Recommended Posts

I'm surprised none of the NeoWin News Staff didn't see this. There is more to Windows rumors than Paul Thurrott.

Microsoft officials told MGX attendees that the company is currently internally planning Windows Seven. So far, the company has determined Windows Seven will come in both 32- and 64-bit flavors. No word on how many SKUs or any kind of guidance on features was provided, but Microsoft did say it would address both consumer and business segments with Windows Seven. Microsoft is mulling the concept of how to extend Windows Seven with subscription-based services, according to the deck ? more like Microsoft Desktop Optimization Pack (MDOP), which Microsoft currently offers to its Software Assurance customers, than Windows Live, however.

Read more here

They shouldn't force it yet... lot's of people don't have money to upgrade yet.. plus im not giving away my p4 3.0ghz just because. Benefits of 64 architecture is in sight and everyone can see it. Its a matter of time till everyone upgrades.

They shouldn't force it yet... lot's of people don't have money to upgrade yet.. plus im not giving away my p4 3.0ghz just because. Benefits of 64 architecture is in sight and everyone can see it. Its a matter of time till everyone upgrades.

if people can't afford to upgrade their pc in 3 years (or however long it's going to take for microsoft to release windows 7) do you really think they should even bother purchasing and installing windows 7?

Having just the 64bit version will make it a lot easier to manage than having to also worry about 32bit.

if people can't afford to upgrade their pc in 3 years (or however long it's going to take for microsoft to release windows 7) do you really think they should even bother purchasing and installing windows 7?

Having just the 64bit version will make it a lot easier to manage than having to also worry about 32bit.

Agreed. I think they did a good thing by making Windows Vista in both variants, however:

Every computer bought in the last year will be 64 bit, and Windows 7 isn't for at least another 2- 3 years.

This means that a non-64 bit computer will be almost 4 years old, at which stage, the idea of installing a new OS release on it is silly.

Take the plunge, go with 64 bit support, force great driver support, simplify things!

Chris

Another thing people must think of is the fact that with vista they practically require a dx9 card (for aero of course, i do realise however that its not a forced requirement since you can run in basic mode without aero) so why not push the cards a lot further. I say its fair game for 3-4 years out to demand 64bit or no new OS. ESPECIALLY when there is no drawback to using AMD64 (except for 16bit apps not working, like old dos and 3.1 software, but i find that a lot of old 16bit stuff doesnt even work in vista 32bit so its not much of a loss).

By then dx9/10 card + a 64bit processor should be baseline requirements. Not to mention didnt microsoft say server 2008 was the last 32bit server OS?

The faster microsoft forces things like 64bit, multi cores, virtualisation via on die hypervisor the faster we get better driver support and better application support to make use of these features. (well you cant really force multi cores, but you understand were im going with it)

then microsoft can price windows better, as if an operating system should cost as much as vista ultimate does ...

if you dont like the price then dont buy it. you dont have a right to buy the OS. Theyre in it to make as much money as they can

They shouldn't force it yet... lot's of people don't have money to upgrade yet.. plus im not giving away my p4 3.0ghz just because. Benefits of 64 architecture is in sight and everyone can see it. Its a matter of time till everyone upgrades.

I reckon if you're still using a P4 3.0Ghz in 2010 then it's tragic.

I hope Microsoft re-considers shipping a 32 bit Windows "7", it's time to let go of the old x86 codebase IMHO

So going by Microsofts track record with choice we could be looking at somewhere in the region of 24 variations of Windows 7 - six 32 bit variations for 32bit only pc's, six 64 bit variations for users who have updated/bought new pc's and twelve subscription possibilities for both 32 and 64 bit pc's.

I'm all for choice but that would be ridiculous. :laugh:

So going by Microsofts track record with choice we could be looking at somewhere in the region of 24 variations of Windows 7 - six 32 bit variations for 32bit only pc's, six 64 bit variations for users who have updated/bought new pc's and twelve subscription possibilities for both 32 and 64 bit pc's.

I'm all for choice but that would be ridiculous. :laugh:

And people thought that Vista had too many choices ;)

i have to say I am very fearful of their "subscription services" - This has the potential to get ugly.

They 'll give you a halfed-assed firewall because onecare has a better one, a crappy anti-spyware tool, cuz they are sellling a better one, etc.

