Skip to main content

Windows 7 Gets Pre-Beta Release in October

Windows 7 Gets Pre-Beta Release in October

Microsoft has confirmed that attendees of its upcoming WinHEC and Professional Developer Conference will receive “pre-beta” versions of its forthcoming Windows 7 operating system. The Professional Developer Conference (PDC) is scheduled for October 27–30 in Los Angeles; WinHec follows a week later.

“Attendees will be among the first to receive the pre-beta build of Windows 7,” write Microsoft marketing manager Denise Begley in a PDC blog. “Additionally, attendees will have the opportunity to attend 21 different sessions that drill down into the details of developing for Windows 7.

Although Microsoft is officially aiming to get Windows 7 out the door during the first half of 2010, industry sources have Microsoft aiming to get a final code release of the next version of its desktop operating system done by mid-2009, which may open the doors to getting the enter operating system out the door sooner.

Windows 7 will be Microsoft’s followup to Windows Vista, which was launched to consumers in early 2007…and was greeted by much trepidation and gnashing of teeth. Although Microsoft continues to rake in significantly amounts of money from sales of Vista, consumer and industry response to the operating system has been so lackluster that Microsoft has recently launched a $300 million ad campaign to promote Vista’s virtues to the world. The campaign—which initially featuring Bill Gates and Jerry Seinfeld and is now attempting to bounce off Apple’s long-running Mac vs. PC ads—has generally been greeted with a mixture of ambivalence and confusion…not unlike Vista itself.

Windows 7 isn’t set up to be a radical change from Vista, and will employ the same kernel technology and device drivers. However, as Microsoft shifts more of its focus toward the Internet, an increasing number of Windows 7 core services will rely on Microsoft online offerings, including email, and movie and photo services.

Geoff Duncan
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Geoff Duncan writes, programs, edits, plays music, and delights in making software misbehave. He's probably the only member…
Windows 11 is getting a major Mac feature soon
HP Pavilion x360 convertible on a white background displaying Windows 11.

Microsoft is testing a task overflow bar in Windows 11 that works much like the stacks feature in MacOS.

The feature is now available in the Windows 11 Insider Preview Build 25163, which rolled out to the Dev Channel on Thursday. The overflow makes it so that when you have more apps open than can fit in the taskbar, they are stored in their own section, which can be accessed via an ellipses icon (…) on the bottom-right section of the screen. You can click the icon to view, access, or close the still-running apps that no longer fit on the crowded taskbar.

Read more
AMD, Nvidia, and Intel all get rumored next-gen release dates
Nvidia and AMD's CEOs side-by-side.

The next few months are undoubtedly going to be an exciting time in the PC hardware arena. With three of the market's biggest brands -- Intel, AMD, and Nvidia -- all set to release the next generations of graphics cards and processors, we're about to witness a real battle of the titans.

The rumor mill has already been buzzing with speculation about the upcoming AMD Ryzen 7000, AMD RDNA 3, Intel Raptor Lake, and Nvidia RTX 40-series. Now, new leaks give us a bit of a clue as to the release dates and some of the prices of these products.

Read more
Chromebooks might get another great feature from Windows laptops
Google Meets on an HP Chromebook.

Some premium Windows laptops have a nifty feature that can detect your presence and lock the screen for your security, or even track you to improve your digital well-being. This is something that current ChromeOS devices don't yet support, but there's now an indication, spotted by Chrome Unboxed, that it might already be in the works for a new Chromebook model.

This is all being fueled by a listing in the Chromium repository that mentions "body detection" for a Chromebook that goes by the name of "Crota." This Chromebook apparently has the 12th-generation Intel Alder Lake CPU and could be coming in early 2023. Adding to that speculation is the fact that @wistron is attached to the email domain in the listing, which Chromeunboxed finds is typically associated with Dell's involvement in a project.

Read more