
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.
Member since:
2006-04-03
I also would not even entertain XP until SP2, and still have a number of client machines on 2K because for me it has been the Microsoft OS that has provided the least issues. The only reason we are upgrading some of those machines (to XP) now is we have users who can't seem to grasp the very slight user differences between IE and Firefox (sigh), and there is some web content that they use that just will not work properly on IE6.
WRT the networking thing, Microsoft have, over the past few years, tried to make it simpler for the home user to network their computers. While this has worked to some degree the downside is they have made it infinitely more frustrating for those who want or need to set things up manually. While the Finder may be a bitch about networking every issue it has can be overcome quite easily, and more importantly in the same or similar manual manner as previous releases. Windows on the other hand...