News
        
        Microsoft Exec: Windows 8 'Release Preview' Coming in June
        
        
        
			- By Kurt Mackie
 - April 25, 2012
 
		
        
		Another test version of Windows 8 called  a "release preview" will be released in the  first week of June, a Microsoft exec said Tuesday.
Steven  Sinofsky, president of Microsoft's Windows and Windows Live Division, made the announcement at the Windows 8 Dev Days conference in Japan. 
Microsoft is marking Windows 8's release milestones using new terminology, with "release preview" possibly taking the place of Microsoft's old "release candidate" term. (A product in the release candidate stage, in Microsoft's parlance, means the software bugs are fixed  but the basic features  aren't changed.) Currently, Windows 8 is available for testing as a  "consumer preview," having been issued in that form in late February.  The OS was at the "developer preview" stage back in September when it  was announced at Microsoft's Build conference for developers. 
The traditional nomenclature for Microsoft's public software  releases has been "beta," "release candidate,"  "release to manufacturing" and "general availability." General  availability is the actual product launch. It's thought that Windows 8 will be  available as a product sometime in the fall of this year, although Microsoft  hasn't confirmed a date.
 
Windows Server 2012
Microsoft also announced this week that the "release  candidate" of Windows Server 2012, which is the actual product name for formerly  the code-named "Windows Server 8," will be publicly available in a close  timeframe with the Windows 8 release preview. Jeffrey Snover, distinguished engineer  and the lead architect for the Windows Server Division, made the announcement  in this  blog post. 
 
Snover's use of the familiar "release candidate"  term probably signifies that nothing has substantially changed in the number of  Microsoft's software releases before product release. Only the names seem to  have changed.
 
Client and server Windows releases now are timed somewhat  closely. Microsoft started up a policy of aligning its client and server code  bases back when it released Windows Vista and Windows Server 2008. Still, some  expert Microsoft observers thought that the dual-platform nature of Windows 8,  being built for both x86/x64 and ARM silicon, along with the many substantial  changes in Windows Server 2012, would cause the two products to arrive at  different times. However, Microsoft is now saying it will deliver both products  this year.
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Kurt Mackie is senior news producer for 1105 Media's Converge360 group.