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Windows 7 to be
Available Oct. 22, 2009
June 3, 2009
Today during a keynote address at Computex 2009 in Taipei, Microsoft’s
OEM Division Corporate Vice President Steve Guggenheimer revealed that
the company is confident with the progress made with Windows 7 and
Windows Server 2008 R2, and that as a result, Microsoft will deliver
Release to Manufacturing (RTM) code to partners in the second half of
July. Windows 7 will become generally available on Oct. 22, 2009, and
Windows Server 2008 R2 will be broadly available at the same time.
Steve Guggenheimer,
Microsoft’s Original Equipment Manufacturer (OEM) Division Corporate
Vice President.
“As we’ve said many times, quality is our primary goal,” Guggenheimer
said. “We announce each milestone once we’re confident of where we are
in the development cycle and that it is ready to be shared with
customers and partners. We’ve received great feedback from our partners
who are looking forward to offering Windows 7 to their customers in time
for the holidays.”
In addition to this, Guggenheimer announced that Microsoft will make
available an upgrade option, so partners can offer customers the ability
to purchase a Windows Vista-based PC and install Windows 7 when it’s
ready.
“Microsoft has been working closely with partners to help our mutual
customers be able to enjoy the many benefits of Windows 7,” he said.
“With that in mind, we’re excited to say that there will be a Windows
upgrade program available. Consumers can buy that new PC, whether for a
student heading off to college or just because they need a new one, and
know they’ll get Windows 7 as part of the deal.”
The actual start date for the program will be announced when it is ready
for consumers, and partners are ready to provide details to customers.
Today’s keynote address is Guggenheimer’s second at Computex. The last
time he spoke at the show, he had just taken over the helm of OEM, the
division that works with hardware manufacturers worldwide to integrate
Microsoft technologies and bring PCs, laptops, mobile handsets and other
devices to life.
Although the economic realities of the past year have created new
challenges for customers, partners and the IT industry, Guggenheimer
says the power of innovation, through both software and broad
collaboration with partners, will continue to benefit consumers, the
industry and the economy at large.
“What we’re doing with Windows will continue to improve people’s lives
so that that technology enables them to communicate better, make tasks
simpler and new things possible,” he says. “Our partners in the hardware
space, our competitors in software — the entire industry is doing
incredible things.”
Casting a Wider Net
To illustrate the point, Guggenheimer points to the evolution of small
notebook PCs (often referred to as netbook PCs), the ensuing emergence
of a new class of “consumer Internet devices,” and Microsoft’s
collaboration with “smart” appliance maker Fugoo LLC, which was first
announced at CES in January.
The broad adoption, Guggenheimer says, shows that small notebooks are
answering a market need, especially given the economic situation. It
also reflects that they have evolved a great deal in a short time to
become powerful personal computers as opposed to the basic Web-surfing
tools they were initially.
“A year ago when these smaller PCs first came onto the scene, many in
the space were saying consumers wouldn’t want or need these devices to
be full-featured,” he says. “In fact, the exact opposite turned out to
be true. Consumers really do want small notebook PCs to work like their
laptops and desktops. Windows provides a familiar and easy-to-use
experience that consumers want and demand from these devices.”
Asked why consumers are choosing smaller PCs with Windows, Guggenheimer
says, “Because Windows makes life simple. It’s easier to use, just works
out of the box with people’s stuff, and ultimately offers more choice.
Over the last 34 years, we’ve learned a lot about what people want from
their PCs, and we’ve worked with OEMs to provide an experience that
meets those needs.”
Guggenheimer says the economy may also be facilitating growth in the
small notebook PC space. Buyers are becoming increasingly cost-conscious
and mobile, and laptop sales are soon expected to outstrip desktop PC
sales in developed economies.
“Fortunately, the breadth of the Windows platform gives device
manufacturers a host of options when it comes to designing new devices
to suit new forms of consumer demand,” he says.
Already, several OEMs have announced plans to issue new small notebook
PCs designed for the Windows 7 operating system.
“They are finding that even on the scaled-down hardware of the small
notebook PC platform, Windows is running smoothly and delivering the
experience consumers are asking for because it just makes things simpler
and tasks easier,” says Guggenheimer.
Devices Building New Market Segments
An example of new devices is in the broadening class of consumer
Internet devices, which fall somewhere between smartphones and the
full-featured small notebook PCs running Windows today.
“This next generation of smart, connected, service-oriented devices will
give people mobile access to a rich set of media and information,” he
says. “Using Microsoft technologies like Windows Embedded CE, Visual
Studio, Silverlight and Expression Blend, we can enable devices such as
personal navigation devices, portable media players, set-top boxes and
networked TVs to provide a rich browsing experience and a dynamic,
immersive user interface.”
Guggenheimer says the first such devices will connect to what Microsoft
calls consumers’ “digital lifestyles,” such as files, pictures, music
and video, that are currently stored primarily on Windows-based PCs.
“Soon these devices will become even more connected, working not only
with PCs but also with cloud services from third parties and Microsoft,
such as Windows Live Services,” he says.
At Computex this week, Kevin Dallas, general manager of the Windows
Embedded Business, will showcase the potential of consumer Internet
devices with a demonstration based on NVIDIA Tegra computer-on-a-chip
technology, which works with the Windows Embedded CE platform for
specialized, small-footprint devices.
Another bid to create a useful class of consumer devices is Fugoo. The
Fugoo platform uses a version of Windows in conjunction with widely
available Web “widgets,” which publish everything from the time and
weather to currency exchange rates and horoscopes.
Fugoo’s prototype devices integrate that software functionality into
home appliances to create dynamic displays in clocks, picture frames and
even coffee makers.
At Computex, Fugoo is announcing that its first commercially available
product, a digital picture frame launched in partnership with Pandigital
in the U.S., will be available on the market this summer.
The frame is Web-enabled and can download photos from social networks or
online photo services. It also allows users to download photos directly
from a PC or digital camera.
Broad Partner Opportunity on Windows Platform
Whatever PC device consumers and businesses choose to use, ultimately,
Guggenheimer says, Windows will support the entire spectrum of devices
easily.
“With the release of Windows Server 2008 R2, companies of all sizes will
get big improvements in virtualization, Web and management,” he says.
“These areas, along with several features that improve scalability and
reliability, help deliver a strong value proposition on the server side
to complement Windows 7.”
To address OEMs’ request for a server product suited for smaller
businesses, Guggenheimer points to the recent release of Windows Server
2008 Foundation. This will be offered pre-installed on hardware products
from Acer Inc., Dell, Fujitsu Technology Solutions, HP, Lenovo, IBM
Corp. and NEC Corp. later this year, and will be available initially in
40 countries and several languages.
“We
expect this new server platform to be popular in markets across the
globe, with its modest cost making it possible for small companies to
grow, innovate and stay competitive, which in turn can ignite growth for
their local economies,” he says.
OEMs will get another big boost with the Windows 7 Device Stage feature,
which is expected to prove especially useful as more and more consumers
hope to connect and use multifunction devices such as printers, cameras
and cell phones with their PCs.
“Microsoft has been working to enable Windows to work well with all
these devices for some time, and we think partners are ready and excited
to deliver,” Guggenheimer says. “Ultimately our greatest strength here,
both for us and our partners, is the depth and breadth of the Windows
ecosystem — a universe that took more than three decades to build.” |