Linked by Thom Holwerda on Mon 23rd Jul 2007 12:54 UTC
Windows Six months ago, after a long gestation period, Microsoft finally released Windows Vista. Vista is a huge release; not only because of the long list of new features, but also because of its sheer size, and number of bugs and other oddities and downsides. The development process that lead to Vista has left many with a very bitter aftertaste; features were cut, codebases were scrapped, release dates postponed. A few days ago, Microsoft released some sparse details on Vista's successor, internally dubbed 'Windows 7', and in order to prevent another Vista-like development cycle, here is what I would advise Microsoft to do. Update: APCMag reports that Julie Larson-Green, who was the driving force behind Office 2007's new Ribbon user interface, has been transferred to the Windows 7 GUI team.
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RE: Actually.... yes
by Moochman on Tue 24th Jul 2007 00:21 UTC in reply to "Actually.... yes"
Moochman
Member since:
2005-07-06

Yes, drivers are all written for it, so it would be nice, but I think using the Solaris kernel would be a nice change for processor and datacenter scalability

The day Microsoft uses an open-source, Sun-developed kernel for their OS is the day hell freezes over.

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RE[2]: Actually.... yes
by Adam S on Tue 24th Jul 2007 00:32 in reply to "RE: Actually.... yes"
Adam S Member since:
2005-04-01

The day Microsoft uses an open-source, Sun-developed kernel for their OS is the day hell freezes over.


Yeah, it was just fantasy.

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