Let's face it, with microsoft's record we will receive a half-way done OS and be expected to pay for their subscription services to get their "Ultimate" experience. I can already see this getting people disillusioned with the next windows because of this (kind of what has happened with vista).

Then again, this is nothing more than very early speculation, a real judgement cannot be passed until we actually try this.

I'm wildly frustrated by Microsoft's 365 SKUs policy. It frustrates customers and only gets them more money for less from the customers... I mean... If they built a nice version of Windows, why not release it? Get it out in a way that everyone can see how GREAT Windows can be!

I'm wildly frustrated by Microsoft's 365 SKUs policy. It frustrates customers and only gets them more money for less from the customers... I mean... If they built a nice version of Windows, why not release it? Get it out in a way that everyone can see how GREAT Windows can be!

I know you are exaggerating, but there are only six Windows Vista SKUs.

Starter Edition: Only available in developing in markets in continents such as Asia and countries such as Russia, Mexico and Brazil to name a few. And you can only get it on new PCs through OEM, you can't buy it off shelf. The OEM cost is said to be $30 to $40. It meets the needs of most persons in these markets who don't need Bitlocker Drive Encryption, Media Center, Meeting Space.

Home Basic: This is considered to the mainstream SKU for most home users, targetting persons with only one PC or basic needs, you get tools ensure that your PC runs efficiently and is protected, also there are features such as being able to burn CDs, manage your photos, instantly find your files.

Home Premium: For homes with with multiple PCs or persons who own laptops/Tablet PCs, who want more flash provided by Windows AERO, Flip 3D, Mobility Center for managing your laptop or Tablet PC. Meeting space for collaborating and sharing documents, watching and recording TV with Media Center, connecting your XBOX 360 and stream content from it to your TV.

Business: Instant Search, Windows AERO, Laptop/Tablet PC support, Meeting Space, Advanced Backup, Remote Desktop, ability to join a Domain if you are on a corporate network.

Enterprise: Everything in Business SKU, with support for multi-lingual companies with with many companies, making it easier to deploy regardless of user machine or language. Sub-system for Unix systems. You can only acquire this through a SA or EA contract, which means you are paying in the ranges of thousands of dollars, basically its out of average users reach.

Ultimate: Best of both worlds, you get every from the consumer and business branches. If you have Tablet PC you use at both home and work.

So, Microsoft is meeting the needs of different types of users, not everybody wants XBOX or Media Center or Tablet or Unix System or Multi-Lingual or Domain Join support.

I know you are exaggerating, but there are only six Windows Vista SKUs.

Starter Edition: Only available in developing in markets in continents such as Asia and countries such as Russia, Mexico and Brazil to name a few. And you can only get it on new PCs through OEM, you can't buy it off shelf. The OEM cost is said to be $30 to $40. It meets the needs of most persons in these markets who don't need Bitlocker Drive Encryption, Media Center, Meeting Space.

Home Basic: This is considered to the mainstream SKU for most home users, targetting persons with only one PC or basic needs, you get tools ensure that your PC runs efficiently and is protected, also there are features such as being able to burn CDs, manage your photos, instantly find your files.

Home Premium: For homes with with multiple PCs or persons who own laptops/Tablet PCs, who want more flash provided by Windows AERO, Flip 3D, Mobility Center for managing your laptop or Tablet PC. Meeting space for collaborating and sharing documents, watching and recording TV with Media Center, connecting your XBOX 360 and stream content from it to your TV.

Business: Instant Search, Windows AERO, Laptop/Tablet PC support, Meeting Space, Advanced Backup, Remote Desktop, ability to join a Domain if you are on a corporate network.

Enterprise: Everything in Business SKU, with support for multi-lingual companies with with many companies, making it easier to deploy regardless of user machine or language. Sub-system for Unix systems. You can only acquire this through a SA or EA contract, which means you are paying in the ranges of thousands of dollars, basically its out of average users reach.

Ultimate: Best of both worlds, you get every from the consumer and business branches. If you have Tablet PC you use at both home and work.

So, Microsoft is meeting the needs of different types of users, not everybody wants XBOX or Media Center or Tablet or Unix System or Multi-Lingual or Domain Join support.

