
While Microsoft has
only just begun fighting the perception problems surrounding Windows Vista, the company is already thinking and planning way beyond its latest operating system. We all know that
Windows 7 will build
on top of the foundations laid by Vista, and that it will include a
fancy multitouch framework (and a
mysterious new taskbar). According to Microsoft, Windows 7 is
still on track for January 2010, and
in a memo to his employees, CEO Steve Ballmer outlined some interesting new approaches the company might try with Windows 7 - including being just a little more like Apple.
Member since:
2005-07-06
Which is kind of ironic, since MS is trying to force closed standards like DirectX and Office down our throat using their defacto monopoly on OS'es and office productivity. But this time MS is on the other side of the fence a they do not seem to like it. Surprise!
With open standards and protocols the IT/IS sector as a whole would thrive well, because a hard to overcome barrier will be taken away, while innovation will still be possible by both F/OSS and proprietary implementations of that open standard.
Doubtful to say the least. There are many open standards already in the IT world; ACPI for example, which has been a constant bane for Linux to support - why? because we have vendors out there who do buggy ACPI implementations.
In the case of Apple, they design the hardware, they design the software, the two sides work together and can test and modify the operating system to address any possible issues that might arise during testing. In the case of Windows, if there is an issue - the OEM is stuck in a situation where by he can't do anything to the operating system.
Microsoft need to tighten the requirements for the 'Windows Vista Logo' - it won't stop vendors from producing crap hardware and support, but if they push the 'Windows Vista Logo' programme, customers will refuse to do business with those vendors who don't have the logo.