It;s not possible to know for positive, offered Microsoft is continuing to decline to comment,
Office 2010 Key, but it;s looking like Windows Live Wave four — like Internet Explorer 9 — isn;t going to support Windows XP.According to a new blog post on LiveSide.Net, internal milestone test builds of Windows Live Wave four only work on Windows Vista with Service Pack (SP) 2 installed and higher. The same is true of IE 9, Microsoft officials conceded earlier this month; both the first developer preview and the final release of IE9 require a minimum of Vista with SP2.Windows Live Wave 4 is the collection of services including Windows Live Mail, Messenger instant-messaging,
Microsoft Office Enterprise 2007, Writer blogging tool, Photo ##############, Movie Maker and other optional software/service add-ons designed to supplement Windows. A subset of these services is bundled together and available via a single installer (Windows Reside Essentials).Microsoft has been internally testing Wave four for a while now,
Windows 7 64 Bit, and there have been several leaked versions available over the Web in recent months. According to a recent roadmap leak — which has since been removed from Windows Reside, as has the leaker;s site (but was grabbed and saved by Neowin.Net) — the public beta of Wave 4 is coming in June. The release to the Web of the final version of Windows Reside Wave four is slated for August, according to that roadmap.Last year, some of us Microsoft watchers were expecting the Softies to release Wave four around the same time as the company made
Windows 7 commercially available (October 2009). Even though Microsoft released Wave 3 in early 2009, the original plan for Windows Reside seemed to be to make regularly updated releases available more rapidly to consumers, but so far that hasn;t been the case.Wave 4 is expected to include the rebranded Reside Mesh synchronization service,
Windows 7 Product Key, and will be the first release to include Office Reside services (like the consumer version of Office Web Apps). It also is expected to include a new “Bing bar” and a Windows Live Companion service for shared browsing.This is all Microsoft is saying about Wave four for now. A spokesperson sent me the following all-purpose statement via e-mail:“We continue to actively work on the next release of Windows Live and think customers will be excited by the changes. The final versions will be released when they are ready for our customers worldwide. We have no specifics to share on the release date or final product at this time.”If Microsoft does proceed as expected as makes Windows Reside Wave four available for Vista SP2 and higher, the move will be shrugged off by some (it;s a nine-year-old operating system on its way out), and villified by others (they;re still selling XP — so they should still support it,
Microsoft Office 2010 Professional!). What;s your take? Should Microsoft make Wave four available for XP and above? Will dropping XP support for Windows Reside Wave 4 hurt the Redmondians more than help them?