Starter edition - can't buy it here

Home basic - home premium provides more for a better price

Enterprise - only if you're in an enterprise do you even have to think about this

so really, there's only 3 practical SKUs, Home Premium, Business, and Ultimate

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • Transmission 4.1.2 by Razvan Serea Transmission is a fast, easy-to-use bittorrent client with support for encryption, a web interface, peer exchange, magnet links, DHT, µTP, UPnP and NAT-PMP port forwarding, webseed support, watch directories, tracker editing, global and per-torrent speed limits, and more. Transmission has one of the lowest memory & resource footprints of any major BitTorrent client. Transmission's light overhead is one reason why it is so well suited for home NAS and media servers. Having been used by Western Digital, Zyxel and Belkin, Transmission gives truly impressive performance on almost any compatible hardware. Transmission is an open source, volunteer-based project. Unlike some BitTorrent clients, Transmission doesn't play games with its users to make money. Transmission doesn't bundle toolbars, pop-up ads, flash ads, twitter tools, or anything else. It doesn't hold some features back for a payware version. Its source code is available for anyone to review. Transmission doesn't track users, the website and forums have no third-party ads or analytics. Transmission 4.1.2 changelog: This is Transmission 4.1.2, a bugfix release. It fixes 20+ bugs and has a few performance improvements too. All users are encouraged to upgrade to this version. Highlights Fixed 4.1.0 bug that could cause duplicate HTTP announces to be sent to trackers. (#8639) All Platforms Reject benc data that has invalid characters. (#8577) Fixed a bug during the startup sequence where if one torrent failed to parse, subsequent torrents would also fail. (#8605) Fixed a bug that stalled some downloads at 99%. (#8654) Fixed a 4.1.0 upgrade bug that could overwrite utp_enabled and tcp_enabled settings. (#8658) Fixed a 4.1.0 crash that could happen when a peer supplied reqq value smaller than 32 in LTEP handshake. (#8713) Fixed a 4.1.0 regression that periodically wrote upload & download stats to disk even when Transmission had been idle since the last write, preventing the stats file's disk from hibernating while idle. (#8722) Fixed a 4.1.0 bug that prevented TCP peer connections on some systems. (#8748) Added safeguards to HTTP responses to prevent clickjacking. (#8749) Fixed edge case that didn't preserve the order of a batch of torrents when moving their queue position up or down. (#8782) Added sanitization for UTF-8 client names provided by peers during handshake. (#8809) Stopped appending redundant zeros to blocklist files when downloaded from a remote URL. (#8819) Fixed a build failure that occurred when building with link-time optimization. (#8540) macOS Client Fixed a 4.1.0 memory leak. (#8613) Fixed navigation focus issues in the Inspector. (#8792, #8810) Improved UI code to use less CPU. (#8832, #8833, #8835, #8836, #8842, #8846, #8851) Qt Client Fixed a 4.1.0 crash when parsing some RPC responses from older Transmission servers. (#8618) Fixed a 4.1.0 bug that saved both deprecated and current settings names to settings.json. (#8623) GTK Client Fixed a 4.1.0 bug that did not show translated logging level strings. (#8611) Fixed a 4.1.0 crash when toggling alternative speed limits. (#8709) Web Client Fixed a 4.1.0 bug that displayed timestamps in some dropdowns as 6.75:45 instead of 6:45. (#8624) Fixed a bug that could show incorrect torrent status when reconnecting to the server after a lost connection. (#8780, #8783) transmission-remote Improved transmission-remote console output for JSON-RPC 2. (#8799, #8805) Download: Transmission 64-bit | Qt 5 Setup ~20.0 MB (Open Source) Download: Transmission 32-bit | Qt 5 Setup Links: Transmission Homepage | Other OSes | Screenshot Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
    • The sweet release of death has never looked more appealing.
    • Meh, just another dongle-haven downgrade compared to my Surface Pro 7+. Whenever I decide to upgrade in the next decade or so, it certainly won't be another microslop Surface with this enshitification trend they've been having after the Surface Pro 7+. Hopefully a future generation of the Framework 12 will be a real upgrade...
    • This could exactly be how our Sun ends but it's not as simple by Sayan Sen Image by Drew Rae via Pexels An international team led by Université de Montréal (University of Montreal) PhD student Érika Le Bourdais has found that the ancient white dwarf star LSPM J0207+3331 is still pulling in planetary debris, even though it has been cooling for about three billion years. White dwarfs are dense, Earth-sized stellar remnants left behind when Sun-like stars exhaust their nuclear fuel and shed their outer layers. The star, located 145 light-years away in the constellation Triangulum, is the oldest and coldest white dwarf known to have a surrounding disk of dust. The star was first spotted in 2019 by a citizen scientist through the Backyard Worlds: Planet 9 project. Its cool temperature immediately