It’s official: Windows 7 is … Windows 7

Yep, they did as I expected: Microsoft will officially name Windows 7 as ... Windows 7:

Hi there, Mike Nash here.

For me, one of the most exciting times in the release of a new product is right before we show it to the world for the first time. And that time is right now.

In a few weeks we are going to be talking about the details of this release at the PDC and at WinHEC. We will be sharing a pre-beta "developer only release" with attendees of both shows and giving them the first broad in-depth look at what we've been up to. I can't wait for them to see it.

And, as you probably know, since we began development of the next version of the Windows client operating system we have been referring to it by a codename, "Windows 7."  But now is a good time to announce that we've decided to officially call the next version of Windows, "Windows 7."

While I know there have been a few cases at Microsoft when the codename of a product was used for the final release, I am pretty sure that this is a first for Windows. You might wonder about the decision.

The decision to use the name Windows 7 is about simplicity. Over the years, we have taken different approaches to naming Windows.  We've used version numbers like Windows 3.11, or dates like Windows 98, or "aspirational" monikers like Windows XP or Windows Vista.  And since we do not ship new versions of Windows every year, using a date did not make sense.  Likewise, coming up with an all-new "aspirational" name does not do justice to what we are trying to achieve, which is to stay firmly rooted in our aspirations for Windows Vista, while evolving and refining the substantial investments in platform technology in Windows Vista into the next generation of Windows.

Simply put, this is the seventh release of Windows, so therefore "Windows 7" just makes sense.

We are very excited about the opportunity to tell you more about Windows 7 in the coming weeks, and show you how we have continued to build on investments begun in Windows Vista to deliver on the next release of the Windows operating system.

I look forward to sharing more with you in the coming weeks and months.

--Mike

Discuss this Article 60

DRWAM
on Oct 14, 2008
Mike, it will be iPhone 3G + or plus. That's my guess, as lame as it sounds. But dammit Jim, I'm a doctor not a phone repairman! Did you know that I bought a $400 Vista laptop that works pretty darn well?
Delmont
on Oct 14, 2008
DRWAM, Did you know I have an almost 4 year old Dimension 9100 that runs Vista great? The Mac guys aren't going to like us. How dare we keep admitting Vista runs good/great for us?
tayme
on Oct 14, 2008
@Delmont - I am not a "Mac guy" and what I "don't like" is that Mike uses opinion and bias for his statements. Other than that, he is obviously a very smart guy, when it comes to Windows...but due to that bias, not so much when it comes to other Operating Systems. --tayme
tayme
on Oct 14, 2008
@DRWAM - My sister was in the market for cheap laptop...was going to buy a used, naked one from where she works for $200. I told her about this one and she went and got it. I am going over to her place tomorrow night to install the extra RAM, clean all of the crapware off, and migrate her data for her. I'll be very disappointed if it doesn't live up to the image you have been portraying...I'll have to get one of my east coast buddies to come over and lay the smackdown on your candy *** <--- ;-) --tayme
DRWAM
on Oct 14, 2008
She'll like it. It choked on the first DVD try after awaking from hibernation. but it did fine after restart, and played a Webkinz game while watching, with only 2GB RAM and all the included software, even that dang McAfee and Google junk. The screen is pretty too. It runs better than my Inspiron 8200 with 1 GB RAM with XP. Also, it has no problem with MS Office, as well as MS works that was included. I see minimal difference with 4GB RAM, bt it was speedy to begin with.
Andre Da Costa
on Oct 14, 2008
I am going to make a quote from your recent Windows 7 FAQ: Quote: "Q: Why Windows 7? A: Since Windows Vista is really Windows 6.0, Windows 7 will presumably be version 7.0. Current beta versions list the version number as 6.1, which is the same version number as Windows Server 2008. This will change." Windows Vista is NT 6.0, Windows 7 remains NT 6.1. The kernel version will not be incremented as you assume you had predicted. The reason for this is compatibility, something Steve Sinofsky described he wants to bring 'forward' in his interview with Ina Fried on CNET. Its a safety net as I am learning, not all applications are programmed to do OS version checking. So, an application coded to see NT 6.0 or NT 5.1 would encounter errors on installation when it sees NT 7.0. Microsoft does not want to go through that again, at least not until NT 7.0 actually arrives in the future. Still, regardless its NT 6.1, it still could be the major version, since XP was 5.1 and was considered a major released that introduced the improved Start Menu, Task Panes, improved compatibility compared to Windows 2000 Pro and the first consumer version of Windows built on NT.
mikegalos@msn.com
on Oct 14, 2008
tayme "Mike uses opinion and bias for his statements" Back it up or retract. (Not the bias, we all have those, but the allegation that I present my opinion as fact)
tayme
on Oct 14, 2008
@mikegalos - Wasn't it you claiming that MS is the only company that innovates in the OS market. That is OPINION....not FACT. It is opinion and not fact because there is absolutely no way that you can know what every OS provider in the world is working on at any given time(plus, its just not true). I remember well the attempts at conversation that John Papola and others had with you regarding that, and you just kept repeating opinions...not facts. Does that meet you needs? (I am guessing not...but what the hey...) --tayme
mikegalos@msn.com
on Oct 14, 2008
tayme No, I was the one asking for examples of other company's innovating in the OS market.
drylight
on Oct 14, 2008
People! Windows 7 is NOT a codename. Vista is a 6.x build, so the next major release will be, yes go for it, you know it... 7! Windows 7 is the next release. So it's not a codename but the actual release version. A codename is something like "Avalanche" or "Lightning".

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