Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates is set to usher in a new era of computing based on the vendor's x64-based Windows and Longhorn Windows at WinHEC 2005 this week. At its annual hardware engineering show ...
With all of the coverage of Windows Vista and its many improvements for client desktops, it’s easy to forget that an equally large team of developers is working on the next generation of Windows on ...
Microsoft previously said Longhorn would ship during the second half of 2007, but today the company announced that the server operating system would be released to manufacturing by the end of 2007.
Microsoft Corp. made a “common-sense” decision late last month to change its original plan and make its next major Windows operating system release, code-named Longhorn, a client-only product, a ...
Enterprise IT folks aren’t exactly champing at the bit to get Vista into their shops; many are only now distributing Windows XP Service Pack 2, and there are plenty of copies of Windows 2000 ...
And there, as Longhorn comes out, people will decide, do they want to let the new machines come in with Longhorn, which we'd certainly recommend, and do they want to go back into the installed base of ...
Microsoft chairman and Chief Software Architect Bill Gates formally and finally ushered Windows into the world of 64-bit computing on Monday delivering 64-bit versions of Windows Server 2003 and ...
Well-respected software engineer David Cutler discussed Windows Longhorn and its development in a 9-minute-long video interview. He explains that a buggy codebase impacted the operating system's ...
Should be interesting, they say "Feature complete" but I can't find anything about the virtualiztion stuff they say was shipping... I guess I will find out tomorrow ...