As I;ve described a few times on this blog, Microsoft privately is telling some of its consumers that Windows 7 will be out inside the latter half of 2009.It;s true,
Microsoft Office 2007 Pro, as Microsoft;s spokespeople contend, the “public guidance” around Windows seven hasn;t changed; Microsoft marketeers continue to state that Windows 7 is on track to ship three years after Windows Vista was released to market (and cite that target date as January 2010). As plenty of Microsoft watchers,
Microsoft Office 2007 Professional Keygen, yours truly included, have noted, Microsoft is NOT gonna release another version of Windows client in January again unless there;s a awfully compelling reason to do so. The best time to RTM a new Windows release is summer if you hope to get it preloaded on back-to-school and holiday PCs.With all this as a given,
Office Enterprise 2007 Activation, it;s not surprising that OEMs are starting to admit that they expect to ship Windows 7 on new machines within the latter 50 percent of 2009.I;m also not surprised that Microsoft is dropping hints about Windows 7 being ready sooner rather than later. As blogger Long Zheng noted, text on the Windows Hardware Engineering Conference (WinHEC) 2008 site currently states that Windows seven will ship before the next WinHEC is held. The exact wording:“Be one of the first to see what;s new in Windows 7 and be among a select handful of to receive a pre-beta build of Windows 7. Join us as WinHEC 2008 – Register today. WinHEC is the only chance for you to engage with the team at this level – there is not another WinHEC planned before Windows seven is released.”The plot thickens further. When I searched the Web for “WinHEC 2009,
Microsoft Office 2007 Pro,” it looks like the next WinHEC seems to be slated for New Orleans from May 3-7, 2009 (although Microsoft potentially could postpone next year;s WinHEC to late fall, like it did this year).Could it be that Windows seven is even earlier than even the most optimistic date watchers are predicting and that it;s on track to RTM before mid-2009? If it is, I wouldn;t be surprised to see the broadscale, public Windows seven Beta 1, which I;m still hearing is set for mid-December,
Office 2007 Activation clave, to get the only public beta for the next Windows release.Understandably, Microsoft isn;t commenting on any of these latest date predictions. The company doesn;t need to do anything more to throw cold water on Vista than its officials already have….I;ll be interested to see how forthcoming (or not) Microsoft officials are about Windows seven;s due date at next week;s Professional Developers Conference.