Microsoft is "getting cold feet" -- as our reader Goblin would put it -- ahead of the arrival of Vista's younger sibling. Vista 7 Starter Edition is a dud and Microsoft knows it. Extracting money from it is a problem, not just the substantiated observation that it is far too heavy for sub-notebooks. If the rumours are true, then Microsoft is rethinking the strategy whose weakness we symbolised in the mockup above (cache). The original source is here, but it is also said by Goblin that: "It must be stressed that I have not been able to confirm or deny this at current time." Given that Paul Thurrott is virtually like an employee of Microsoft, the message seems reliable.
“Vista 7 Starter Edition is a dud and Microsoft knows it.”Microsoft has meanwhile given up on Windows Vista completely. The coming year will be hugely interesting and John Dvorak, a recent Ubuntu GNU/Linux migrant, has just predicted over at MarketWatch that GNU/Linux would continue gaining on the desktop. it is already quite prevalent. ⬆
"Acer and Intel, for example, are already complaining that Windows 7 Starter Edition simply won't sell."
--Source
Comments
Will
2009-05-24 15:24:31
http://pcper.com/comments.php?nid=7203
I know Linux can fit in any specs that Windows can, but I just don't want to see hardware arbitrarily crippled when there's no technical or economic reason to do so. But I guess this won't affect ARM netbooks. (And I have no intention of buying a netbook until the ARM devices come out).
Roy Schestowitz
2009-05-24 15:56:14
Chips B Malroy
2009-05-24 15:19:13
Roy Schestowitz
2009-05-24 15:59:01
ARM is particularly good because of energy usage, not price.
pcolon
2009-05-24 14:47:04
Intel didn't migrate it's corporate desktops to vista and it's work with Moblin (since vista 7 is not a good solution on netbooks) can point to that; keeping intel as a viable cpu producer on this platform. It has to make Moblin successful since people are starting to look at the coming netbook offerings which are ARM or MIPS based.
Roy Schestowitz
2009-05-24 14:55:31
Intel's latest moves show confidence that ARM has lots of potential with GNU/Linux. Many devices will come in July.