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Windows 7 in the Next Year?

Microsoft's efforts to get businesses to adopt Vista may come to a screeching halt now that Bill Gates has announced "Sometime in the next year or so we will have a new version", referring to Windows 7, the next expected version of the company's flagship desktop operating system.With a new version available soon, many organizations may decide to wait and see if they can avoid the pain of a Vista rollout altogether.

33 of 385 comments (clear)

  1. I don't think so by joaommp · · Score: 3, Insightful

    They may very well test it a bit longer and delay it a bit in the end just to make sure another vistaesque fiasco doesn't roll out.

    1. Re:I don't think so by PopeRatzo · · Score: 4, Insightful

      They may very well test it a bit longer and delay it a bit in the end just to make sure another vistaesque fiasco doesn't roll out.
      I'm not sure "not enough testing" was what made Vista such an unpleasant experience for many of us.

      I think it had more to do with problems with design and implementation. Arguably, you could say there are also issues with the overall scope of what MS was trying to accomplish with Vista.
      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
  2. I find that hard to believe by AC-x · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Next year? they haven't even started beta yet have they?

    1. Re:I find that hard to believe by bcmm · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Of course it won't be ready by then. They'll keep putting the date back. But they hope that if they keep saying it's almost ready, businesses won't get impatient and migrate to Linux.

      --
      # cat /dev/mem | strings | grep -i llama
      Damn, my RAM is full of llamas.
    2. Re:I find that hard to believe by BountyX · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It's a marketing ploy. They are trying to say to the world "ok we screwed up, look were already making a better one". By making it seem like they quickly fixed the "Vista" bug, it gives their consumers more confidence.

      --
      Trying to install linux on my microwave, but keep getting a kernel panic...
    3. Re:I find that hard to believe by stevey · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Retraining is one of those things that is often used with a selective memory.

      For example "You can't switch to Linux for your secretaries desktops, you'd have to retrain them!".

      But then you have "Use our new Office, it has ribbons. They rock. Retraining you say? Nah, they'll pick it up in no time".

      People adapt quickly. I loved Windows 2000, not too flashy, and pretty solid. But I had to relearn a lot when the company I was working for jumped to XP. Now I'd probably be stumped when dealing with a 2000 machine again.

      Thankfully I've used nothing but Debian at home for many years, so no retraining or admin changes there.

  3. It sounds pretty quick... by Red+Samurai · · Score: 2, Insightful

    But I doubt it'll be a whole new OS. I reckon they'll just change Vista enough so that it doesn't suck anymore. That, combined with a slightly different GUI, and they'll hope they have a successful OS on their hands.

  4. Breaking API compatibilty...release in 1 year? No. by ChangeOnInstall · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Didn't we just read that they're breaking binary compatibility with Windows XP/Vista in 7? I laud them for doing this, but the idea that a modular, completely-rethought, bloat-free, and binary incompatible Windows is one year away strikes me as nothing short of absurd. The only cases I can see where both of these facts being correct is either that 7 has been in development for at least three years, or the new item is a steaming pile.

    The more likely scenario is that we're being mislead (e.g., the inference that he's talking about Windows 7 is wrong, or that the previous article today regarding binary incompatibility is hogwash).

    --
    What has *science* done?!? -- Dr. Weird (ATHF)
  5. Won't someone please think of the customers!? by damburger · · Score: 1, Insightful

    If you are a windows who^H^H^Huser then this is unlikely to be great news:

    1. You've stuck with XP, and windows 7 is just an incremental upgrade of that - you end up paying hundreds for what amounts to a service pack and a polish of the UI

    2. You've gone to Vista, and windows 7 is just an incremental upgrade of that. Same as above. Really fucking expensive service pack for an already expensive OS

    3. You've gone to Vista, but windows 7 is basically just XP. Thankyou for your generous contribution to the Bill Gates worlds-first-trillionaire fund. Carrying on using the same operating system as you did before.

    This is only (partly) good if you stuck with XP, and Windows 7 is based on Vista. Logically this is a strong reason not to buy Vista at all, as if you needed one more.

