Insightful
      I'm still wondering why anyone had to upgrade to XP from 2000.

      --
      You are being MICROattacked, from various angles, in a SOFT manner.
  7. Bud Light Presents... by kneeslasher · · Score: 5, Funny

    Bud Light presents ... Real Men Of Genius.

    [Real Men Of Genius.]

    Today, we salute you, Mr Impatient For Windows Vista Guy.

    [Mr Impatient For Windows Vista Guy.]

    While others marvel at an operating system whose primary repair
    tradition is a complete wipe, you just can't wait for more of the
    same.

    [I just love my Long Horn!]

    Yes, it lacks security, efficiency, speed, heck, just about
    everything. But ever since 1985, when you first jammed your floppies
    into that curvaceous 186, you've been enraptured with Windows.

    [It was five and a quarter inches!]

    Despite the fact that it requires an array of Crays to run already
    invented technologies at sub-optimum speeds, you will beat the rush
    and see Notepad and Clock run in CPU-crippling GPU-hogging
    translucency.

    [It turns on all my pixels!]

    So crack open an ice cold Bud Lite, oh Chevalier of the Control Panel,
    because whilst the rest of us wonder what Vista will bring, you
    already know.

    [Mr Impatient For Windows Vista Guy!]

    Bud Light beer. Anheuser Busch, St. Louis, Missouri.

  8. Hoping? by andrewman327 · · Score: 4, Funny
    Well, I'm hoping for a pair of brunettes and a sports car, but it's not happening. I don't know how Bill Gates can even estimate the chance at this point. He says that it keeps getting sent back from testing.


    Windows Vista = new Windows();
    Vista.announceWayTooEarlyReleaseDate()
    Vista.test();

    public void test()
    {
    test();
    }

    --
    Information wants a fueled airplane waiting at the hangar and no one gets hurt.
  9. Happy holidays! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    "He is also hopeful that the next version of Office will ship in December."

    Oh man, now he's resorting to asking Santa...

  10. yes but... by owlnation · · Score: 4, Funny

    ...which January?

  11. Sneer if you like by DysenteryInTheRanks · · Score: 5, Insightful

    He said the company's software partners, in developing and adapting their own products for the two launches, would invest 20 times as much as Microsoft

    Right there is why Microsoft is the most successful software company in the world -- respect for developers.

    It's all well and good to laugh at Steve Ballmer sweating like an ape on a stage and shouting about developers. It's fine to feel smug and superior using Mac OS or Linux (I'm using both write now myself).

    But Microsoft has always respected the work of developers coding to their platform. Backward compatibility is a religion at Microsoft, by all accountts. Which is good because they're, um, a platform vendor.

    Sounds simple, but it is amazing how often this is screwed up. Apple is notorious for breaking old programs that didn't interpret the Mac API just right -- or that relied on a technology fad Apple pumped and abandoned (OpenDoc, QuickDraw GX, Publish + Subscribe, etc etc).

    Apache Foundation did the same thing moving from httpd v1 to v2 -- PHP took quite a long time to move over and at one point was telling people not to even try using it with v2.

    Firefox seems to do it on every release with its extensions.

    Backward compatibility might not give warm fuzzies to the systems programmers -- it is hard, inelegant work. But it is a boon to users and application programmers.

    I only use Linux on the server, where I don't run into backward compatibility issues, but from what I understand the drivers often have to be rewritten from release to release.

    I'm not in love with Windows or Microsoft, but I will continue using their OS becase of the sheer range of CHOICES in terms of software and hardware, and the fact that all my old stuff can migrate to a new machine.

    So go ahead, laugh at Microsoft, har dee har, "u r d3layed AG@1N!" For your purposes -- programming, running a server -- Linux may be the best. Or Mac OS X for that plus video editing, publishing, and other tasks and price points that don't require the full diversity of Wintel.

      But for most computer users, Windows offers wins because of its compatibility with an incredibly array of cheap hardware and an incredible back (and forward) catalog of software. Microsoft knows this, and THAT'S why they are going to wait until Vista is just right. Yes they screwed the pooch, but they are attempting something that neither Linux nor OS X can touch.

