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        Microsoft Promoting Windows 7 for the Enterprise
        Microsoft on Wednesday explained how the needs of enterprise  users were considered in the early design stages of its new Windows 7 operating  system.
        
        
        Microsoft on Wednesday explained how the needs of enterprise  users were considered in the early design stages of its new Windows 7 operating  system. A 
blog  post by Gavriella Schuster, senior director of Windows product management,  described Microsoft's "behind the scenes" rationales.
The OS is currently being tested at the beta stage, and  Microsoft has already received "over 5,000 Send Feedback reports"  from beta testers, Schuster wrote.
Microsoft engaged its partners early in the design stage of  Windows 7 and polled 4,000 customers on such areas as "risk management, compliance  and mobility," Schuster explained. The respondents said they wanted three  features in the new OS: help protecting data on corporate laptops (56 percent);  control over user installs (61 percent); and support for remote worker access to  the corporate network (49 percent).
In response, the Windows 7 team added BitLocker protection  for laptops and portable hard drives. They added AppLocker to Windows 7 to lock  down installs. To enable remote access, they included plans to support Direct  Access capabilities in Windows 7, Schuster wrote. 
Veteran Microsoft watcher Mary-Jo Foley contradicted this  view that Windows 7 includes many features for the enterprise. She suggested that most of  the features in the beta were consumer oriented. A NetworkWorld  article took a different tack and claimed that Microsoft has already  briefed analysts on useful features in the Windows 7 Enterprise edition.
Schuster's blog post stays true to slow information-release concept  championed by the Engineering Windows 7 blog. That blog took the view early on that Microsoft should be honest but still not release too much  information about its new OS. The idea was to avoid misleading Microsoft's partners  on the direction of the OS -- a problem that ostensibly tripped up the release  of Windows Vista.
An Engineering Windows 7 post on Tuesday described Microsoft's  efforts to test applications for compatibility with Windows 7. Microsoft  officials have made the general claim that applications that work with Windows  Vista will also work with Windows 7. However, the blog added a caveat to that  contention.
"We do have to be careful about making this claim to be  universal because there is a class of applications that are always updated in  tandem with a new Windows release," the  blog explained. "These applications are primarily system utilities,  diagnostics, and security software -- the common thread is that they make  assumptions about the underlying implementation of Windows internals and thus  require updates."
In response, Microsoft has engaged closely with independent  software vendors to iron out the kinks, according to the blog.
Vista has been viewed by  some enterprise IT departments as an expensive upgrade that lacked additional  utility over Windows XP. A Forrester  Research study found that Vista had been  deployed by just 10 percent of enterprises surveyed nearly two years after its  release. 
A common complaint against Vista was that hardware upgrades  were needed to run Vista's glitzy Aero  graphical user interface. However, Microsoft now appears to be bending over  backwards in its communications to assure that Windows 7 won't get the same frosty  reception as Vista got in the enterprise. The  Windows 7 OS is said to have a lighter footprint than Windows Vista, with the  possibility of running on low-tech netbooks -- something that Vista  can't do for the most part.
Schuster emphasized that Microsoft understands that IT  departments are facing tough decisions in a bad economy.
"To summarize, customers tell us the economy is  bringing new levels of scrutiny to how they manage costs, mitigate risks and  make their people more productive with less. We get it," she wrote. 
However, the down economy ultimately may be an inhibiting  factor to Windows 7 sales. Chris Liddell, Microsoft's senior vice president and  chief financial officer, told financial  analysts last week that macroeconomic conditions would be the ultimate  determining factor for sales of Windows 7 and new PCs.
Windows 7 is scheduled for general public release in early  2010, but a rumor has suggested it could be released in the third quarter of  this year. Meanwhile, Liddell has predicted that the economic downturn could  last for another two years.
Apparently a new version of Windows 7 is now showing up on  BitTorrent sites. A Neowin.net  article claims to have spotted a leaked version of the Windows 7 Beta,  which it described as Build "7048." Microsoft had initially released  the Windows 7 Beta as Build 7000.    
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Kurt Mackie is senior news producer for 1105 Media's Converge360 group.