Windows 7 details to come in October
“We strongly believe that success for Windows 7 includes an open and honest, and two-way, discussion about how we balance all of these interests and deliver software on the scale of Windows,” he wrote. “We promise and will deliver such a dialogue with this blog.”
Microsoft had already said that Windows 7 would be on the PDC docket in some manner.
One thing that should be pointed out, Microsoft has said that it is engaging much earlier and deeper with computer makers as part of the Windows 7 design process. From what I’ve heard from PC manufacturers, this has been true so far. “It’s like night and day,” one PC company executive told me.
On the plus side, Windows engineering boss Steven Sinofsky did at least put a date to when he would share some more details.
Microsoft is launching its
Windows 7 blog, but it still doesn’t have much to say.
In an interview with CNET News in May, Sinofsky did disclose a few details–namely that it would use the same driver model and basic kernel approach as Windows Vista and that the company wanted the whole thing on the market by January 2010, three years after the mainstream release of Windows Vista. Microsoft also showed in May a glimpse at a new multi-touch interface that will be part of Windows 7.
“The Professional Developers Conference (PDC) on October 27 and the Windows Hardware Engineering Conference (WinHEC) the following week both represent the first venues where we will provide in-depth technical information about Windows 7,” Sinofsky and Windows Core operating system head Jon Devaan wrote in a posting on Thursday. “This blog will provide context over the next 2+ months with regular posts about the behind the scenes development of the release and continue through the release of the product.”
Sinofsky acknowledged that Microsoft continues to say less than many people would like, but repeated his standard line that the company doesn’t want to share details until they have reached a certain level of concreteness.
Sinofsky did suggest that the company wants to be more open at some point as it tries to create a product that serves the needs of a customer base as broad as Windows does.