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9/29/2008
Microsoft hopes to draw crowds to its upcoming Professional Developers Conference by making Windows 7 bits available to the public attending the event. The venue will be the staging ground for the first public release of the new operating system.
Microsoft plans to provide a "pre-beta copy of Windows 7" at the Los Angeles-based event, which will be held Oct. 27 to 30. The copy can be installed and tested on your PC, according to Microsoft's announcement.
The company's latest operating system has so far been kept closely under wraps, although a private group of testers has been checking out build versions of it. Veteran Microsoft watcher Mary-Jo Foley, citing leaked information, has identified one of the builds as "M3" or "Milestone 3."
One Microsoft blogger suggested that "mostly faked Photoshop renderings" of Windows 7 have been circulating so far.
PDC attendees will get a 160 GB portable USB 2.0 drive with the Windows 7 pre-beta on it, along with software development kits and other Microsoft materials. Microsoft also plans to have compatibility labs at the PDC so that attendees can test their applications by running them on the new OS.
Panel sessions on Windows 7 have been increased to about 21 so far at the PDC. The other venue where Windows 7 will figure prominently is Microsoft's WinHEC event, to be held in Los Angeles on Nov. 5 to 7.
The actual beta release of the operating system is unclear. Foley's sources tell her that Windows 7 Beta 1 "is due in December 2008" with the final release expected in the second half of 2009.
Microsoft's "software plus services" concept will be the other major theme at the PDC event. The concept, which envisions a software world that combines Internet cloud-based services with installed software, has been much discussed by Microsoft officials, but the PDC will be its "coming out party," according to Gianpaolo Carraro, Microsoft's director of SaaS architecture.
Microsoft plans to launch "a comprehensive service platform" for its software plus services vision at the event, according to Mike Swanson, the PDC 2008 content owner.
Microsoft will have one edge in ushering in this software plus services world, and it's associated with how supplementary programs will be offered with Windows 7.
For instance, unlike earlier Microsoft operating system releases, Windows 7 will lack e-mail, movie making and photo-editing programs, according to Microsoft officials cited by CNET's Ina Fried. Instead, those programs will be offered as services. They will be available as free downloads through Windows Live, Microsoft's services portal.
Kurt Mackie is online news editor, Enterprise Group, at 1105 Media Inc. You can contact Kurt at kmackie@1105media.com.
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The William F. Harrah College of Hotel Administration at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas (UNLV) has received a donation from Micros Systems that will allow the college's students to use its Opera hospitality software in classes.
The University of Cambridge is deploying Aruba Networks' wireless LAN equipment to replace a legacy network that had become unmanageable and a drain on resources. Since early 2008, about 100 Aruba AP-65 access points have been deployed, along with dual MMC-6000 Multi-Service Mobility Controllers.
Cerego has released new content creation tools for its iKnow social learning platform, adding support for creating learning modules in any of 188 languages. The company has also expanded language support for the text-to-speech technology used in the iKnow platform.
Smart Technologies last week unveiled updates to its Smart Board 600i interactive whiteboard system. The new lineup includes both a standard 4:3 and a widescreen 16:10 model, each featuring new boom-mounted, short-throw projectors.
Binghamton University, part of the State University of New York (SUNY) system, is using StealthWatch from Lancope to help streamline network management, control, and security with visibility of network behavior. Binghamton has an IT network that spans 20,000 client endpoints and six geographic locations. After contending with worm propagation and other security threats that affected network performance, the university's network management team sought a way to increase visibility of network traffic and analyze network behavior for potential threats.
Tufts University has optioned rights to a technology that can recharge the batteries of any hybrid electric and electric-powered vehicle while it is driven. The Tufts-developed technology could increase by 20 percent to 70 percent the miles per gallon or total driving range performance of vehicles like the Honda Civic, Ford Escape, and Toyota Prius hybrids and the Tesla Motors and Phoenix Motorcars electric vehicles.