    --
    If we can put a man on the moon, why can't we shoot people for Apollo-related non-sequiturs?
  6. Microsoft to RIAA/MPAA by Nomen+Publicus · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Look you guys, we built an operating system with your crappy DRM ideas built in and guess what? It didn't work too well. The entire point of a computer is to copy data accurately and as soon as you mess with that, you get a crappy result. It's not so much "garbage in, garbage out" as "quality in, garbage out".

    So, Vista didn't work too well and it's your fault. The RIAA and MPAA can take DRM and shove it where the sun don't shine. Microsoft is now a born again anti-DRM company and there is nothing you can do because we've got more money than you.

    Now I must go because there's a conference call with some BSD kernel hackers I want to take.

    Well, a guy can hope, can't he?

  7. Re:Breaking API compatibilty...release in 1 year? by blind+biker · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Breaking binary compatibility would make development considerably *easier*, not harder.

    --
    "The agriculture ministry is not in charge of Gundam" - Japanese ministry official.
  8. +1 Insightful by Joce640k · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This announcement is all about keeping up momentum and stopping people from looking elsewhere.

    OF COURSE it won't be released next year, or even the year after. They'll want to "get it 100% right this time".

    --
    No sig today...
  9. Please stop quoting UPENN on "wait and see" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Thanks for woefully misrepresenting the nature of Penn's "wait and see" suggestion regarding Vista SP1. Penn's IT org gives that advice regarding virtually every major OS update published by any vendor. In fact, Mac OS 10.5 is was also "wait and see"'d on first release for the exact same reasons. http://www.upenn.edu/computing/provider/docs/originalmacos105provider.html

  10. Re:Breaking API compatibilty...release in 1 year? by Computershack · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Breaking binary compatibility would make development considerably *easier*, not harder. Indeed. WinME was shite because it tried to maintain Win98 compatibility. WinVista is shite because it's trying to maintain Win2k/XP compatibility.
    Sometimes you just need to flush the whole lot down the crapper and start with a clean sheet.
    --
    I only please one person per day. Today is not your day. Tomorrow isn't looking good either. - Scott Adams
  11. Longhorn next year! by Groggnrath · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This is simply the way MS operates. Windows 7 will be due out next year, for the next 3 years.

    It'll be right around the corner, or almost to Beta for at least 2 years, only to have the whole thing scrapped because it's too hard to program anything not NT based.

  12. Re:Breaking API compatibilty...release in 1 year? by Nimey · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Most likely this "Windows 7" is a marketing name for what's really planned as a 6.1 release (Vista being 6.0).

    That or they're lying; Windows 7 being the next major refresh of Windows in maybe five years but they're wanting you to think about the neat cool stuff while they're actually just talking about a point release next year.

    Or, since this is Slashdot, it's sensationalism.

    --
    Hail Eris, full of mischief...

    E pluribus sanguinem
  13. Brilliant actually by canuck57 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    they will release it, but it will just be a repackaged version of xp. They probably want to switch back to it without anyone really knowing. It like the "new coke"

    Brilliant actually. Lets see, you buy a PC at Best Buy and can only get Vista on it. So you go to another shop, and buy a copy of XP and install it. So far a double dip.

    Now, next year you shell out more cash and will want to upgrade to Win7. The triple dip, Brilliant.

  14. Re:Nah, not really by Knuckles · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Where would you like your 5 copies of Mac OS X sent?

    I would think that "Linux-like" includes "Free".

    --
    "When I first heard Daydream Nation it quite frankly scared the living shit out of me." -- Matthew Stearns
  15. Mods on crack again by Daengbo · · Score: 1, Insightful

    "If there was a company that made a "professional, commercial" Linux-type OS that could run all Windows programs natively..."
    "Where would you like your 5 copies of Mac OS X sent?"

    You've got to be kidding. This is insightful? Mac OSX is not Linux-like OR able to run Windows app NATIVELY.

    Someone with mod points correct this, please.

