Sales: 0800 321 3812
Support: 0845 680 3812

Posts Tagged ‘Operating System’

Windows 7 RTM gets green light

by: Chris Hudson
23 July, 2009

win7boxshotMicrosoft has announced that its next generation OS Windows 7 is ready for delivery to PC manufacturers.

“Today after all the validation checks were met, we signed off and declared build 7600 as RTM,” said Brandon LeBlanc of the Windows Team on Microsoft’s official website yesterday.

Windows 7 release dates:

The Windows 7 RTM (meaning release-to-manufacturers) announcement is significant as it signals to PC makers that the new OS is ready to be built into their computers so it can be available when Microsoft’s latest operating system is released to high street consumers on October 22nd, 2009.

LeBlanc gave specific details of the Windows 7 rollout; “ISV (independent software vendor) and IHV (independent hardware vendor) Partners will be able to download Windows 7 RTM from Microsoft Connect or MSDN on August 6th. Microsoft Partner Program Gold/Certified Members will be able to download Windows 7 RTM in English through the Microsoft Partner Network (MPN) Portal on August 16th. By October 1st, the remaining languages will become available to download. Microsoft Action Pack Subscribers will be about to download Windows 7 RTM in English starting August 23rd. By October 1st, the remaining languages will become available to download.”

Windows 7 pricing:

Microsoft has already announced massive discounts on Windows 7 preorders received before August 9th.

Microsoft has also offered free upgrades to Window 7 to people who buy Vista-equipped PCs before the release date of Windows 7.

Owing to the ongoing EU anti-trust inquiry against Microsoft, Windows 7 will be going on sale in Europe without including Microsoft’s Internet Explorer 8. This will catch out some people who try to upgrade a PC to Windows 7 without first having a USB stick or CD available that contains a web browser necessary for the installation! The version to be released in Europe is designated “Windows 7 E”

Will the Google Chrome Operating System be allowed in the UK?

by: Chris Hudson
8 July, 2009

Google have announced that they will release a Google Chrome operating system in 2010.

Google Chrome OS will be an open source, lightweight OS, initially aimed at netbooks, that will begin shipping in 2010.

Google claim they have gone back to basics with the OS to provide the user with a fast, secure environment that will get them onto the web as quickly as possible.

Microsoft will wince when they read Google’s claim that they have completely redesigned the security architecture of the OS so that users won’t have to endure the onslaught of viruses, malware and endless security updates.

However, Apple won’t rest easy when they see that Google are aiming for a lightweight OS providing ease of use and accessibility, with a fast start-up that gets you onto the web in seconds. Those users that love Apple’s OS for it’s relative ease-of-use may be tempted by the Chrome OS, especially if they just want to surf the web and so have no need for all the additions to the Mac OS X that have been bolted onto the basic OS over the last five years.

Inherent in the Google Chrome OS experience is fast and safe web browsing. Clearly that rules out any Microsoft version of Internet Explorer and obviously Google aims to make the Google Chrome browser the heart of their new OS experience. To use any other browser would undermine the new security architecture.

But that begs a question for users here in the UK.

Will the EU allow it?

The EU have constantly attacked Microsoft over it’s bundling of IE with Windows. The EU lawmakers weren’t even satisfied when Microsoft announced that it would not be doing so with Windows 7. However, there are no expensive, pointless lengths to which the highly-paid EU civil servants won’t go in order to promote notional “competition” in the EU. Google may be in for a legal fight to retain the right to supply the whole Chrome package without offering a competitor’s product too.

What if there isn’t a competing product at the time? The EU will probably insist that Google provide developers with enough information so that they can make one! This is the EU we are talking about after all.

What If Microsoft produced a Chrome version of IE? Given the grip that the flawed Internet Explorer has on the psyche on many Windows users you can’t help but think that given the choice a huge number of new Chrome OS users would install and use IE and thereby eliminating the whole security point of the Chrome OS. Why would Microsoft be able to produce a secure browser for Chrome when it has failed to do so in eleven years for Windows?

But being totally illogical and senseless is not something that ever stopped the EU Commission’s work so Google had better be ready for a disappointment.