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Microsoft Windows 8 News and Information

March 1st, 2012

How to get the Microsoft Windows 8 Beta / Consumer Preview

February 6th, 2010

Windows 8 might ship in 64 bit and 128 bit versions, based on the LinkedIn profile of Microsoft employee Robert Morgan:

Working in high security department for research and development involving strategic planning for medium and long-term projects. Research & Development projects including 128 bit architecture compatibility with the Windows 8 kernel and Windows 9 project plan. Forming relationships with major partners: Intel, AMD, HP, and IBM.

Robert Morgan is working to get IA-128 working backwards with full binary compatibility on the existing IA-64 instructions in the hardware simulation to work for Windows 8 and definitely Windows 9.

Hmm, very interesting…

February 6th, 2010

Windows 7 build 7600 is the RTM version that’s on all the new PCs today. It’s the version that was completed shipped by Microsoft last summer – but it appears as though the developers are still tinkering away at it.

Neowin reported that a Russian site Wzor, which has a history of Windows leaks, posted screenshots from a post-RTM Windows 7 build 7700.

While many of you will find the screenshot completely uneventful, given that there does not appear to be any visual changes aside from the version number, the real news here comes from the build strings that tell us the progress that Microsoft is making.

The latest leak is 7700.winmain.100122-1900, which tells us that it is build 7700 and it was compiled in the ‘winmain’ lab on January 22, 2010 at 1900 hours.

Build strings leading up to this latest one are:…..

Read full article at softarchive.net

February 6th, 2010

Despite the emphatic success of Windows 7, the fastest selling OS in history, Microsoft is hard at work improving the operating system and its successors  Microsoft is reportedly readying Windows 7 Service Pack 1 for a June 2010 beta release and a September 2010 final release.  The SP1 will bring out of the box support for USB 3.0, one of the most exciting new computer technologies.

And according to Chris Green, a former Microsoft developer, Microsoft is already hard at work on the best-selling operating system’s successor, code named Windows 8.  The next-gen Windows may be released on July 2011.  He leaked an entire release schedule which includes the upcoming Office 2010 and its successor Office 2012.

Microsoft also had some other good news to report.  In January 2010, Internet Explorer 8 became the world’s most used browser, passing IE 6.  IE 8 currently has about a 22.31 percent market share worldwide.  Internet Explorer 8′s gains have been partially fueled by Windows 7′s success — IE 8 is the default browser on the U.S. edition of the OS.  

IE 8 also has benefited from a recent push by Microsoft to get users away from IE 6 and IE 7, both of which have a flaw that was exploited by Chinese hackers to steal corporate data.  Microsoft is urging users to upgrade to the new browser.  Amazingly 20.07 percent of users in January still used IE 6 (many of these were likely business users).  Google recently announced that it would be phasing out support for IE 6.

Microsoft appears to be firing on all cylinders.  If it can continue its momentum with the release of Office 2010 later this year, it should be in a very favorable position at the year’s end.

Read entire article at Techcrunch