Subscribe to Windows IT Pro
July 09, 2009 12:00 AM

Sinofsky Promoted to Windows Chief

Windows IT Pro
InstantDoc ID #102442
Rating: (24)

A week before Microsoft is expected to finalize Windows 7, the company promoted Steven Sinofsky, the man most directly responsible for Windows 7 development, to president of the Windows division. Previously, Sinofsky shared a title—senior vice president of Windows—with Bill Veghte, whose fate is unclear. Microsoft says only that Veghte will move into "a new leadership role" later this year.

"Steven Sinofsky has demonstrated the ability to lead large teams that deliver great products," says Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer. "The work he and the team have done in getting ready to ship Windows 7 really defines how to develop and ship world-class software. He is a perfect fit to lead the Windows group."

Microsoft's pleasure with Sinofsky's Windows 7 achievement is clear, but it's also an implicit approval of Sinofsky's more secretive, Apple-like, management style. Unlike with previous Windows versions, Sinofsky kept Windows 7 information away from the public until the last minute and released very few product milestones to testers, and then only very late in the product's development. The company believes that this strategy prevented it from over-promising and under-delivering, as many feel it did with Windows Vista, but it also means that testers have had far less influence than ever on the product's design.

That said, the quality and timeliness of Windows 7 is not debatable. The product has garnered overwhelmingly positive reviews, even in pre-release form, and many feel that Windows 7 could easily have shipped to the public months before its projected release date. Microsoft previously announced that it would deliver Windows 7 generally in late October after finalizing the product by the second half of July.

Previous to his work on Windows 7, Sinofsky led the Office team through several releases. He was directly responsible for the innovative "ribbon" user interface that re-energized Office with the Office 2007 release. As president of the Windows Division, Sinofsky is now responsible for several key Microsoft products, including Windows, Windows Live, and Internet Explorer

Related Content:

ARTICLE TOOLS

Comments
  • Frederick
    3 years ago
    Jul 13, 2009

    Ahh! Thanks for the iSpell iHelp!

    2 years does it matter? Cut-n-Paste was available in the first version of MS Word (for the Mac btw) in 1990...

  • Andrew
    3 years ago
    Jul 13, 2009

    iPhone was launched 2 years ago.....

    Your spell checker isn't working either - its 'rudimentary'.

    Oh, and iPhone.....

  • Frederick
    3 years ago
    Jul 13, 2009

    Well, things can't be perfect out the gate correct? This is first gen for BES, heck, as I love to point out with the perfect IPhone, it took Apple three years to get rudementary cut-n-paste into OS X (as you pointed out)

  • Andrew
    3 years ago
    Jul 13, 2009

    From engadget re. Blackberry Storm:

    Going into this review, we really wanted to love this phone. On paper it sounds like the perfect antidote to our gripes about the iPhone, and in some ways it lives up to those promises -- but more often than not while using the Storm, we felt let down or frustrated. Ultimately, this could be a great platform with a little more time in the oven, but right now, it feels undercooked -- and that's not enough for us.

    Best huh?

  • Frederick
    3 years ago
    Jul 13, 2009

    There you go once again...

    Not to be funny, but accurate, as I described. You chose BMW to imply coolness, shekness, and desirability. I get the same with charmin....

    Once again, it would not be Kmart it would have to be Wal-Mart, a very large, very successful, very influential, might I say dominating company in their chosen marketplace. They sell everything the masses want, have very market share, and everyone one knows Wal-Mart.

    Wow didn’t know that Apple get the full BSD kernel loaded onto a phone! I guess that someone forgot to tell them to port the Cut-n-Paste feature over to the phone version! Oh you mean the phone version of the OS X shell?

    Not sure on WINCe 7.0 much more of a RIM kinda of guy, once again a best in market kinda guy.

    Well I read this to mean 4 in 10 companies will be upgrading to Windows 7 next year, and the other 6 in 10 to follow in the next couple of years. Surveys taken during a recession always skew lower than when the economy is doing well. Is there a survey of businesses planning to upgrade to Snow Leopard next year? Well the question really is, is there even a need to survey businesses planning to upgrade to Snow Leopard next year?

You must log on before posting a comment.

Are you a new visitor? Register Here

advertisement

advertisement

Windows is a trademark of the Microsoft group of companies. Windows IT Pro is used by Penton Media Inc. under license from owner.