Microsoft Previews ‘Windows 8’ … No, Not THAT Preview

In addition to the Steven Sinofsky live appearance yesterday, and the Microsoft preview document and video (analyzed here), Microsoft also separately previewed Windows 8 at the Computex conference in Taipei. Here’s some info from the release:

At 2011 Computex today, Microsoft showed hardware partners the next version of Windows, internally code-named “Windows 8,” to help the partners build devices that take advantage of the new user experience. As part of this technical preview, Mike Angiulo, corporate vice president of Windows Planning, Hardware and PC Ecosystem at Microsoft, demonstrated how “Windows 8” is optimized for newer touch-centric hardware, including tablets, while still delivering the flexibility, connectivity and power that people have come to expect from Windows today.

The technical demonstration also highlighted the new operating system’s ability to work across both x86 and ARM-based architectures, with a variety of early prototypes shown running the new operating system. Microsoft and silicon chip makers AMD, Intel Corporation, NVIDIA Corp., Qualcomm Inc. and Texas Instruments Inc. initially announced plans in January to work together on the next version of Windows.

“Our aim with ‘Windows 8’ is to make the user experience a natural extension of the device, from the time you turn on your PC through how you interact with the applications you know and love,” Angiulo said. “This represents a fundamental shift in Windows design that we haven’t attempted since the days of Windows 95, presenting huge opportunities for our hardware partners to innovate with new PC designs.”

The new user experience also extends to how applications will run on “Windows 8,” with controls naturally fitting into the device experience. Developers also will be able to use common Web technologies, such as HTML5 and JavaScript, to create applications for the PC, further easing integration and adoption.

Discuss this Article 1

cyberblade
on Jun 3, 2011
After watching the videos, I am not impressed. One OS covering two types of devices (slate and desktop OS) must ultimately end up in a compromise. The eulogized innovations are useful for a slate/touch device but have just limited value on a desktop with large screen and mouse operation.
Also the use of Metro Design is problematic because its bleeding edge approach is polarizing and too many people hate it. May be Metro will limit the succes of Windows 8 the same way it did before on Zune and WP7.




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