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November 08, 2006

It's Gold: Windows Vista Hits RTM


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The long wait is finally over. On Wednesday, November 8, 2006, at 11:00 a.m. PST, Microsoft announced that it had released Windows Vista to manufacturing, ending five years of waiting and one of the longest development periods in Windows history. For Microsoft, its partners, and its customers, the lengthy road to Vista concludes with Microsoft shipping the so-called "golden master" version of the product to manufacturing and its closed partners.

"We've really refreshed the user experience for the first time in a while with Windows Vista," Microsoft Lead Product Manager Greg Sullivan told me during a recent briefing. "The performance, fit, and finish are going to surprise people. We've also worked a lot on the overall aesthetics, from the packaging, to the new icons, to the new system sounds."

Microsoft said it won't repeat Vista's lengthy development time. "Integration and innovation are hard to deliver at the same time," Sullivan said. "We will be more regular [with future Windows version releases] going forward."

Vista will launch in two separate events--one for businesses and one for consumers--in November 2006 and January 2007, respectively. In this time period, Microsoft will roll out Vista alongside a set of other products, including the Microsoft Office 2007 System, Microsoft .NET Framework 3.0, and Exchange Server 2007. In 2007, Microsoft will also ship a new version of Visual Studio and the long-awaited Longhorn Server product line. "It's the largest launch wave that we've had in the history of the company," said Microsoft Vice President Ron Markezich.

I've been covering Vista extensively for more than five years, and the SuperSite for Windows has evolved into the premier Web site for Vista-related content. Not surprisingly, I have a wealth of Vista release to manufacturing (RTM) content now available, with more coming in the near future, including the following:

* Vista RTM review--The first two parts of my comprehensive eight-part Vista review are now available, and I'll be adding new parts in the coming days.

* Vista RTM screenshot galleries--I've uploaded separate screenshot galleries for all the retail and OEM versions of Vista, including Vista Starter, Vista Home Basic, Vista Home Basic N, Vista Home Premium, Vista Business, Vista Business N, and Vista Ultimate.

* Vista FAQ--I've updated the first-ever Vista FAQ for the RTM version of the product.

* "The Road to Gold: The Long Road to Windows Vista"--An epic, seven-part series chronicling the history of the Vista development process, from mid-2001 to present day.

All this and more is now available on the SuperSite for Windows.
http://www.winsupersite.com

End of Article



Reader Comments
Wow.. congrats MS... finally the baby is born.. let's hope it is healthy :)

VinnyH November 08, 2006 (Article Rating: )


"On Wednesday, November 11, 2006, at 11:00 am PST"

Should be November 8 @ 11AM

yhamade November 08, 2006 (Article Rating: )


Finally!!

Will be d/ling as soon as it is available via MSDN AA.

NateB2 November 08, 2006 (Article Rating: )


While I'm not interested in Vista itself yet, as a developer, the WPF (WinFX) is very attracting and it run on Windows XP sp2. Office 2007 also rocks.

.Net 3.0 was also released yesterday.

(also, how are we suppose to read such complicated CAPTCHA image that include symbols that require the charmap program to be typed properly?)

pavigeant November 08, 2006 (Article Rating: )


"(also, how are we suppose to read such complicated CAPTCHA image that include symbols that require the charmap program to be typed properly?)"

You must be new here. We have been having this issue for months and months. Just copy your comment and refresh until alphanumeric digits are displayed

NateB2 November 08, 2006 (Article Rating: )


Awesome news ! Can't wait to get my hands on a copy in January :-)

sticknick November 08, 2006 (Article Rating: )


Better late than never. Congrats on the RTM, Microsoft.

vandil2 November 08, 2006 (Article Rating: )


Does anyone know if Office 12 finally fixes the issue where Powerpoint won't use sound files with pathnames longer than 128 characters? My boss ripped a track in Windows Media Player, which copied the .WMA to My Music. Powerpoint 2003 wouldn't play it. Imagine how stunned I was to learn from the help files that Powerpoint won't play something with 128+ character pathnames.

That's some modern technology, folks (snicker). I'll definitely check the new Powerpoint and let you know if this ridiculous, ***-backwards bug still exists from the "#1 software developer in the world."

Preseton November 08, 2006 (Article Rating: )


Who the hell uses 128 character file names anyway? Man, you'll pick at anything.

I'd be more stunned that you found the answer in the help files.

sticknick November 08, 2006 (Article Rating: )


Good luck to Microsoft....and while I am using Linux on all machines except one with XP, I do hope this is a better product than what they have offered in the past. Normally I would jump on this but for the first time, I am going to watch patiently for a couple of years and see if it goes to another round of service packs and constant updates....if that is the case, this will be their first product I ignore.

treeorc November 08, 2006 (Article Rating: )


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