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        Windows 7 Waits on Partner Readiness, Sinofsky Says
        
        
        
			- By Kurt Mackie
 - January 30, 2009
 
		
        Users testing Microsoft's Windows 7 Beta have been asking  Microsoft when it will release the final product, but Microsoft isn't saying  right now, according to a Windows 7 team 
blog posted on Friday.  
The reluctance to announce the date stems from Microsoft's  need to coordinate with its partner ecosystem, wrote  Steven Sinofsky in the blog. Sinofsky is Microsoft's senior vice president of the Windows  and Windows Live engineering group. 
Partners will need time to get  their hardware drivers and applications up to speed, the blog explains. PC  builders also need time to validate the Windows 7 team's work. Microsoft's  partners have been receiving interim builds of Windows 7 since its pre-beta  release in November. 
Driver compatibility is a touchy subject for Microsoft. The  issue dogged Windows Vista purchasing early on, giving pause to new PC buyers  and IT professionals alike. Microsoft claims to have since remedied the  situation.
For instance, back in November of last year, Jon DeVaan,  Microsoft's senior vice president of the core operating system division, told  WinHEC attendees that "today over 95 percent of PCs have all the drivers that  they need" to run Windows Vista. 
Some testers of Windows 7 Beta have experienced problems running  older hardware and software, but the reception has been generally positive,  judging from Microsoft forum comments. Microsoft is making the claim that if  software and devices worked with Vista, then they  will work with Windows 7, because the two operating systems share a common code  base. 
The next stage will be a release candidate version of  Windows 7, followed by release to manufacturing and general availability.  Microsoft has typically publicized early 2010 as the Windows 7 general  availability date. The company defines general availability as the time when  new PCs can be bought with the operating system installed.
In the meantime, Microsoft has been tallying user feedback  from the Windows 7 Beta release. The beta of Windows 7 is feature complete and  API complete, Microsoft claims, so the team currently just concentrates on  fixing bugs.
"The path to Release Candidate is all about getting the  product to a known and shippable state both from an internal and external (Beta  usage and partner ecosystem readiness) standpoint. We will then provide the  Release Candidate as a refresh for the Beta," Sinofsky explained in the  blog. 
His comment may indicate that the currently released beta of  Windows 7 is the final one.
The beta version of Windows 7 is set to expire on Aug. 1,  and Microsoft is feeling the pressure to announce its plans for the release  candidate and RTM versions. Sinofsky hinted in the blog post that "the  answer is forthcoming." He also suggested there will be a sufficient lead  time for release candidate users to upgrade to the final product.
"It is worth noting that the Release Candidate will  continue to function long enough so no one should worry and everyone should  feel free to keep running the Release Candidate," Sinofsky wrote.
Although Microsoft isn't providing the details, ZDNet  blogger Ed Bott deduced that  Windows 7 Beta users will be able to upgrade to the release candidate version  in a period sometime between July and August of this year.
For those who didn't get the Windows 7 beta earlier, Microsoft  extended public availability to Feb. 9.   
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Kurt Mackie is senior news producer for 1105 Media's Converge360 group.