    1. Re:Mods on crack again by penix1 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You just got to love the Mac OS X fans trying to blunt the fact that OS X is just as bad as Microsoft at being closed source and that Apple will sue out of existence anyone distributing it just like Microsoft. You see, that is the main "linux like" item you totally ignore. The fact that the license allows re-distribution in Linux is one of its strongest points. The fact that I can modify it to suit my needs instead of at the whim of some corporation is another.

      --
      This is a sig. This is only a sig. Had this been an actual sig you would have been informed where to tune for more sigs.
    2. Re:Mods on crack again by omega_dk · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Okay, so the closed-source *UI* and *APPLICATIONS* are your problems, then. So comparing it to Linux is a specious argument; you should be comparing it to Gnome/KDE/XFCE, etc.

      In terms of the Operating System, it is Open Source, and I actually *can* modify it from the kernel up. Google "gnome on Darwin" if you don't believe me.

      Choosing to stick with the default closed source UI is my choice as a user; I have other options available to me. The Kernel itself is free-er than Linux; unless, of course, you don't think BSD is free.

      And yes, parallels allows native execution.

      --
      Just because you don't like the truth, does not make it false.
  16. Re:2-3 years is normal for Windows by Martin+Blank · · Score: 2, Insightful

    That depends on how much they're bringing forward. When including legacy functionality, a tremendous amount of work has to happen to preserve it within a new framework, whereas writing new code that adheres to design goals can be (though not always is) easier to do.

    It will be interesting to see how it turns out. I'll be happy just to see them shrink the install size back down to a useful level.

    --
    You can never go home again... but I guess you can shop there.
  17. Re:2-3 years is normal for Windows by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    When has Microsoft said that Windows 7 is "fundamentally different in design" from previous versions?

    I know that various people on /. have said that Windows 7 is fundamentally different. But I don't know that I've ever heard that from anyone who claims to work at Microsoft.

    About the only thing that I've heard about Windows 7 is this "minwin" stuff, and as best as I can figure, that's just shuffling chairs on the bridge deck - they've moved code around to make it so that they can boot the OS with a minimal set of functionality. But that's not a fundamental shift in the OS design.

    Amazingly enough, you can't trust random crap you read from people on the internet, especially when it comes from anonymous cowards.

  18. I want these feature please... by Spy+der+Mann · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Arguably, you could say there are also issues with the overall scope of what MS was trying to accomplish with Vista.

    Heh, I'm still waiting for the database-based filesystem they bragged so much about when they talked about... Longhorn.

    Microsoft is desperate. They can't innovate, they're running out of ideas, and they can't find something so attractive to make users switch.

    But here are a few ideas of mine that would make Windows a guaranteed success:

    * Revamp the configuration. Slice the configuration for applications into different registries, but add a layer of compatibility. No more corrupted registry blues.

    * Virtualize the registry so bad programs can modify hkeylocalmachine but it'll only affect them.

    * In fact, virtualize the entire filesystem so a bad program can't screw up your install.

    * Instead of babysitting the user with endless "Cancel Allow" dialogs, allow some programs (administrator-defined) to run as administrator (i.e. root) by adding a popup dialog to ask the password. Add the possibility of remembering the password FOR THIS SESSION ONLY.

    With the above two measures, users can effectively install any software without worrying about viruses and all that.

    * Speaking of filesystems, add native compatibility for ext2,ext3,ext4 (is it out yet?), reiserfs, jfs, xfs, etc. We live in an open world. Add compatibility or die.

    * Make Windows non-primary-partition tolerant. Allow it to run in other partitions so it doesn't try to get hold of my entire hard disk.

    * Make (or adopt) a decent partitioner that can resize partitions without requiring to buy third party products.

    * Give up on the directx "intellectual property" stuff and release the code under a GPL-compatible license.

    * Modify the kernel so it can run in Xen without CPU-virtualization extensions.

    * Release the specs for developers to be able to make and use their own window managers (i.e.KDE, GNOME, etc) work with Windows.

    * Separate the shell from terminals, so users can add their own scripting languages for shells. You know, like bash.

    * Add the possibility of having virtual terminals so advanced users can just log in in text-mode.

    * The same with hardware drivers.

