Bill Gates talks Windows 7 ... Again

I want to qualify what I'm about to describe here with the following: Bill Gates is leaving (full-time) Microsoft. Soon. I get the feeling he doesn't necessarily ever accurately describe what's going on at the company. For example, he was recently (mis)quoted as saying that Windows 7 would ship as soon as "next year." (He didn't really say that, necessarily. See this post for details.)

Anyhoo.

Gates recently appeared at the Windows Digital Lifestyle Consortium in Japan where he gave a little talk. (See the complete transcript.) And since we're such tools, geeks the world over are hanging on every little mention of Windows 7, as if the seer of Redmond actually had something notable to say about a product that will ship two years after he leaves full-time work at the company. Here's what he says about Windows 7 in this speech:

We're hard at work, I would say, on the next version, which we call Windows 7. I'm very excited about the work being done there. The ability to be lower power, take less memory, be more efficient, and have lots more connections up to the mobile phone, so those scenarios connect up well to make it a great platform for the best gaming that can be done, to connect up to the thing being done out on the Internet, so that, for example, if you have two personal computers, that your files automatically are synchronized between them, and so you don't have a lot of work to move that data back and forth.

This is a description of Live Mesh, not Windows 7. And that alone should give you pause about the accuracy of his other comments here. For example:

  • Lower power, take less memory, be more efficient. This is awfully vague and basically meaningless, but an implicit reaction to some of the criticism of Vista.
  • Lots more connections up to the mobile phone. Today, Windows has zero connections "to the mobile phone." In fact, you have to download separate software, the Windows Mobile Device Center, in order to use a Windows Mobile-based phone with Windows Vista at all. Is WMDC going to be included in Windows 7? I mean, that's all it would take for this sentence to be true. Big deal. And totally expected.
  • Great platform for "the best gaming that can be done." Arguably, with its support for DirectX 10.1, Windows VIsta already achieves this. Given the lifetime of video game consoles, what Gates is really saying her is that Windows 7, an OS that will ship two years from now, will be a better gaming platform than the Xbox 360, a system that first shipped over two year ago. Exciting, eh?
  • Connect up to the thing being done out on the Internet. This is my favorite line, thanks to the tortured sentence structure. He's saying that Windows 7--get this--will be compatible with the Internet and the Internet services that Microsoft is already creating. Stop the presses, people. We have a headline.

But wait, there's more.

Also the effort to upgrade, I think that's an area we got a lot of feedback in Vista, that we need to invest in that, and we're going to make that very, very simple for people. So Vista is doing well, and we're hard at work putting even more investment now in the version that comes after that.

So... Microsoft will make it easier for people to upgrade to a new version of Windows? This is something that Microsoft worked on in both XP and Vista, so we're talking a simple evolution of pre-existing functionality. Big deal.

Oh, and Microsoft is hard at work on Windows 7.

So I ask you: Did Gates really say anything about Windows 7 here? Really?

No, not really.

So why do we hang on his every word again?

Discuss this Article 7

weedmonk
on May 14, 2008
Looks like he's just trying to say that 7 will right all the perceived wrongs of Vista. The power thing jumped at me because Vista is noticeably worse when compared to XP when it comes on laptops. Aero's tax on the GPU is a big reason but there is huge room for improvement. Mobile phone I agree I couldn't care less about right now but it'll be nice to see what they'll come up with. Gaming on Vista for me has been generally decent but the perception out there has been as with vista generally negative and lot of that has to do with Nvidia and the OEMs. The last one I agree is as vague as the BS that is "cloud computing".
BrightrevCarl
on May 14, 2008
Somehow I'm doubting that Windows 7 is going to be lower memory or more efficient when a bottom spec 2010 PC is going to come with a quad core CPU and 4 GB of RAM. Not to mention that every Windows upgrade since forever needs more resources than its predecessor.
Ocean
on May 14, 2008
It's important because many are making a determined effort to skip Vista. http://www.businessweek.com/technology/content/may2008/tc20080512_157155...
DarkSages
on May 14, 2008
I don't care about it taking more memory or CPU/GPU resources so long as they add functionality and is better than vista. Not that vista is not solid which I think it is. I would like to see better media center, more usability with the home server, and make windows media player work with zune or get rid of it and make the app for the zune default (upgrade it first). Pcs now a days are so under used (cpu/ram/gpu) anyways why not actually use full potential of computes in 2010.
mjw149
on May 15, 2008
You don't know if Gates is right or wrong here. If Live Mesh ships with Windows 7, then that validates your biggest problem with this statement. How much confidence can we have in MS mgmt if Gates is their chosen mouthpiece in the post-Yahoo disaster period and he doesn't even know what's going on? If we should ignore him as a crazy old uncle, then why he is wasting their partner's time in Asia, etc.? Why even do Live Mesh if it's not shipped with Windows 7? How do they plan to get it adopted by enough people to reach critical mass? Isn't that the issue with Zune? Are you assuming that they don't ever learn their lessons?
subzerohitman721
on May 16, 2008
I believe Gates is trying to leave Windows 7 in the fog of war, so that its competitors won't have anything decisive to counter. By leaving it vague, I think Gates wants to make the engineers at Apple and at the Linux companies scratching their heads. He's a business man at heart and he wants to give you a tease and not the full trailer yet. I think it would be logical to shrink down Windows memory use. Anything in Seven to end the "memory hog" cry of anti-Vista pundits would be a good way to show true improvement. Just look at AVG, it doesn't eat up a lot of resources, but it gets the job done for most people. If the minimalist approach to resource use is the rule for Seven, I think that bodes well for the future of the OS. I think speed and efficiency needs to be the next rule. If it shows lightning and thunder speeds of boot up, performance, and shut down, Seven will be something people pay for in spades. MS has to make Seven a very decisive counterpunch. I do think this is the goal.
Waethorn
on May 16, 2008
"If Live Mesh ships with Windows ...." Whooaaah there a minute!.... Windows Live software wasn't included in Windows, and probably never will be, due to antitrust regulations. The tie-in will be available for OEM's and System Builders that choose to preinstall it, as it is now, but I highly doubt Microsoft would try to include their cloud computing stuff directly in the OS. They'll aggressively market the services in the OS, but don't expect to see the Windows Live suite bundled in a stock install. "Just look at AVG, it doesn't eat up a lot of resources, but it gets the job done for most people." Funny, because I had 3 systems full of trojans and spyware come in in the last week, and all of them had AVG Free 8 installed (with the included antispyware "protection), and with all the updates no less. Funny, because even though AVG wouldn't detect them until I ran a full scan (meaning the realtime scanner is crap), and OneCare gets a lot of grief for the 1 poor score by AV-Comparatives (which is run by University students), OneCare detected them all running in the background and successfully removed them. Windows was another story though - at least one trojan corrupted the in-box driver catalogs, so a reformat was necessary. In all cases, I talked the customers into cutting their losses and just go for a reformat anyway, since Windows was pretty much fubared before OneCare was even installed. In all circumstances, data was successfully backed up because the malware hadn't infected it - only Windows itself. On all 3 computers, Windows XP SP2 was the OS. On 2 of them, Limewire was installed (and the only P2P program ever installed). On the other, the user played free downloadable games from sites like BigFish, though not from respectable sites like Pogo or MSN Games.

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