Windows Vista Release Date
Microsoft hedges on Vista deadlineBy 28 July 2006 10:35 A EST Platforms & Applications |
Microsoft on Thursday
continued to send mixed signals about Windows Vista's ship date,
claiming that it was on track to deliver the new operating system in
early 2007 but also repeating that it wouldn't release Vista until it
was satisfied with the software's quality.
At
Microsoft's annual financial analyst's conference, Kevin Johnson,
co-president of the company's platforms and services group, addressed
Vista's ship date.
"We will ship Windows Vista when the product is ready," he said. "[But]
product quality is job one.
"There's no data or information that says we are not going to make the
November business availability or the January [2007] consumer
availability," said Johnson in one breath. In the next, he added
"However, we are going to ship the product when it's ready. We are just
going to take it milestone by milestone."
In March, Microsoft announced that it was postponing
Vista from an anticipated October release to November for enterprise
customers with volume licenses, and January 2007 for everyone else.
Since then, Microsoft has repeatedly said it is on track to meet those
deadlines while also refusing to commit to those dates. In fact, earlier
this month, Microsoft chairman Bill Gates gave Vista only an 80 percent
chance of releasing on time.
"Job one is we will ship a quality product," Johnson repeated later in
his presentation.
Earlier in the morning, however, chief executive Steve Ballmer said
nothing about Vista's quality, only that "Vista and Office 2007 launches
come for consumers at the beginning of next year."
In other Vista news, Johnson also said that although Microsoft won't set
pricing for Vista until closer to its roll-out, costs will be in line
with current lists.
"[We] don't expect significant changes in our pricing strategy. However,
Vista Ultimate is a new SKU, and we will sell that at a modest premium."
Vista Ultimate will be a superset of the consumer and business editions,
and according to Microsoft "combines all of the advanced infrastructure
features of a business-focused operating system, all of the management
and efficiency features of a mobility-focused operating system, and all
of the digital entertainment features of a consumer-focused operating
system."
Microsoft's current in-production OS, Windows XP, tops out at US$299 for
Windows XP Professional.
The company's presentations to analysts continue throughout Thursday.

Microsoft hedges on Vista deadline