    1. Re:Sneer if you like by Soko · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Your statement is inherently true - Microsoft takes care of it's devs (The VS product line is normally stellar in quality and ease of use) unless, of course, you're a dev in competition with them. Then you get to deal with closed formats, random API changes and, in the case of GPL software devs, licensing that benefits them at your expense. Oh, you can become a compeditor of thiers at any time - as soon as they see you're making some serious money and/or stratecically covet your market segment.

      OK, Microsoft can do ths if they want, but it hurts the industry when Microsoft can tell devs what, for whom and how to develop software, or suffer destruction at thier hands. (Unlees you're IBM or Oracle sized, and have enough resources to fight back.)

      Soko

      --
      "Depression is merely anger without enthusiasm." - Anonymous
  12. But Microsoft will never make up the 8-9 billion by macslut · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Here's the problem with Microsoft...they're spending 8-9 billion on Vista, but will only see a very slight fraction of return on the investment. Few people will upgrade to Vista, but instead will adopt Vista when it comes with their new PC. Microsoft could just keep XP and these same people would've paid roughly the same amount for it on a new PC as they would with Vista on a new PC. In other words, Microsoft since becoming the overwhelmingly dominate OS has no incentive to improve Windows unless they can release something so major that it provides an incentive for people to upgrade. The problem is that doing a major release like that would be *extremely expensive* and risk losing customers due to the radical change. This is why the *next* version of Windows after Vista will be even more of a headache for Microsoft.

  13. Re:If Apple is really smart ... (was:Doesn't matte by MyOtherUIDis3digits · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Release OSX for generic PC. It'll kill their (perceived) "hardware business" (in practice is just expensive dongles for their OS and software suite) but it would pretty much nail M$ to the wall.

    Now I admit I'm a huge Mac fanboi and would be just fine never touching another Windows box in my life, but Apple would take many tears and years to integrate the hardware support that Windows has. One of the reasons I love Apple, "Don't do it all, just do what you do damn well."

    --
    Ignore anything I said above, I actually agree with everything you believe - mod accordingly.
  14. As a self-proclaimed Linux fanboi . . . by mmell · · Score: 5, Insightful
    I have to say "Yes" - it does make up for all the times Mr. Gates has used the American free-enterprise system exactly as intended to serve his own best interests.

    You want corporate evil? Look at fellows like Carnagie and Rockefeller. There's a couple of great examples of the "robber baron", and we still name civic centers and auditoriums after them. Gates isn't even a blip on the radar next to those two. Granted, he's beyond obscenely rich, and there's no mistaking his business practices for anything resembling fair, but he really is quite tame by comparison to some of America's more revered/despised business leaders of the past.

    American history is replete with such men. It's the inevitable result of the free-enterprise system.

  15. Re:Vista or Mac ? by MyOtherUIDis3digits · · Score: 5, Funny

    I have a little experience with Linux (RHCE) but I have to say that using it day to day for other than server purposes is like dating a crazy chick. It's a lot of fun and she let's you do stuff with her that other chicks don't, but you often wonder, "Is it worth all the hassle?"

    --
    Ignore anything I said above, I actually agree with everything you believe - mod accordingly.
  16. Microsoft is taking a page from the politicians by wealthychef · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Clever strategy: "We want to make sure our focus groups are happy." Now, if they don't ship, it's because they care to make it perfect. If by a miracle they actually do ship on time, yeah right, then they have pulled off a miracle. Either way, they look good. Before, it was just do or die. Very effective politics, mr. Gates.

    --
    Currently hooked on AMP
  17. That was old Microsoft by SuperKendall · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The new Microsoft is more than happy to ship .Net upgrades that break older code.

    As for Apple not having respect for developers, which companies ships every OS with a copy of the development tools? Just because they are a little more agressive API wise does not mean they do not support developers.

    And Linux of course is the original "I liked the product so much I wrote it myself" kind of system that is by developers, for developers. If Linux has a problem it's that it only truly respects developers and other people are allowed to tag along for the ride!

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
  18. Revisions due to beta-tester feedback by Cryptimus · · Score: 4, Funny

    Shit Bill, in my day we just called 'em bugs.