Microsoft lays out Windows timing
Microsoft is to ditch key parts from
the next version of its Windows software to keep its schedule on
track.
The software giant said it still aims to release Longhorn, as the new version of
Windows is codenamed, in late 2006. But
to do so it will drop a redesign of the operating system's structure dubbed
WinFS, which could have made it much easier for users to find
information. Longhorn has faced repeated
delays, and Microsoft has been under pressure to firm up the release
date.
Profits
If Longhorn now sticks to the schedule,
five years will have passed since the current version - Windows XP - went on
sale. Despite its forays into multiple
technology markets and its huge war-chest of cash, the company relies on massive
margins on sales of Windows and its Office suite of programmes for most of its
profits.

We've had to make some trade-offs to deliver
the features in a reasonable timeframe
Jim Allchin, Microsoft
Further delays to Longhorn could
antagonise vendors keen to use it as an opportunity to sell new
PCs. "We've had to make some trade-offs
to deliver the features customers... are asking for in a reasonable timeframe,"
said Jim Allchin, group vice-president of Microsoft's platforms
group. And with security an ever-present
concern, Microsoft's monopoly position could be further whittled away by
competitors such as Linux and Apple.
Test bed
The news that WinFS would only be in
beta - in other words, still being tested - by the time Longhorn makes it to
market was "not a good surprise", said long-time computer market analyst Rob
Enderle. The storage available within
computers and on networks has grown massively in recent years, leaving the
search tools available as standard in current versions of Windows struggling to
keep up. Apple Computer announced in
July that the next version of its own computer operating system - codenamed
"Tiger" and scheduled for release in the first half of 2005 - would have
advanced search technologies. There are
also fears that a new system called "Avalon" which would allow Windows to handle
three-dimensional graphics better could be
axed. Microsoft is now promising to make
sure Avalon - and a technology called Indigo intended to make it easier for PCs
to use online services and talk to small devices - will be compatible with both
Longhorn and XP. But that could mean
severe cutbacks in its functionality.
Posted: Mon - August 30, 2004 at 09:44 PM