suggested that it was very old, since white dwarfs gradually lose heat over time. Using the W. M. Keck telescopes in Hawaii, astronomers later confirmed that the star shows infrared signals consistent with dust rings formed by asteroids breaking apart under its strong gravity. Such infrared excesses occur when a star emits more infrared light than expected, often because warm dust surrounding it absorbs and re-radiates energy. “This discovery challenges our understanding of planetary system evolution,” said Le Bourdais. “The fact that we still see planetary debris being accreted three billion years after the star became a white dwarf suggests that asteroids, comets, and even planets can remain in orbit around these stars for a very long time.” Spectroscopic analysis—a technique that studies light to identify the chemical elements present in an object—revealed thirteen heavy elements in the star’s atmosphere: sodium, magnesium, aluminium, silicon, calcium, titanium, chromium, manganese, iron, cobalt, nickel, copper, and strontium. Normally, heavy elements sink quickly in hydrogen-rich white dwarfs, making them hard to detect. “We expected to see only a few elements, but we found dozens!” explained Le Bourdais. The research paper adds more detail. The absence of carbon features suggests the debris came from a carbon-volatile-depleted source. The abundance pattern shows slight deficits of magnesium and silicon compared to iron but otherwise resembles Earth-like material. This points to a differentiated rocky body—one whose materials have separated into distinct layers such as a metallic core and rocky mantle—with a metallic core fraction higher than Earth’s. In other words, the star is accreting the remains of a large rocky object, similar in structure to Earth or the asteroid Vesta. “White dwarfs offer one of the only ways we can directly measure the composition of exoplanets,” said Patrick Dufour, co-author and professor at Université de Montréal. “When planetary debris come too close, they are torn apart by the star’s gravity and end up polluting its atmosphere, leaving a detailed chemical fingerprint of its composition.” The team also detected weak Ca II H & K line core emission, making this only the second known isolated polluted white dwarf to show this feature. These are specific spectral signatures produced by ionised calcium and can indicate unusual physical activity in a star’s upper atmosphere. The finding suggests that extra physical processes may be happening in or above the star’s upper atmosphere. The study stresses the importance of including heavy elements in model atmosphere calculations, since leaving them out can distort the inferred structure and lead to inaccurate stellar parameters. Earlier work suggested the star’s infrared excess came from two dust rings. The new analysis shows that a single silicate dust disk—a ring composed largely of rock-forming minerals rich in silicon and oxygen—can explain the observed signal at 11.6 μm, simplifying the picture of the system’s structure. The question of how debris ended up falling into the star so late remains open. One idea is that giant planets in the system slowly destabilised smaller bodies over billions of years. Another possibility is that a passing star disturbed the orbits of debris. “Future observations with the James Webb Space Telescope or archival data found in the European Space Agency’s Gaia mission could help distinguish between a planetary rearrangement and the gravitational effect of a close stellar encounter,” said John Debes, co-author and researcher at the Space Telescope Science Institute. Dufour noted that hydrogen-rich white dwarfs are the most common type, and the coolest among them are the oldest stars in the galaxy. “We didn't have the habit of looking for signs of accretion in them. This unique case motivates us to expand our search to more of these stars.” The findings show that even after billions of years, planetary systems can remain active and complex. Substantial accretion events—the gradual accumulation of surrounding material onto a celestial object—can still occur long after a star’s death, offering a rare window into the composition and fate of distant worlds. Source: University of Montreal, IOPScience This article was generated with some help from AI and reviewed by an editor. Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, this material is used for the purpose of news reporting. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing.
  • Recent Achievements

    • One Month Later
      B2Proxy earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • One Year In
      MadMung0 earned a badge
      One Year In
    • Week One Done
      jefred earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Apprentice
      JoeyNeo went up a rank
      Apprentice
    • Week One Done
      oliviaexpo earned a badge
      Week One Done
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      485
    2. 2
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      228
    3. 3
      Skyfrog
      70
    4. 4
      FloatingFatMan
      58
    5. 5
      neufuse
      56
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!