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Developer: Windows Vista Is Not Ready

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High-level Microsoft executives may be in for more of what they don't want to hear. After one developer says what many were thinking, those inside Vista development fulfill their own prophecy. Vista's not ready.

A release candidate means "Hey, we think we're finished, and this is the build we'd like to put out thereIt should always follow a stable beta, which Beta 2 was notWindows Vista is not ready yet, and I don't think Microsoft will have it ready by the end of the month. Currently, Vista teams are hard at it trying to meet a late August/early September deadline for the final product. McLaws believes that deadline should be pushed back 4-6 weeks. Subsequently, that pushes back Vista's official launch to late February/early March, nearly a quarter behind an already very late product. And that won't make Wall Street happy in the slightest. But the argument that other stakeholders have put forth is that it's better to release a bug-free product rather than risk consumers waiting until a Windows Vista Service Pack is available before installing. Consumers unwilling to give Microsoft another chance after years of buggy OS releases could be worse than another short delay. Worse for Redmond, Apple gets a serious leg up in the market, building on momentum stemming from the company's switch to Intel. Microsoft has to get it right, or risk everything. Technology journalist and editor of PC Computing and PC World, Ed Bott thinks a February launch is still premature. "Make that 'end of March' and I'll sign up too," Robert Scoble believes even March might be too early. This sucker is just not ready. Too many things are too slow and/or don't work. I've been on the betas of every Windows OS since Windows 3.1 and Vista is starting to feel good, but it doesn't feel good enough to release to the factory in October. It feels like it needs a good six more months than that, which would mean a mid-year release next year. So June now is it? That's two quarters (and five years) late. Allchin has shown public concern about Vista's development for nearly a year now. In September of last year, Allchin had to break the news to Bill Gates that "[Vista] is not going to work." The problem then was the complexity of Vista, being pieced together by thousands of programmers all working on their own small part. "[It's] so complex its writers will never be able to make it run properly," Allchin is WebProWorld Tag: Add to Del.icio.us | Digg | Yahoo! My Web | Furl Bookmark Murdok:

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