Linked by snydeq on Wed 11th Mar 2009 10:24 UTC
Windows For the past several months, Microsoft has engaged in an extended public mea culpa about Vista, holding a series of press interviews to explain how the company's Vista mistakes changed the development process of Windows 7, InfoWorld reports. Chief among these changes was to 'define a feature set early on' and only share that feature set with partners and customers when the company is confident they will be incorporated into the final OS. And to solve PC-compatibility issues, Microsoft has said all versions of Windows 7 will run even on low-cost netbooks. Moreover, Microsoft reiterated that the beta of Windows 7 that is now available is already feature-complete, although its final release to business customers isn't expected until November.
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Jeez
by google_ninja on Wed 11th Mar 2009 12:05 UTC
google_ninja
Member since:
2006-02-05

The same rang true for Vista, and even for its predecessor Windows XP, a solid OS still in wide use that nonetheless also required a major service-pack release to deal with critical security issues that plagued enterprise users.


Read that far. Windows XP SP1 was about SATA and USB2, but it would still get pwnd within minutes of being connected to the internet, although by then most of the stability and performance issues had been addressed. SP2 was about security and came 2 years later.

Guess I can't complain that much, it is page 2. I just find it irritating when tech journalists dont even have the enthusiast level of knowledge about what they are writing.

Edited 2009-03-11 12:07 UTC

Reply Score: 3