The advertising campaign, which will last for 15 months, is designed to showcase all the things Windows can do. The company is also gearing up to celebrate the 20th anniversary of Windows' debut.
"As we enter the third decade of Windows, the 'Start Something' campaign celebrates how people can follow their dreams and pursue what they are passionate about -- from creating an in-home music studio to starting a new business or becoming the family photographer," senior vice-president Will Poole said in a statement released late Sunday.
The campaign which will launch in 11 countries with online, print and television ads, will try to play up Windows as the start to many things. The ads will have messages like "Start something curious," "Start discovering lost cities" and "Start feeding your brain." In all, Microsoft said there are 51 TV spots, 39 print ads and 250 online advertisements.
Given its time frame, the "Start Something" campaign will serve as a run up to the debut of Longhorn, the next version of Windows, which is set to go on sale towards the end of the US summer in 2006. Jim Allchin, the head of the Windows unit, said in an interview last week to expect a massive ad push for Longhorn as well.
A beta of Longhorn is slated for this summer; developers will get an updated preview version of Longhorn at next week's Windows Hardware Engineering Conference in Seattle.
The new ad campaign also comes as rival Apple prepares to launch its next operating system -- Mac OS X 10.4 Tiger -- which goes on sale on 29 April.










