Tim Anderson takes a sneak peek at Windows 7, which is due to launch in 12 months’ time, to discover whether it will be worth the wait
Even at this early stage, two Windows 7 predictions seem safe. First, it will be better liked than Windows Vista, which has become a PR disaster for Microsoft thanks to poor early experiences for many users.
Second, naysayers will say that Windows 7 is merely Vista reheated and they have a case. Even Microsoft says that the core architecture is unchanged, and the pre-beta code reviewed here is suspiciously stable.
The new features are generally low key, and the company is betting that users would rather have an operating system that’s familiar but smoother and less annoying rather than one that rewrites the Windows rules yet again.
When will we get Windows 7? Microsoft has not announced an exact date, though the company says it will be around three years after Vista, which launched in January 2007.
That would mean early 2010, but given the pressure on Microsoft to move on from Vista, and the high quality of the current builds, most observers think it will be sooner.
The first feature-complete public beta launched recently and, all going well we could see PCs pre-loaded with Windows 7 on the shelves in autumn 2009.
That would mean getting the final code to PC vendors in the summer, which is an accelerated schedule but looks plausible based on what we have seen.
Damage limitation
Windows 7 was unveiled at Microsoft’s Professional Developers Conference (PDC)
in Los Angeles late in 2008.
Reviewers got loan machines with a preview build pre-installed. Some of the new features were not enabled in this build, including the new taskbar, so we also tried one of Microsoft’s internal builds, which is closer to what will eventually be shipped.
Windows 7 includes Internet Explorer 8, but this is not covered in detail below since it is a separate product that will also be available for Windows XP and Vista.
Two factors strongly influence Windows 7. One is the poor reception given to Windows Vista, launched under the slogan ‘The Wow starts now’, but soon criticised for poor performance, low-quality drivers for some devices and an irritating user interface.
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