Microsoft sees end of Windows era


Recommended Posts

Microsoft has kicked off a research project to create software that will take over when it retires Windows. Called Midori, the cut-down operating system is radically different to Microsoft's older programs. It is centred on the internet and does away with the dependencies that tie Windows to a single PC. It is seen as Microsoft's answer to rivals' use of "virtualisation" as a way to solve many of the problems of modern-day computing.

Although Midori has been heard about before now, more details have now been published by Software Development Times after viewing internal Microsoft documents describing the technology. Midori is believed to be under development because Windows is unlikely to be able to cope with the pace of change in future technology and the way people use it. Windows worked well in an age when most people used one machine to do all their work. The operating system acted as the holder for the common elements Windows programs needed to call on. "If you think about how an operating system is loaded," said Dave Austin, European director of products at Citrix, "it's loaded onto a hard disk physically located on that machine. "The operating system is tied very tightly to that hardware," he said. That, he said, created all kinds of dependencies that arose out of the collection of hardware in a particular machine.

This means, he said, that Windows can struggle with more modern ways of working in which people are very mobile and very promiscuous in the devices they use to get at their data - be that pictures, spreadsheets or e-mail. Equally, he said, when people worked or played now, they did it using a combination of data and processes held locally or in any of a number of other places online. When asked about Midori by BBC News, Microsoft issued a statement that said: "Midori is one of many incubation projects underway at Microsoft. It's simply a matter of being too early in the incubation to talk about it."

Midori is widely seen as an ambitious attempt by Microsoft to catch up on the work on virtualisation being undertaken in the wider computer industry. Darren Brown, data centre lead at consulting firm Avanade, said virtualisation had first established itself in data centres among companies with huge numbers of servers to manage. Putting applications, such as an e-mail engine or a database, on one machine brought up all kinds of problems when those machines had to undergo maintenance, needed updating or required a security patch to be applied. By putting virtual servers on one physical box, companies had been able to shrink the numbers of machines they managed and get more out of them, he said. "The real savings are around physical management of the devices and associated licensing," he said. "Physically, there is less tin to manage."

Equally, said Mr Brown, if one physical server failed the virtualised application could easily be moved to a separate machine. "The same benefits apply to the PC," he said. "Within the Microsoft environment, we have struggled for years with applications that are written so poorly that they will not work with others. "Virtualising this gives you a couple of new ways to tackle those traditional problems," he said. Many companies were still using very old applications that existing operating systems would not run, he said. By putting a virtual machine on a PC, those older programs can be kept going. A virtual machine, like its name implies, is a software copy of a computer complete with operating system and associated programs.

"On the desktop we are seeing people place great value in being able to abstract the desktop from actual physical hardware," said Dan Chu, vice president of emerging products and markets at virtualisation specialist VMWare. Some virtual machines, he said, acted like Windows PCs to all intents and purposes. But many virtual machines were now emerging that were tuned for a particular industry, sector or job. "People take their application, the operating system they want to run it against, package it up along with policy and security they want and use that as a virtual client," he said.

In such virtual machines, the core of the operating system can be very small and easy to transfer to different devices. This, many believe, is the idea behind Midori - to create a lightweight portable operating system that can easily be mated to many different applications. Microsoft's licensing terms for Windows currently prohibited it acting as a virtual machine or client in this way, said Mr Chu. Michael Silver, research vice president at Gartner, said the development of Midori was a sensible step for Microsoft.

"The value of Microsoft Windows, of what that product is today, will diminish as more applications move to the web and Microsoft needs to edge out in front of that," he said. "I would be surprised if there was definitive evidence that nothing like this was not kicking around," he said. The big problem that Microsoft faced in doing away with Windows, he said, was how to re-make its business to cope. "Eighty percent of Windows sales are made when a new PC is sold," he said. "That's a huge amount of money for them that they do not have to go out and get. "If Windows ends up being less important over time as applications become more OS agnostic where will Microsoft make its money?" he asked.

Source: BBC.co.uk

Posted: 09:51 GMT, Monday, 4 August 2008 10:51

Link to comment
https://www.neowin.net/forum/topic/653416-microsoft-sees-end-of-windows-era/
Share on other sites

Damn, you beat me to it! :D I saw this earlier.

I really like this idea. There's a similar thing already out called Mojopac. You basically stick it on a pen drive and put your programs and games on it, and you can use them on any PC! Better still, nothing is left on the computer. Everything goes through your pen drive.

no way in hell cloud computing will replace the typical programs it is way slower for many things internet bandwidth limitions (our telco by then **** our bloods )

and even if internet become 1000x times faster it is still better to run them natively in the machine

no way in hell cloud computing will replace the typical programs it is way slower for many things internet bandwidth limitions (our telco by then **** our bloods )

and even if internet become 1000x times faster it is still better to run them natively in the machine

It's inevitable. Midori will come for you.... *cue evil laughter*

Read "The World is Flat" by Thomas Friedman. It discusses work flow software and how everything's based on the Internet now.

I really don't like what I read. I don't want a 'cloud' computer.

