By Mike Ricciuti, 23 July 2007 08:40
NEWS
Microsoft is planning to ship its next major version of Windows - known internally as version "7" - within roughly three years.
The company discussed Windows 7 last week at a conference for its field sales force in the US, according to sources close to the company.
While the company provided few details, Windows 7, the next client version of the operating system, will be among the steps taken by Microsoft to establish a more predictable release schedule, according to sources. The company plans a more "iterative" process of information disclosure to business customers and partners, sources said.
Windows Vista, the oft-delayed most recent release of Windows, shipped to businesses in November and to consumers in January after more than five years of development. Vista's gestation period was marked by shifting product details as internal priorities changed and problems arose with development.
Like Vista, Windows 7 will ship in consumer and business versions, and in 32-bit and 64-bit versions. The company also confirmed it is considering a subscription model to complement Windows but did not provide specifics or a time frame.
Next up on Microsoft's agenda is Service Pack 1 for Vista, which is expected before year's end.
The discussion of Windows' future isn't surprising, given that Microsoft has been criticised by business customers for delays related to Vista. Many business customers pay for Microsoft's software under a licence agreement called Software Assurance.
Windows 7 was previously known by the code-name Vienna. A Microsoft representative confirmed Windows 7 is the internal code-name for the next client release of Windows. The details were released "as part of our ongoing outreach to enterprise customers and partners, Microsoft has begun sharing plans for how they will continue to deliver value to businesses in the futureĀ Software Assurance customers in particular", a representative said in a statement.
According to the representative: "Microsoft is scoping Windows 7 development to a three-year time frame, and then the specific release date will ultimately be determined by meeting the quality bar."
Mike Ricciuti writes for CNET News.com

Comments
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1. Karen Challinor
just as all the bugs get ironed out of the last release, the new release arrives
quick question, what will it give us that we either don't already have from XP & Vista or can't get for free by switching to Linux based operating systems ?
2. Nick Cole
The majority haven't even installed this latest version and here they are with the next!
Or are there too many bugs in Vista that cannot be sorted?
Moral of the story - don't bother even considering upgrading unless there is actually some cost effective imperative or it is unavoidable. You'll just be going through the hoops yet again and probably haven't recouped the investment let alone made anything from it.