The software giant has offered an approximate launch date of January 2010 for the upcoming operating system.
Microsoft vice president Bill Veghte quoted the intended launch date in a letter sent to enterprise and business customers on Tuesday.
In the letter, titled An Update on the Windows Roadmap, Veghte said: "You have told us you want a more regular, predictable Windows release schedule.
"Our plan is to deliver Windows 7 approximately three years after the January 2007 general availability launch date of Windows Vista."
Veghte assured customers that the arrival of Windows 7 would not throw up the application incompatibilities that accompanied the arrival of the much criticised Windows Vista.
"You've also let us know you don't want to face the kinds of incompatibility challenges with the next version of Windows you might have experienced early with Windows Vista," he wrote.
"Our goal is to ensure that the migration process from Windows Vista to Windows 7 is straightforward."
Long term Microsoft watchers, however, will not be holding their breath in the 18 month countdown to the arrival of Windows 7.
The company originally planned to ship consumer versions of Vista by Christmas 2006, but was forced to delay the launch by a year to prepare device drivers for the operating system.
Microsoft confirms Windows 7 release date
By
Guy Dixon
on Jun 30, 2008 8:24AM
Got a news tip for our journalists? Share it with us anonymously here.
Partner Content
Beyond the box: How Crayon Is Redefining Distribution for the Next Era
Shared Intelligence is the Real Competitive Edge Partners Enjoy with Crayon
MSPs with a robust data protection strategy will achieve market success
How mandatory climate reporting is raising the bar for corporate leadership
How Expert Support Can Help Partners and SMBs Realize the Full Value of AI
Sponsored Whitepapers
Cut through the SASE confusion
Stay protected as cyber threats evolve
Defend Your Network from the Next Generation of AI Threats
The race to AI advantage is on. Don’t let slow consulting projects hold you back.
The changing face of Australian distribution