Got this funny feeling that this move will cost Microsoft it's lead in operating systems. Also make me want to look to other companies like, Apple for instance.

cloud (osx ) haha they will rip off there fans even more they will make them pay 1000$ a mounth to use the best os in the world

//sacarasim

I thought Microsoft would have learned its lessons with Windows XP -> Windows Vista. Too many changes result in unhappy customers and loss of market share. Looks like Microsoft flunk that lesson. :/

This whole topic makes me wonder, if Microsoft is planning to make Windows obselete, and spread news like this. How will their stock price react? Practically Microsoft is calling Windows a 'has been'. I imagine this is not a smart move.

ok and how many ppl will run that OS?. would be great to see that... Because you will need a very fast connection and in the way the net is growing everyday I dont see that might (ever) happend.

Creating traffic where already is a bunch of traffic never was a good idea.

the article doesen't quote anyone from microsoft,so..........

In wich basis BBC news and neowin says that Microsoft himself sees no futur for windows?.

It's completely ridicoulous,Nobody that has been quoted on this article are from microsoft itself,they can belive whatever they want,the only one who decides the futre of Windows is Microsoft.

I don't understand why you guys think this article is implying that this is something MS is planning on implementing anytime soon. It does no such thing. It's just saying that MS is covering their bases should people come to want something drastically different.

I can see cloud computing becoming the norm, but not for at least another decade or two. It won't be feasible until then.

-Spenser

Mojave was the pr experiment, which was very successful.

BTW, i wouldn't keep trolling this same thread. makes you appear obvious. Fail.

Yes, Mojave was a clever bit of marketing. So now when people ask me what I use on my home PC - I say Windows 'Mojave' :D

I don't get your last statement. I guess you're just too clever for little old me.

Actually many of the complaints about vista weren't even from actual customers. they were from random linux fans on the net with nothing better to do but join some hate ms wagon.

...

Funny. I am a Linux "fan", yet you don't see me trashing Vista. I have even offered up some positive comments on it.

Then, go look in the Windows area of the Neowin forums. See all the XP "fans" trashing Vista there?

So, it's the Linux users, not the Windows users, eh? :shifty:

I've got no problems with Vista and am looking forward to Windows 7.

I'm sure Microsoft is always toying around with ideas like this. I have a hard time seeing it not being called Windows, but who knows, maybe they will develop an entirely new naming scheme.

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

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • Tidal won't monetize AI slop music, company says by David Uzondu Image via Tidal Tidal has announced an AI policy aimed at protecting artists and their crafts, as AI music generation tools continue to improve both in speed and quality. According to the music streaming platform, AI-generated music will be accepted, but these tracks will be held to a "higher standard" of content integrity. Next month, the company plans to auto-identify and tag these uploads. Listeners will spot a special icon next to content that algorithms flag as 100% AI-generated starting mid-July, and the platform hopes to expand this tag to partially generated songs as detection tech improves. Any AI music that exploits an artist's voice or likeness will be taken down, and Tidal will immediately block tracks associated with fraudulent activity, which includes artificial streaming and deceptive content that interferes with real creators. And finally, music that's 100% AI-generated will not be monetized. Tidal said there is "ongoing debate" about whether certain licensed synthetic models deserve payouts, so it's possible that this part will change in the future. Streaming platforms are absolutely getting flooded with AI-generated music because of how easy it is to pump out endless tracks every minute. To give you an idea of how "bad" it is, Deezer alone reported that synthetic uploads now make up about 44% of its daily intake, which translates to roughly 75,000 automated tracks hitting its servers every single day. Interestingly, Deezer found most people cannot tell the difference between human and machine creations, with an Ipsos study revealing that 97% of listeners failed to spot the AI-generated tracks. Spotify's CEO recently pushed back against listeners who call AI music "slop," urging people to stop using the term and instead embrace the creative potential of AI music. The Swedish platform partnered with Universal Music Group to test "legal and controlled" generative AI tools that let subscribers remix songs with AI.
    • According to Microsoft, Cause: One of the drivers controlling the device notified the operating system that the device failed in some manner.   https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/topic/error-codes-in-device-manager-in-windows-524e9e89-4dee-8883-0afa-6bca0456324e
    • This looks awesome, I will request access via Steam later this afternoon!
    • Personally, I’ve found that it’s usually worth investing in the infrastructure you don’t want to replace later, especially cabling. Running Cat6A (or better, depending on your needs) during an upgrade is relatively inexpensive compared to having to re-cable a few years down the road. For switches I try to balance current specs with realistic growth. If my budget allows it Ill choose switches with higher uplink speeds which leaves room for expanding later on, but I don’t necessarily overspend on access ports if the endpoints won’t benefit from them anytime soon. One lesson I’ve learned is that planning for scalability pays off. It’s much easier to add devices, VLANs, or higher-bandwidth workloads when your network infrastructure already supports it than to replace hardware later.  What is your budget like?
  • Recent Achievements

    • Reacting Well
      NovaEdgeX earned a badge
      Reacting Well
    • Week One Done
      NovaEdgeX earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • One Year In
      BA the Curmudgeon earned a badge
      One Year In
    • Conversation Starter
      rosiecharles earned a badge
      Conversation Starter
    • First Post
      KMilenkoski1202 earned a badge
      First Post
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      539
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      269
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      154
    4. 4
      Steven P.
      99
    5. 5
      macoman
      66
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!