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Windows 9 release date, news and rumors
Windows 9 release date, news and rumors
Updated What do we know about the future of Windows?
Windows 9 will build on the touchscreen nature of Windows 8
Update: We've gathered some brand new information on when we'll see Windows 9 and how much it might cost. Read on to learn what's up!
With Windows 8 and now Windows 8.1,
Microsoft tried – not entirely successfully – to make tablets part of a
continuum that goes from number-crunching workstations and high-end
gaming rigs through all-in-one touchscreen media systems and thin-and
light notebooks down to slender touch tablets.
The general consensus is that it still has a long way to go to produce a unified OS.
Despite
rumors of an aggressive development and shipping schedule, there's no
official word about what's in the next version of Windows, but there are
plenty of rumors (many of them from Chinese enthusiast sites that claim
to have leaked builds), plus more reliable information from job
postings for the Windows and Windows Phone teams.
There
are also patents, which may or may not be relevant, and some rare
comments from developers on the Windows team. Here's what we've heard
about Windows 9 and what we think is happening.
Cut to the chase What is it? A complete update of Windows When is it out? We expect it to be out in 2015 What will it cost? We really have no idea. But if Windows 8 is anything to go by, it won't cost much to upgrade.
Windows Blue turned out to be Windows 8.1 rather than a completely new version of the Windows OS – Windows 9 will be that new version.
As for interim releases, we'll probably also get Windows 8.2 before we get Windows 9. And we have already seen the initial update to Windows 8.1, called Windows 8.1 Update 1.
The new update features improvements to the Start Screen including the ability to boot straight into the Desktop, the return of shutdown on Start and a more familiar task bar to unify the old and new user interfaces. The update was announced at Build 2014, along with features teased for Windows updates to come.
It
certainly seems there's a new development cadence for Windows in
action. It seems that Microsoft is set to put out new releases of
Windows, Windows RT and Windows Server every year, the way it already does for Windows Phone.
The
next complete version of Windows is being referred to as Windows 9,
though this may change. And a new codename has appeared – Threshold,
possibly in refrence to moving across from our reliance on the desktop
to a new world where the Start screen is at the heart of how we use
Windows.
While still just a codename, Windows 9 was referenced by Microsoft in a job posting, spotted by MSFT Kitchen on March 13, 2013.
The
ad, for a Bing Software Development Engineer, says that the team will
be delivering products "in areas including Windows 9, IE11 services
integration, touch friendly devices including iPad and more."
Windows 9 release date
Microsoft communications chief Frank Shaw said the company wasn't ready to talk about how often Windows might come out
when we spoke to him in January, but he agreed "you have certainly seen
across a variety of our products a cadence that looks like that;
Windows Phone is a good for example of that, our services are a good
example of that".
We don't know if Windows 9 will be available as
an upgrade from Windows 7 that you can buy as a standalone product or if
you'll have to have Windows 8 to get the upgrade. But it may not be
with us for a while yet – Windows business chief Tami Reller has talked
about "multiple selling seasons" for Windows 8, meaning that we'll
likely have several versions of it.
Some rumors have suggested late 2014 or early 2015
for a Windows 9 release, though the former seems wide of the mark.
While claims and reports are all over the place, it seems like Windows 9
should drop before September 2015 at the latest.
In January 2014, well-known Microsoft blogger Paul Thurrott
said he believes the company plans to release Windows 9 (codenamed
Threshold) in April 2015, less than three years after Windows 8.
The
thinking appears to be that the Windows 8 name is now too tarnished and
that – in contrast to Reller's comments above – Microsoft wishes to
clear things out by releasing Windows 9 instead. ZDNet's Mary Jo Foley recently echoed these reports, citing sources pointing toward a spring 2015 release for Windows 9.
In
May, prolific Microsoft leaker FaiKee released two separate documents
that he or she claims to be Redmond's full roadmap for Windows 9 and
other products. The first of which, released to the My Digital Life forums, pointed to text reading "Windows 9 Windows Preview Release @ 2015 02-03."
That appears to point toward a preview release of either February or March 2015. The second leak was caught by Myce.com,
and is a bit more vague in timing but less so in the actual text. That
alleged official document detailed a preview release between Q2 and Q3
2015, so by September of next year at the latest.
In June, we learned from a ZDNet source that Microsoft would launch a preview build of the latest Windows in the fall. But most recently, WZOR struck again
with a rumor that Windows 9 in full will launch in that same time
frame. Naturally, a Microsoft representative snapped back at the rumor
on Twitter.
How much will Windows 9 cost?
Not a cent. At least that's what Russian leaker collective WZOR
claims to have heard. The group reports that Microsoft is considering
pushing out Windows 9 for free, but cannot confirm at this time.
What
the collective has heard exactly is that a prototype version is in the
works in which a barebones version of Windows 9 will be available for
free. For additional functionality, users would have to pay up through a
subscription.
That said, ZDNet's Foley has heard the opposite:
different SKUs of Windows will be offered for free or at different
prices to OEMs and consumers, but that the desktop version will indeed
have a sticker price. A recent, subsequent leak provided by WZOR seems to not only corroborate Foley's sources, but render its previous report moot.
What will Windows 9 features be like?
Updated What do we know about the future of Windows?
Page 2 of 2What will Windows 9 features be like?
