Longhorn to see light in 2005
By Joris Evers, IDG News Service
May 07, 2003 11:52 AM ET
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Microsoft Wednesday for the first time publicly confirmed 2005 as the release year for Longhorn, the successor to Windows
XP.
The operating system release, which analysts have said will be one of the most important Windows launches for Microsoft, will
follow a pre-beta release in October, a first beta in early 2004 and a second beta in mid-2004, said Will Poole, senior vice
president for Microsoft's Windows Client division, in a presentation at the company's Windows Hardware Engineering Conference
(WinHEC) in New Orleans.
"We will see Longhorn coming to market in 2005," Poole said.
The shipping year for Longhorn had been a moving target; insiders first expected it to come late 2004 or early 2005, though
recently most had pegged 2005 as the year for Longhorn. The pre-beta release will coincide with Microsoft's Professional Developers
Conference (PDC) in Los Angeles in October, the company said.
"At PDC there will be a build suitable for hardware and software developers to start creating applications for Longhorn. The
build is not meant for broad customer usage, but for developer usage," said Tom Phillips, general manager of Microsoft's Windows
Hardware group.
Microsoft released a developer preview of Longhorn in March, the company said. Three alpha versions of Longhorn have leaked
onto the Internet, the first surfacing late last year and the most recent leak last month.
Before Longhorn comes to market, there will be some follow-on releases to existing Microsoft operating system products, Poole
said. New language editions of Windows XP Media Center Edition, for example, he said. However, "the weight of the (Windows)
division and the company is behind Longhorn."
A big change in Longhorn will be the new Windows Future Storage (WinFS) file system, based on SQL Server database technology
and designed to give users a direct route to data, making the physical location of a file irrelevant. WinFS replaces the NTFS
and FAT32 file systems used in current Windows versions.
The IDG News Service is a Network World affiliate.
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