|
Microsoft has launched a blog dedicated to its forthcoming
operating system, called "Windows 7" at this point, to be hosted by two senior
vice presidents who are leading the development effort.
For now, the site just contains an introductory statement from Jon DeVaan and
Steven Sinofsky, who will be heading up the development. They will reveal the
first engineering details about Windows 7 on Oct. 27 at the Professional
Developers' Conference in Los Angeles. Additional talks will take place at the
Windows Hardware Engineering Conference (WinHEC) scheduled for Nov. 5–7, also in
Los Angeles.
"With this blog we're opening up a two-way discussion about how we are making
Windows 7. ... We strongly believe that success for Windows 7 includes an open,
honest and two-way, discussion about how we balance all of these interests and
deliver software on the scale of Windows. We promise and will deliver such a
dialogue with this blog," the two wrote.
A Microsoft (NASDAQ: MSFT) spokesperson said the goal of the blog is to foster
two-way communication between the engineering team and developers for Windows 7,
as well as provide additional information on how the OS is being built.
"One of our chief goals with this release is to be deliberative, thoughtful and
considerate with what we disclose,” the spokesperson said. “When we disclose
information, we want to make sure it is accurate and truthful. Steven and Jon
would like to start the conversation about Windows 7, and they will continue to
provide information at various milestones in the development process”
But don't view this blog as Microsoft acknowledging the failure of Vista and
moving on. "This reflects the fact they are hoping to get Window 7 out by 2010,
and there will be some things in it of interest to software developers. To get
those developers, they need to start corralling them now. This is sort of a
starting gun for that push," said Rob Helm of analyst firm Directions on
Microsoft.
"There were Vista blogs before Vista shipped, there's an IE8 blog, and blogs are
a standard way of communicating with developers and others," said Michael
Silver, an analyst with Gartner (NYSE: IT). "If Microsoft really wants to open a
dialogue in time to get any real feedback, they cannot wait much longer in the
dev cycle. Plus, they need to have enough information out so that developers can
support Windows 7 as soon as possible once it's released."
Sinofsky was brought over from the Office division in March 2006 to help get the
Windows strategy on track. Thanks to a recent reorganization, he now reports to
CEO Steve Ballmer, not CTO Ray Ozzie. DeVann has been involved in a number of
projects at Microsoft, most notably Internet Protocol television, or IPTV
(define).
Microsoft seems determined to get more feedback from the community this time
around than it did with Vista, one of the many knocks on the beleaguered
operating system. Sinofsky and DeVaan said their goal was to make sure "not to
set expectations around the release that end up disappointing you--features that
don't make it, claims that don't stick or support we don't provide."
Windows 7 was first discussed at the beginning of this year, when Microsoft
executives promised a long gap between OS releases like the one between Windows
XP (2001) and Vista (2007), would not occur. Given the relative dissatisfaction
with Vista, considerable talk abounds about how IT shops are just holding on and
waiting for the new OS rather than an upgrade to Vista.
What is known so far about Windows 7 is that it will be based on Windows Server
2008 kernel, which is an updated version of the Windows Vista kernel. The
current driver model will be retained. In short, the internals won't change
much.
Helm is hoping Sinofsky repeats for Windows what he did with Office 2007, which
had a much more successful launch and has been well received. "It would be a
good thing for him to do for Windows 7 what he did with Office. They will
benefit from a fairly conservative release delivered on time. Windows 7 could
come out onto the market with less of the early pain Vista had to face," he
said.
|