    * Get rid of all that Digital Rights Management crap and allow users to save videos and music in hi-res formats for backups. Windows media player shouldn't allow any copy-protection crap to execute and spy on them.

    * Open-source network-based apps and provide official support a-la sourceforge for users to submit bugs and security vulnerabilities.

    * Don't sell 7 different versions of the OS. Make the management and administration parts available on the darn CD / DVD.

    * Here's an idea: Make (or use) a "/home" partition so users can put their configuration and files in a directory of their own, so advanced users can either boot Windows or Linux and still have their important documents unmodified.

    * And please, for the love of everything good in the world, GET RID OF THAT ANTIPIRACY CRAP!!!

    Registration, Genuine Advantage, it's driving everyone crazy. It's ironic, I bought a legitimate copy of Windows because I was afraid of Genuine Advantage. But it was the limit on the number of non-phone based activations that pushed me to the limit and made me switch to GNU/Linux. So yes, it's real, you ARE losing users because of the antipiracy measures! (Now that I think about it, can I get a refund on XP? It sucks).

    Yes, many of the features I'm asking for are already present in Linux. So is that signing Microsoft's doom? No. Linux is free, so Microsoft doesn't lose anything by letting Linux and Windows coexist on the same machine. The key here is attracting users to KEEP Windows, not forcing them from using any other OS besides Windows.

    See the difference?

    Start innovating (or at least following the trends) and users will actually WANT to use Windows. Right now users see Windows as a necessary evil: They don't like it but they have to stick with it. Start offering them something MORE.

    If Microsoft adopted the above ideas, I'm sure. I would LIKE to buy a copy. "Windows X. Compatible with everything".
    1. Re:I want these feature please... by jm4 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      How the hell did this get modded insightful? Aside from the ideas about a revamped configuration (which would only further complicate Registry hell), the rest would make Windows into a Linux clone. How would that make Windows a success? At that point, why not just use Linux instead? Who is going to choose a costly clone of something that's freely available?

      The fact is there are a lot of people out there who like Windows. It's familiar and easy enough for most people, compatible with lots of other products and mostly works pretty well. Some may find it not configurable enough and the antipiracy measures infuriating. We, powerusers, are always going to use Linux or some other free and open OS, and we are always going to be the minority.

      The reality is that the larger market doesn't care about window managers, terminals, filesystems or disk partitions. They certainly don't care about product activation because they almost never reinstall the OS. Once it's sufficiently junked up they buy a new computer. For them, Windows is for the most part transparent. It fills their needs without a whole lot of fuss, but they complain about it every once in a while because that's just what people do. Some of them probably just do it because the IT guy at works said Windows sucks and they want to sound like they know something. If they had real problems with it they'd investigate alternatives.

      Microsoft makes a good enough product that caters to an enormous market and has some of the best marketing money can buy. Microsoft isn't in the business of making superior products. They're in the business of making money and that means making the products that sell the most. Openness and extensibility are for the most part only desired by a small, albeit vocal, minority and simply never enter into that equation.

  19. Re:Ground up by ozmanjusri · · Score: 2, Insightful
    If they focused everything on developing Windows 7, then they might, just, have something in a year.

    Read this and tell me if you still think that.

    --
    "I've got more toys than Teruhisa Kitahara."
  20. Re:2-3 years is normal for Windows by DannyO152 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I also look at the two-year extension given to XP in the ULCPC market as an indicator of when Microsoft expects Windows 7 to land.

    My barely-informed opinion is that we'll never see WFS. Search technologies, parallel processors, and virtual directories (smart folders) have obviated the idea that files need a relational database overlay in order to facilitate structured storage and convenient retrieval. Files and the reasons a person saves and the reasons a person retrieves are a many-to-many-squared hairball and it's difficult for me to imagine that a databased file system approach would be effective without user involvement and that dooms it right there. We all see how Google seems to handle keeping track of the web. Apple tells a story that they were going one way with Spotlight and they realized they had already solved the search problem with iTunes. No, my read is WFS was yanked because others showed how the user could go fishing, get bites, and join in the fish fry without an explicit graph structure overlay of the file system tree.

