July 06, 2009

Reports: Windows 7 heads to RTM July 13

Paying subscribers of Microsoft's MSDN and TechNet services likely will get Windows 7 final code almost immediately

Microsoft will finish Windows 7 a week from today and declare the operating system ready for "release to manufacturing," several Web sites have reported.

According to GeekSmack.net, Microsoft will declare Windows 7 completed on July 13, the opening day of the company's annual Worldwide Partner Conference (WPC). "Microsoft is still in the process of testing and choosing from the RTM candidate builds," GeekSmack.net added.

[ Preparing for Windows 7? Get the overview you need in the Windows 7 PDF Report from InfoWorld's J. Peter Bruzzese. | Can your PCs run Windows 7? Find out with the compatibility checker in InfoWorld's free Windows Sentinel monitoring tool. |  And get the analysis and insights that only Randall C. Kennedy can provide on Windows tech in InfoWorld's Enterprise Desktop blog and Technology: Windows newsletter.  ]

Release to manufacturing, or RTM, is Microsoft's term for the stage where development has been completed and the product moves into duplication and distribution.

GeekSmack.net isn't the only site to peg July 13 as Windows 7's RTM date. TechARP.com, which has a solid track record in leaking Microsoft plans, said two weeks ago that the company would announce RTM on that date.

Although Microsoft has said it will start selling Windows 7 on Oct. 22, it hasn't nailed down the RTM, saying only that work would wrap up by the end of this month.

If Microsoft follows past practice, it will probably offer Windows 7's final code to paying subscribers of its MSDN and TechNet services on July 13 or shortly after. In 2006 Microsoft announced Vista's RTM on Nov. 8, and posted downloads to subscribers on Nov. 16. But it's unlikely Microsoft will withhold Windows 7 from MSDN and TechNet for long; when it tried to do that in early 2008 with Vista Service Pack 1 (SP1), subscribers revolted, calling the decision "boneheaded" and "the lamest since Microsoft Bob," the latter a reference to a ridiculed interface that debuted in 1995.

Several Microsoft executives will handle the WPC keynote address on the morning of July 13, including Bill Veghte, the senior vice president responsible for the Windows 7 client business. Veghte has been blogging frequently about Windows 7 on such topics as pricing, which he revealed late last month, as well as the free upgrade program that also kicked off June 26.

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LutherM 10-Jul-09 12:31pm
This seems to be a re-hash of the problems that occurred when users were migrating to Vista from XP. It is useless to state an operating system is working properly, when it has not been tested with at least most of the various drivers needed for printers, monitors, and other peripherals. Vista has never been completely sorted out and now we have another debacle from the "Church of Whats happening now." I intend to pass on it this time.I do not want or need the aggravation and distraction from getting work completed.

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