Microsoft has said precious little about Windows 7, but it has provided at least one outsider with an early test version of the forthcoming operating system.
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The software maker confirmed in a court filing last week that it has provided a test version of Windows 7 to the technical committee helping to oversee Microsoft's compliance with the US antitrust settlement.
Windows 7 crops up about a third of the way through the 21-page joint status report, initially with Microsoft noting that the technical committee would like to see an unspecified issue addressed in Windows 7.
"In addition, the [technical committee] has begun to review Windows 7 itself," Microsoft and regulators said in the filing. "Microsoft recently supplied the TC with a build of Windows 7, and is discussing TC testing going forward. The TC will conduct middleware-related tests on future builds of Windows 7."
Microsoft has not said when Windows 7 will arrive, nor said much about what features it will contain, though Bill Gates said in a recent interview with ZDNet.com.au sister site CNET News.com that Windows 7 is "a big step forward" in speech recognition and other natural interfaces.
Also of note in the status filing is the fact that Phoenix Technologies, which makes the firmware that helps computers boot up, had complained about Microsoft's Vista licensing terms, which limited which versions of Vista could run inside a virtual machine.
"After discussions with Plaintiff States and the TC, Microsoft agreed to remove the EULA (end user license agreement) restrictions and has done so," Microsoft said in the filing. "This change has been widely reported and well-received in the trade press."
However Microsoft made no mention of Phoenix's complaint when it announced the change in January.
"Now is the right time, we believe, to make it easier for technical enthusiasts...to experience and see if virtualisation is right for them," group product manager Patrick O'Rourke said in a telephone interview when the change was announced.
ZDNet blogger Mary Jo Foley notes that Microsoft has strained its credibility recently by announcing moves and then later disclosing outside pressures that might have influenced the moves. In another example, Microsoft announced a series of interoperability principles in February, only to be hit with a record fine from the EU a week later.
Asked about the timing, CEO Steve Ballmer told CNET News.com in an interview that Microsoft knew the EU fines were coming when it made the interoperability announcement, but maintained they related to past non-compliance and that Microsoft believed it was already in compliance prior to that announcement.














Remember Windows ME? Vista has that same feel to it. As a support guy in the Far West of NSW I can recall upgrading "nunerous" ME installs to 98SE or Win2k.
Guess what? As a support guy in Sunraysia, a fair bit of my time is taken up doing Vista to XP upgrades.
Given the so called Workstation 2008 along with the leaks of Windows &, I wonder if Microsoft intend to abandon Vista and go forward to the OS they should have given us???