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August 22, 2006

Microsoft Publicly Confirms Windows Vista Ship Schedule, Rejiggers RC1 Plan

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Exclusive to WinInfo: On Monday, Microsoft publicly reaffirmed its plan to ship a version of Windows Vista to businesses in November and to consumers in January. But behind the scenes, the company has had to devise a new plan for the Release Candidate 1 (RC1) version of the product after plans to use build 5520 for RC1 fell through.

Microsoft's public discussion about its Vista shipment schedule came from an unexpected source: Timothy Chen, the CEO of the company's greater China region. "As of now, the release schedule of Vista is unchanged," Chen told reporters Monday. "In a word, Vista for small businesses and consumers will be released late in the fourth quarter and late January." This announcement confirms a report published last week in WinInfo, which stated that Microsoft wouldn't bow to widespread public opinion that Vista couldn't be made ready in time for the planned November and January shipping dates.

Meanwhile, inside the software colossus, work continues toward an early September RC1 release for Vista. However, the build previously planned for RC1--build 5520--had two major problems, so Microsoft had to move on to a newer version--build 5536--for RC1. The company plans to ship build 5536 internally today, according to my sources.

Historically, Microsoft considers RC builds of software products as candidates for the final release. However, with Microsoft not planning to finalize Vista until sometime in October, it's clear that the Vista RC1 version--whatever the build number--won't be a true candidate for release. It should, however, be quite a bit more polished than the previous public milestone, Vista Beta 2.

End of Article



Reader Comments
If it slips, it slips. The firm won't make any friends if they ship bugger-than-usual-1.0 code, so the smart money's on letting it bake. What's the deal with this arbitrary release date around year end anyway? If you've missed the holiday season, who cares when you release in Q1?

outofcoffee August 22, 2006 (Article Rating: )


I like to see it this year but ha beter it silps then haveing lots of bugs in it.

Any one know what the two major issues were?

and is there a date set for RC1 yet?

ra@ix.net.au August 22, 2006 (Article Rating: )


A "release candidate" should mean "a candidate for release". But it will not be. In Microsoft-speak, as far as I can grok, "release candidate 1" means "advanced beta".

GuidStephen August 22, 2006 (Article Rating: )


I suspect the reason they are afraid to let it slip is that they will be tempted to "re-do" things which will result in a messy quagmire that will delay them months more.

I bet they think, the best thing is to crack the whip and get something workable out the door on schedule. Once done they can review the results and develop a good service pack(s) for it.

GuidStephen August 22, 2006 (Article Rating: )


I'm thinking they're trying to get the Corporate version out in time for the 2007 fiscal year. It's going to be a lot easier to get people to buy Vista if they don't have to wait for it to get their 07 computers. Since they definitely can't make the holiday consumer season, it doesn't matter if they ship in 07.

orion.adrian@gmail.com August 22, 2006 (Article Rating: )


Microsoft may be claiming they'll meet that schedule now, but who's going to believe them when they've broken their promises so many times before? Come on, we all know this release to corporations is just a ploy to make it seem like they're "on track" in their release schedule. Meanwhile, corporations will be getting an early, buggy build of Vista that they won't install because it's not even good enough for consumer use. Only Microsoft would treat a Release Candidate as a beta.

The earlier Vista ships to the public, the buggier and more riddled with security holes it will be. I can't wait to witness the disaster.

bonch August 22, 2006 (Article Rating: )


"I can't wait to witness the disaster."

After flirting with moderation for a couple of days, you're finally back to your normal self. I'm glad the dog's tail was finally straightened, even if it was only for two days. Microsoft is not lying. All it's saying is that as things stand now, Vista will be released as per schedule. That doesn't mean there won't be any further delays.

shark47 August 22, 2006 (Article Rating: )


This is not an OS that's going to be used by 50 people around the world, so, it's good if Microsoft delays it if it feels it's not ready.

shark47 August 22, 2006 (Article Rating: )


<back to ignoring bonch>
MS - if you're listening. Please delay the product if it's not 100% ready. We dont' want a release version that's really a beta. Shipping a rock solid product will earn forgiveness for all delays.

jersey72 August 22, 2006 (Article Rating: )


I hope Vista is a success. I'd love to see the look on the faces of people like bdkjones, bonch, etc. who pray for a Vista disaster in Church then.

yahoo August 22, 2006 (Article Rating: )


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