This can be merely a quick publish to support tutorial people who aren;t utilised to Micro-speak.Contrary to numerous blog posts you might have read more than the previous day or so, Windows seven;s due date hasn't slipped — at least not yet. This can be the exchange between Microsoft and site WinVista Club that lots of sites have been quoting to prove that Windows seven, the successor to Vista,
Office Professional Plus 2010, is running late:Q: (From WinVista Club): “What is the expected timeline for the availability of Windows seven?”A. (From Microsoft,
Office Standard 2010, via email): “We are currently in the planning stages for Windows 7 and expect it will take approximately 3 years to develop. The specific release date will be determined once the company meets its quality bar for release.”Here;s how to interpret this Microsoft statement.Windows execs have been using the “in planning” line about Windows seven since last year. My bet: The Windows dev team will likely say that Windows 7 is in planning until the day it is released to manufacturing. Planning simply means not done; it doesn;t mean it does not exist in bootable form, in the new “translucent” Windows world order.Microsoft is continuing to tell folks it will take the Windows team three years to release Windows 7. Windows Vista was released to manufacturing in November 2007 2006. If Microsoft took the full three years, that would make Windows 7 a 2009 deliverable (and 2010 if you count from January 2007 as the Vista ship date) — a ship target Microsoft first stated last summer.But based on early Windows 7 screen shots,
Office Pro 2010, which continue to proliferate, it seems like the Windows team is leaning toward delivering a smaller, a lot more finite release, rather than another big-bang like Vista. Fewer features means less time needed for development and testing — not more.One of my sources close to Microsoft weighed in recently with this observation: “Windows seven is cleaning up some UI (user interface) and will feel far more like a SP (service pack) than (Vista) SP1. In fact,
Windows 7 Starter, it looks like the only changes will be around the Task Bar (;the tray;) and not much else. There is a big push to take a lot more (out of) Windows,
Microsoft Office 2007 Product Key,” not to cram much more features into it.I;m still betting we could see Windows 7 ship in 2009. Moral of the story: Every Microsoft statement about future Windows releases may possibly not be what it initially seems.Update: On January 29, The Windows client team decided to provide a bit additional clarity regarding how to calculate its ship date commitment. A company spokeswoman provided this updated sound bite:“We are currently in the planning stages for Windows seven and development is scoped to three years from Windows Vista Consumer GA (general availability). The specific release date will be determined once the company meets its quality bar for release. “Consumer GA was January 30, 2007. So Microsoft;s official public statement remains that Windows seven wil be released in 2010, three years after the consumer launch of Vista.