Microsoft will this autumn reveal significant technical details about its new
Windows 7 operating system, according to a new blog about the OS.
Engineering managers Jon DeVaan and Steven Sinofsky wrote in their blog
Engineering Windows 7 that the
Professional
Developers Conference on October 27 and the Windows Hardware Engineering
Conference (WinHEC) the
following week would "represent the first venues where we will provide in-depth
technical information about Windows 7".
Pushing Windows 7 into the public eye for the first time may be the beginning
of the end for Vista, which has so far garnered poor feedback from customers and
seen
slow
uptake among enterprises.
The Engineering Windows 7
blog will feature comments and participation from various members of the
engineering team and seeks to "open up a two-way discussion" about how the
software is being developed.
Generally, the blog has been well received according to those leaving
comments, although some have used the blog to highlight flaws in
Vista.
"Less is more. Really, it is. Microsoft went completely in the wrong
direction with Vista," wrote one commenter. "I personally think that, if you
want a real hit on your hands, strip down the Vista OS to bare bones, optimise
the heck out of the code, and tune the baby for speed."
Another argued that the new OS should rely less heavily on the registry. "
For someone who provides tech support the registry is a nightmare. Applications
not showing up as installed, applications not showing up as un-installed, sloppy
installation programs causing system instability due to a deleted registry key,
" he wrote.
Windows 7 has been slated for release in early 2010.
Do you agree?
Have your say on this article