  21. saving face by mookiemu · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I think that this announcement is a way for MS to save face. People just aren't flocking to Vista in droves, in fact they aren't using Vista at all unless they are forced into it or are new to the world of computing. By announcing that Windows 7 will be out in a year they can avoid embarrassment by telling everyone that Vista adoption is slow because windows 7 is around the corner.

  22. Re:Nah, not really by mollymoo · · Score: 2, Insightful

    It's been a long while since I play with Java GUI stuff, but it would have to be a hell of a lot better than it was to convince me it was worth using for anything other than the most trivial desktop apps. [...] Hmm, a quick search finds SWT has come on a bit and might be a viable alternative. Having said that, I assume Eclipse itself uses SWT and Eclipse has always had a treacle-like GUI on every platform I've tried it on (the last time being about 6 months ago on OS X). I don't know if that's down to Eclipse, SWT, SWT on OS X or OS X itself but it not a great advert.

    --
    Chernobyl 'not a wildlife haven' - BBC News
  23. Paradigm shifts and evil empires by DrYak · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I've been betting on Google for the next Evil Empire (for one thing, I like the irony), but Apple just might have a shot.

    I definitely bet on Google.

    See everytime the previous evil empire falls and a new one emerge, we all see a shift in the paradigms f evil empires. It's not a coincidence that an "Evil" empire has become evil. It's because it has become quite efficient at the kind of abuse that are necessary to secure a position, in the "Evil Corp" world. And it won't be easy for a concurrent to replace it in the exact same position. Usually the concurrent replace them by making them irrelevant.

    Usually, Evil Corps die in the way of obsolescence. Take the previous old evil empire : IBM.
    IBM has achieved a huge monopoly in the market place based on the hardware they were selling.
    And they got replaced by Microsoft, which is basically a software company (or an abuse company occasionally selling software as pointed by some /.ers higher in the thread). All this switch happened, because computer got commoditised. During the IBM era, you had to go to IBM to buy specific mainframes. At the end of IBM's kingship you could buy a PC from them, but also buy a PC-compatible from any other nameless vendor from around the world. Wherever you bought your hardware from, you could install your OS (...DOS from Microsoft...) on it. The fact that the hardware was from IBM became irrelevant, hardware didnt' matter anymore.

    The current evil empire(tm) is a software empire. And they have built their empire on a ground of software monopoly. You have to buy your OS from them, there are the only one selling Windows. What makes Google the best candidate to be the "Next Evil Empire", is that there a good potential to shift paradigm and make the current software-based busyness model obsolete. Microsoft has a solid ground for a software monopoly, only as long as people need to buy their specific software.
    Google isn't a company based around software. It's a company which uses standards instead. What they provide are information services : searches, mails, maps, whatever. And they are bloody good at it because they can leverage a decade long experience in data processing/clustering, a decade worth of data mining, tons of different kind of database that they can cross-reference, etc.
    But also, all their application are built around standards : most of their service are web applications built around pretty plain standard-compliant HTML.
    Whichever software you have installed on you PC doesn't matter anymore. It could be Windows, it could be Mac OS X, it could be one of the dozen nameless Linux-based distribution. As long as it can display HTML properly, it can work.

    The same way Microsoft replaced IBM once the PC became a commodity, the same way Google and similar service providers will replace Microsoft once the OS becomes a commodity.

    Also, what make specifically Google a potential Evil Corp among other factor, is that once in place they will be hard to compete against.
    IBM secured their position because it was hard at that time for another company to come up with competing hardware.
    Microsoft secured its position, because of vendor lock-in, no standard-compliance, being the target of most 3rd party applications, etc. : In the beginning some competitors could pull a competing OS, but it won't see adoption because it wouldn't be compatible with all the applications that the Microsoft users already had.

