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April 28, 2009 12:00 AM

Finally, Microsoft Admits to 2009 Delivery for Windows 7

Windows IT Pro
InstantDoc ID #102003
Rating: (5)

It's been possibly the worst-kept secret in the history of Microsoft. But now, finally, the software giant is admitting what we've known all along: It will deliver Windows 7 in 2009, not 2010 (as it has long claimed), and it will do so in time for the 2009 holiday season.

"A holiday release is accomplishable," Microsoft Senior Vice President Bill Veghte said Monday. It is the first public statement from a Microsoft executive that contradicts long-standing company policy to promise only that it would deliver Windows 7 roughly three years after its predecessor, Windows Vista. That OS shipped to the public in January 2007, so Vegas odds-makers have been targeting January 2010 as the expected release date.

Before all this happens, of course, Microsoft must deliver its final pre-release milestone—the Windows 7 release candidate (RC)—to testers, developers, and others interested in providing last-minute feedback. According to Microsoft, the RC build, which was completed last week, is feature-complete and representative of the final product.

Again, my expectation is that Microsoft will finalize Windows in late July or August and begin selling it to customers in September.

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Comments
  • Osvaldo
    3 years ago
    Apr 30, 2009

    @ebraiter: The problem is simple, what if I buy a new system _before_ July? Right now I'm using a Dell Vostro laptop that's already a bit long in the tooth, but I will wait until Win7 is out, or until I can buy a new laptop with a Vista license that includes free upgrade right to Win7. That's it. I'm not spending any money in new machines or software licences - not good for either Dell or Microsoft in the current economic downturn, I suppose.

  • Eric
    3 years ago
    Apr 30, 2009

    Has there been any word on Windows 7 pricing yet? Surely they will not expect Vista users to pay Vista Upgrade prices again. I have been user RC Ultimate for a couple of days and it's good, but it's nowhere near another $260.00 good.

    If Windows Vista was the Longhorn reset, Windows 7 feels like the Vista reset. I guess I just don't see where the new value added functionality is.

    How about this, they offer a Vista to Windows 7 upgrade for 29.99? Plus each copy comes with a apology letter signed by Bill Gates for two years of needless Vista suffering.

  • Andrew
    3 years ago
    Apr 29, 2009

    How about an 'upgrade' to downgrade to XP?

  • Ed
    3 years ago
    Apr 28, 2009

    @opinali: If the free upgrade begins in July and you buy a system in September with Vista on it, what's the fuss? It gets the free upgrade - OEM or Retail. Not just retail purchases.

  • Osvaldo
    3 years ago
    Apr 28, 2009

    Good news, except that if Win7 ships as early as Aug or even Sept, the July 1 cut date for free upgrades is too late. It would be ridiculous to buy a new PC with OEM Vista say in June or even May, and having to shell out cash for a full Win7 license in Aug/Sept. I'd expect a policy of 100% free upgrades for _at least_ 6 months before its launch. Not to mention that win7's status of "Vista R2" would justify a symbolic upgrade price (or even free) for all suckers like me who bought Vista and had to suffer through its issues for two years.

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