Microsoft announced basic availability on March 1 with the last model of its Windows Embedded Compact 7 operating program, codenamed “Chelan.”
Microsoft posted a 180-day trial edition of the final Windows Embedded Compact seven bits to the Microsoft Download Center on February 28. (Microsoft officials refused to say when the Compact 7 product actually RTM’d, but @UltraWindows notes the digital signature on the bits is February 19, 2011.)
(click on the slide to enlarge)
The newest Embedded Compact running program is designed to power phones (including Windows Phones), medical devices,
Windows 7 Key, industrial automation products and retail systems,
Office 2007, as well as slates/tablets.
For the final several months,
Office 2010 Download, a number of Microsoft OEMs have been touting new slates and tablets that will be running Compact 7. Microsoft officials have attempted to distinguish slates and tablets running full Windows seven from those running Compact seven by saying those running the Windows Embedded Compact OS are meant to be consumption devices, rather than consumption and creation devices.
Microsoft’s first “real” tablet/slate OS is considered by many to be Windows 8, which is seemingly on track to be released to manufacturing in 2012.
The Windows Embedded Compact 7 product — the evolution of Windows Embedded CE — includes several new features. Among them:
* Support for ARM v7
* New developer and designer tools
* New technology for creating user interfaces
* New SMP (symmetric multiprocessing) support for x86 & ARM,
Microsoft Office 2007 Product Key, MIPS
* New multimedia player, with customizable UI
* New model of Internet Explorer (which is based on IE seven with some “performance updates” from IE 8)
* Flash 10.1 support (which requires an Adobe license by OEMs who want to include that feature)
* Silverlight for Embedded support
* Improved Connectivity to PCs, servers (NDIS 6.one support)
Silverlight for Embedded enables OEMs to create custom interfaces,
Microsoft Office 2010 Product Key, using XAML and native C++, “free from Windows chrome,” meaning the surrounding usual Windows user-interface elements. Here’s a slide from a recent Microsoft presentation to OEMs that outlines the new Silverlight for Embedded feature in Compact 7:
Go to the next page for more Microsoft slides and information about Windows Embedded Compact 7