    Google will probably secure its position because of the massive amount of experience and data they can leverage. To be performant as a service providing company, a company will probably need very efficient algorithms to process their data, and massive amount of data to process to provide services from. To take the example of websearches, Google have an important head start, because they have had 10 years to perfect their algos, they had 10 years to collect massive amount of data about all pages available on the web, and more i

    --
    "Sufficiently advanced satire is indistinguishable from reality." - [Tips: 1DrYakQDKCQ6y52z6QbnkxHXAocMZJE61o ]
  24. Re:A GOOD Windows OS by yuna49 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Why does everyone seem to think Microsoft introduced the various DRM components into Vista because Hollywood pointed a gun at their heads? Isn't it apparent to everyone that Microsoft is also becoming a purveyor of content as well as computer software (and a variety of other products, of course)? I wouldn't at all be surprised to see Microsoft buy a studio in the next decade assuming they could get it past the Antitrust Division.

  25. Re:Microsoft: "The whole world is our beta tester. by Doctor+O · · Score: 2, Insightful

    That said, NEVER install hardware drivers from Windows Update. I have *never ever* seen this option working, not even for the most common of on-board sound or NIC. Frankly I've thought it was an alibi "feature" which just sent a packet to NIL so that it looks as if it looked up drivers and that pretty much was it... so I've not ever seen it actually finding drivers. What kind of drivers are on MS Update?
    --
    Who is General Failure and why is he reading my hard disk?
  26. Re:2008 is the year of the Linux desktop! by az-saguaro · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Right idea, but wrong year I think.

    2008 will be the year that many people start to look for alternatives. Remember, this is Slashdot, tech savvy people who are very familiar with these issues, but who are but a small fraction of overall computer users. 2008 is the year that many regular folks start to question their OS. Remember, most "regular folks" get their Vista with a new computer. MS claims to have "sold" 100M or so copies of Vista. If true, they are sowing seeeds of destruction, because enough regular folk will start to see the limtations of this release and start to complain and look for alternatives. It happened to me - I'm a tech savvy /.'er, but I am VERY happy with XP, and very happy to be looking at alternatives (Nix'es) to Vista because of how bad an experience that Vista has been. I think that 2008 - 2009 is the year that many folk, tech and regular alike, start to look elsewhere - BUT . . .

    That alone won't drive Linux onto the desktop in great numbers. Too many regular folk with limited computing needs are / will be happy enough with Vista, or they won't know any different. Left to the desktop market itself, Windows will reign for a long time, no matter how bad it might be - BUT . . .

    Linux will succeed on the desktop for the very same reason that Windows originally did: migration from the workplace.

    Remember when PCs were nerdy things for the tech elite? Not that long ago. Two things changed that. One was the development of the Web, which brought "point-and-shoot" graphical commerce and communications onto the desktop. That is what suddenly drove everyone and their granny to get wired. By that time, many people were already very familiar and comfortable with PCs and Windows because they used them at work - they already knew how to use a PC, even if they had never bought one themselves. Dominance in business, as opposed to arts & graphics, is what let MS reign over Apple - Windows won the hearts and minds of regular folk because that is what they learned at work.

    Linux will succeed on the desktop because the WORKPLACE hates Vista and is looking for Linux solutions. The more that "regular folk" employees use a new Linux system at work, they more that Linux will grow on them. Think of how easy it is for them to learn a new OS under these circumstances. They will use it because their employer decided on Linux. Like or not at first, they can learn it safely, non-threatening, non-anxiety provoking, since they need not worry about losing their own data, and the company IT will support their learning curve.

    Once the workplace starts switching to Linux, people will start to learn it, and use it, and like it. When it then comes time to buy a new PC at home, and if they have had a bad MS-Windows experience, they may then have no hesitation to get what they already know and like from work. The more this happens, the more users will start seeking productivity apps, and this will drive third party app development, which in turns strengthens Linux's position, and the whole thing ramps up.

    The average person will not get Linux on the desktop because they hate Vista - most have never heard of Linux yet. They will get Linux on the desktop because they had a good experience with it at work, and they now know how to use it.

    I think that "2008 is the year of the Linux desktop" only in the sense that this is the year that the soil is tilled, and some of the seeds are planted. The growing season will come over the next 2-3 years. If MS flops with their latest promise of Win7, then Linux can expect a huge bumper crop by 2012-2014.