Pre-Release Testing Of Longhorn Starts + Screenshots
Spinner
Birmingham, UK
Microsoft has started offering a selected group of testers an early preview of Windows, Code-Name "Longhorn".
In other related news ieXbeta has made available some new screenshots of the latest Longhorn build 5203 as well as a handy recap of this weekends Longhorn events.
View: Longhorn Screenshots @ ieXbeta
View: A Recap of Longhorn News @ ieXbeta
Source: Neowin
In other related news ieXbeta has made available some new screenshots of the latest Longhorn build 5203 as well as a handy recap of this weekends Longhorn events.
View: Longhorn Screenshots @ ieXbeta
View: A Recap of Longhorn News @ ieXbeta
Late Friday night, Microsoft sent out a first round of Windows "Longhorn" beta invitations to a very select group of testers (e.g. WinHEC attendees, MVPs, Microsoft Partners, etc.). Unlike before though, these invitations contained a unique ID for each tester and also utilized a new beta testing site called Microsoft Connect. Ultimately, this new site will take the place of current sites such as Microsoft BetaPlace and Microsoft WindowsBeta. All this was in preparation for the Beta 1 rollout which is still planned for the end of July. Later on this summer, the beta program will be expanded for a second round of testing and will include the more regular beta testers, the Community Technology Preview program, and most likely the public at the large.
Longhorn will provide advancements in the following key areas:
-A strong focus on the fundamentals of the operating system, including advancements in reliability, performance, deployment, and ease of use.
-Major improvements to help PC users to work smarter and provide exciting new experiences for home users.
-The next-generation developer platform to make it easier for developers to create breakthrough applications.
Source: Neowin
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Comments
I was excited for Longhorn before - now I probably won't upgrade
It's nothing revolutionary. It's still fundamentally windows, with a modern looking UI. It's not a drastic paradigm shift like the one that happened from OS9 --> OSX.
Of course we'll all use it, we have no choice. They'll end support for Windows XP and we'll snicker and laugh at the old holdouts that are still using that ancient OS, just like we do now for 98/ME users.
An awful lot of prettiness there but I don't see any radical interface changes
I will upgrade to it though no matter what, I just love new things to fiddle with.
I'll upgrade just becuase it'll probably support alot of the new stuff natively like SATA(without the damned floppy drive! I HATE THE FLOPPY!), that alone makes it worth it IMHO. But if it can support 4 processors that'd be even better as i want to own dual athlons with dual cores
Are the menus still going to use the graphics card, rather than software to display? Or is that some pipe dream I had...