At the same time, Microsoft's Internet Explorer 10, Windows Server
2012 and Visual Studio 2012 also have reached the RTM milestone, given
all of these products have been developed in lockstep with Windows 8. (I
am not 100 percent sure if Windows RT also RTM'd simultaneously and do
not believe Microsoft officials ever promised this would be the case.)
Microsoft officials said earlier this month to expect Windows 8 to RTM in the first week of August.
(I modified this wording in my coverage to "by the first week of
August," knowing the propensity of Windows execs to pad their dates a
bit in order to never be late.) As those same execs also noted
previously, Windows 8 will be generally available via retail and preloaded on new PCs and tablets on October 26.
However, some will be able to get their hands on the Windows 8 RTM bits a lot sooner. MSDN and TechNet subscribers get the bits on August 15.
Volume licenses with Software Assurance will get it on August 16;
volume licensees without SA will get the bits September 1, according to a
Windows Team blog post today.
Last week, Microsoft went public with details about its next big Windows developer conference. Build 2012 will be held October 30 to November 2 in Redmond, Wash.
Microsoft execs said in September 2011 that there would be one public
developer test build of Windows 8 (which came to be known as the
Developer Preview), one public "beta" (the Consumer Preview) and one
public Release Candidate (the Release Preview). There were additional private builds of Windows 8
that went to a select few outside the company. But after the Release
Candidate -- which Microsoft made available at the end of May 2012 --
there were no more public test builds of Windows 8 scheduled before the
product is released to manufacturing (RTM). Recent private builds
included a number of user interface modifications, the removal of the
"Aero" glass interface, as well as some under-the-hood programming
interface tweaks.
Now that Microsoft has completed work on Windows 8, the product goes
to PC makers (which also includes Microsoft itself). The PC makers do
testing, finish any kind of compatibility work they need to achieve and
preload images the operating system on new PCs. The Microsoft Surface
team is one of these OEMs and will be delivering the first of two Surface designs (the Surface RT, based on an ARM processor) at the same time as Windows 8 is generally available, October 26.
What's next for Windows? Microsoft is expected by some to speed up
delivery of its next operating system releases, going forward. In other
words, "Windows Next" -- or whatever Microsoft calls the successor to
Windows 8 -- isn't expected to be three years away. It could be a lot sooner.
No comments:
Post a Comment