Will Windows 9 focus heavily on cloud computing? What is Bing's role
in the new OS? How much of a power drain will this new version be? We
know about as much as these leakers and reporters claim, but have
collected all the latest rumors and scuttlebutt below.
Windows 9: Return of the Start Menu
Teased
during the Build 2014 keynote address, the long-missed Start is
basically guaranteed to make its return in Windows 9. Since that preview
of the Start menu, replete with both Desktop and Modern UI elements, a
screenshot (seen below) of an updated version of the feature has
surfaced – ba-dum, chhh – through the MyDigitalLife forums.
Regardless
of whether the snap is legit, since Microsoft has publicly promised the
return of the Start menu, it should be safe to expect its debut in
Windows 9 ... whenever that is. (Credit: DUF_, MyDigitalLife)
Machine learning is the future of Windows?
That's at least what Microsoft Research lead Peter Lee wants out of Windows 9. He said as much in an in-depth interview with Digital Trends
recently, pointing to Microsoft's Azure cloud computing platform and
Bing to hopefully be the drivers behind the next versions of Windows.
"Using
machine learning to extract relationships, entities, key ideas being
worked on and bring those to the surface in tools. Maybe even
digital-assistant tools to make companies more productive and smarter.
That's one area we're going at" for Windows 9, Lee said.
"If I
write a document and I want to say, share this with the appropriate
people that work with Vikram from the meeting, or say, 'what's trending
around me at work,' not in my personal space but at work … answering
questions like that requires a very different kind of machine learning,"
he said.
Windows 9 to be smaller, with more apps
In the last Microsoft earnings call CFO Peter Klein made it clear that Microsoft has got the message that Windows 8 tablets
need to be cheaper; "we know that our growth depends on our ability to
give customers the exciting hardware they want, at the price-points they
demand."
Another revealing Microsoft job advert talks about
having Windows Phone and Windows RT apps run on both Windows Phone and
Windows – it's no secret that Microsoft wants to unify things in this
area.
"Do you wish the code you write for Windows Store apps
would just work on the Windows Phone and vice versa? If so, then this is
the role for you! We are the team leading the charge to bring much of
the WinRT API surface and the .NET Windows Store profile to the Phone."
That
sounds like a longer term goal, given that the job advert was on the
Microsoft Careers site at the beginning of February 2012, and it's being
driven by the Windows Phone team, but it could give developers an
incentive to write apps for the Windows Store and give Windows 9 users
more to choose from. Scaling apps to fit different size screens would
help here too.
Windows 9 reaches for the cloud
A vision
for a smaller version of Windows with more apps sounds like it lines up
nicely with rumors that Windows 9 will focus heavily on cloud computing.
WZOR claims to have information that supports this idea, pointing
toward a Chrome OS-like operating system that requires an internet
connection.
According to the leaker group, the core of Windows 9
will live in the given system's BIOS, while the rest of the OS will
reside in the cloud, ready for picking via various apps and services.
(Exactly how much of the standard Windows functions would be left out is
what's worrying about this rumor.)
Windows 9 power management
A
recent Channel 9 video featuring Bruce Worthington, who leads the team
working on Windows power management fundamentals, included some rather
technical details about saving power in Windows and the improvement in
Windows 8.
"If you look at the number of times we would wake up
the CPU per second," he explained, "for Windows 7 you would typically
see numbers on the order of one millisecond. We would literally be
waking up the CPU a thousand times per second. If you look at Windows 8,
on a clean system, we have numbers that are better than a hundred
milliseconds. "
Now that Windows Phone 8 is based on the Windows
Phone kernel, power management has to get better. "Now we're looking
forward to the next release and we can get even farther – especially as
we start interacting more and more with our phone brethren.
"They
want us to be quiet for multiple seconds at a time. They even talk
about minutes in some scenarios which is pretty far afield for us, to be
thinking about minutes of being completely quiet. At least getting into
the multi-second we're definitely ready to think about that."
Especially with Intel Haswell
bringing Connected Standby to Core systems, not just low-power Atom
tablets, saving power looks like a priority for Windows 9 (especially if
it comes out at the same time as Intel's new chips.
"For the next
release there's all kinds of things we've already identified that are
going be quite challenging but at the same time the user is going to get
a tremendous boost forward," Worthington promised.
Windows 9 gestures and experiences
There
are features we predicted for Windows 8 based on Microsoft patents and
technologies we've seen demonstrated by Microsoft leaders like CTO Craig
Mundie that didn't make it into the OS. There are features Microsoft
plans for every version of Windows that get cut to ship on time;
sometimes they reappear, sometimes they don't.
Kinect-based 3D
gestures might be on the cards this time around, especially as we hear
that some notebooks will soon get 3D cameras – although from other
suppliers rather than Microsoft.
Using two cheap webcams rather
than an expensive 3D camera could make gesture recognition hardware
cheap enough for laptops and then you could wave at the screen from a
distance.
And maybe Direct Experience will arrive in Windows 9. The patent
explains this as a way of starting Windows to play media files in a
special purpose operating system and there are improvements in Hyper-V
for Windows Server 8 that Microsoft could use to make Windows 9 work
better for this, like being able to move a virtual machine from one
place to another while it's running. Direct Experience would start up a media version of Windows if you booted with a USB stick of music files plugged inOne
obvious question is whether Windows 9 will be 64-bit only – something
that Microsoft threatened even before Windows 7 shipped – but that's
going to depend on what chips are in PCs.
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