Thursday, December 14th 2006
Gartner says "No more new Windows"
Super-analysts at Gartner have something to say about Microsoft and its Windows software. For those of you unfamiliar with the company, Gartner is the largest IT industry analyst firm in the world, and it got there for a reason - it's pretty good at its guesses.
Gartner estimates that Windows Vista will be the last Windows as we know it. The company predicts that it is too difficult and expensive to keep pushing box sales for new versions.
Perhaps a modular architecture, where you download updated versions of modules that piece together the OS, is on its way?
Source:
Bit-tech
Gartner estimates that Windows Vista will be the last Windows as we know it. The company predicts that it is too difficult and expensive to keep pushing box sales for new versions.
Perhaps a modular architecture, where you download updated versions of modules that piece together the OS, is on its way?
19 Comments on Gartner says "No more new Windows"
linux on a floppy disk...lol
so i guess for vista, is gonna be nothing but service pack from now on :slap:
Plus it's not the end of Microsoft, and not the end of Windows... just this type of windows... There will definitely be a windows coming out being modular IF that's how O/S's are going to be programmed... Which is plausible.
maybe they could give you windows free, but you would pay per minute of use .. some way or another they will have to make their money
They're moving to a NEW type of OS & its design is actually pretty different in many ways from current NT-based heritage'd OS from MS.
Look up "SINGULARITY" online, W1zz, because I think you'll like a great deal of what you see in the writeups on it, & as to how they plan to construct it... Microsoft R&D sections @ MS should have a TON on it.
To me, for TODAY's hardware? It seems a bit much, & will be slower initially, but when the time comes for them to release it, I wager the hardware will be RIGHT IN LINE with it, as to making it run fast.
(From what I understood? Even DRIVERS will be in separated instances of memory sandboxes, from the OS core & one another, as to one example of what's changing in it, but still will be able to address the process space of other RPL3/Ring3/usermode apps as usual & same w/ services (which are typically brokered in the SAME address space as svchost.exe etc. et al))
APK
Ever tried to join a domain on XP Home?
Or tried to set user rights in XP Home?
Ever been able to use more than 2 desktops on XP Pro?
How about network faxing built in to XP?
We already do, but for those that only want e-mail and internet it might be the ticket to have a OS that costs less, and only performs those functions.
The downside to this all is that those who use a bit of everything are going to have to pay out the nose, switch OS choice, or never have the latest and greatest.
Fortunately for those users smart enought to make the choice, there are linux flavors out that have the bare essentials that run fast on mediocre hardware. However, based on the popularity of myspace, AOL, and adware, we as a species only survive due to the fact that sex is fun.
btw i checked out vista 32-bit in vmware yday and was quite impressed by it
APK