Vishal Gupta 4 Report post Posted July 26, 2005 Guys! Microsoft has announced the final name of Longhorn, (the next generation of Windows) which will have a very good security. The operating system, due out in 2006, will now be known as Windows Vista with the tag line, "Bringing clarity to your world." Microsoft's qoute: Beta 1, targeted at developers and IT professionals, will be available by August 3rd 2005.The first beta will include only some of Vista's promised functionality, such as virtual folders and a new desktop search engine, but will not include much of the graphical user interface (GUI) enhancements of the finished product. Those features will be available in beta 2. Windows Vista Homepage Microsoft Vista logo I'm attaching the Official Vista Wallpaper also. ENJOY!!! Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
gids 0 Report post Posted July 26, 2005 it sure is a long time after we'll have a diff version of windows. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Vishal Gupta 4 Report post Posted July 26, 2005 Microsoft says it will call the next version of its operating system "Windows Vista" as it prepares to release a wave of new products after posting its slowest-ever year of growth. Windows Vista, formerly known by its code-name Longhorn, is scheduled for a worldwide launch in the second half of 2006, five years after Windows XP, the longest time lag between releases of its flagship operating system that runs on nine out of 10 personal computers worldwide. Microsoft has promised many enhancements in Windows Vista, including better security, graphics and computing over the Web. "It's in the consumer area that they have the best hope of rapid adoption," said Rob Helm, analyst at independent researcher Directions on Microsoft. Brad Goldberg, general manager, Windows product development at Microsoft, said more details on Vista would be released at a developers' conference in September and a beta, or test version, by August 3. New products, including Windows Vista, the next version of Office, new database software and the Xbox 360 video game console are expected to help Microsoft return to double-digit growth after the company said on Thursday that yearly revenue grew 8 per cent to US$39.79 billion ($58.15 billion), the slowest yearly growth since Microsoft went public in 1986. Shares in the company fell 2.6 per cent to US$25.75 on Nasdaq on Friday after it said earnings for the current fiscal quarter would be just below Wall Street's expectations. At current prices, Microsoft is valued at 16 times projected earnings, compared with the average 24 times earnings valuation seen for the broader software sector. Courtesy: The New Zealand Herald Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
vb86 0 Report post Posted July 26, 2005 apparently they might need to change the name since its already been registered 6yrs bk in usa. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
deepu 0 Report post Posted July 27, 2005 Anybody knows about the hardware requirements!!! Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Vishal Gupta 4 Report post Posted July 27, 2005 Hardware Requirements for Longhorn Average Longhorn PC requires a dual-core CPU running at 4 to 6 GHz; a minimum of 2 gigs of RAM; up to a terabyte of storage; a 1 Gbit, built-in, Ethernet-wired port and an 802.11g wireless link; and a graphics processor that runs three times faster than those on the market today. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
anujit 0 Report post Posted July 27, 2005 I think thats asking a lil too much even for a resource hogging windows system! Especially since it has different "modes" of running i.e. cutting out on excessive graphics fat. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
deepu 0 Report post Posted July 27, 2005 Hardware Requirements for LonghornAverage Longhorn PC requires a dual-core CPU running at 4 to 6 GHz; a minimum of 2 gigs of RAM; up to a terabyte of storage; a 1 Gbit, built-in, Ethernet-wired port and an 802.11g wireless link; and a graphics processor that runs three times faster than those on the market today. 36607[/snapback] You got to be kidding!!! Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
jigar657 0 Report post Posted July 27, 2005 Hardware Requirements for LonghornAverage Longhorn PC requires a dual-core CPU running at 4 to 6 GHz; a minimum of 2 gigs of RAM; up to a terabyte of storage; a 1 Gbit, built-in, Ethernet-wired port and an 802.11g wireless link; and a graphics processor that runs three times faster than those on the market today. Hahaha vishal !! aur koi mila nahi kya !! is microsoft making longhorn only for supercomputers ??? :'( jigar Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Vishal Gupta 4 Report post Posted July 27, 2005 Guys! I just googled for it, copied the info & pasted it here... SIMPLE! :'( Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
ashoksoft 83 Report post Posted July 28, 2005 Supercomputers ? My a** that seems to be some Giga-Uber-Ultra computer..... btw ... how many users do those smart guys at MS expect to shift over to Vista? I am sure... they will scale it down very soon... or very soon it will not be 9/10 windows users.... he he Cheers Ashok Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Puneet 0 Report post Posted July 28, 2005 Hardware Requirements for LonghornAverage Longhorn PC requires a dual-core CPU running at 4 to 6 GHz; a minimum of 2 gigs of RAM; up to a terabyte of storage; a 1 Gbit, built-in, Ethernet-wired port and an 802.11g wireless link; and a graphics processor that runs three times faster than those on the market today. 36607[/snapback] Check this out: Windows Vista Hardware Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Vishal Gupta 4 Report post Posted July 30, 2005 Some real Longhorn/Vista screenshots Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Vishal Gupta 4 Report post Posted July 30, 2005 Winsupersite.com is providing a lot of screenshots of Vista, & I mean a lot Computer Control Panel The new Search Pictures & Videos Music Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
StaticElectricity 8 Report post Posted July 30, 2005 As of today this configuration seems far fetched.. Hardware Requirements for LonghornAverage Longhorn PC requires a dual-core CPU running at 4 to 6 GHz; a minimum of 2 gigs of RAM; up to a terabyte of storage; a 1 Gbit, built-in, Ethernet-wired port and an 802.11g wireless link; and a graphics processor that runs three times faster than those on the market today. but by fourth quarter 2006 or first quarter 2007 that'll be and average home desktop PC. And i'd really like to see some o/s giving tough competition to win98se , as for me, xp loses at point 0. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
anujit 0 Report post Posted July 30, 2005 Wonder what they're testing it out on. Especially since when they started Longhorn development I dont think they had 4 Ghz Pentiums out. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
StaticElectricity 8 Report post Posted July 30, 2005 yup, thats why the front end is not yet developed. anyways, for a company like microsoft , providing a computer with 5-6 parallel processesors to their dev team, no big deal. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
rEdshiFt 1 Report post Posted August 2, 2005 this is firefox and IE running in windows vista. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
anujit 0 Report post Posted August 3, 2005 Static: They can develop the thing on supercomputers for all I care... but they have to run the damn thing on ordinary machine to see if it works! And the front-end isnt developed because their management/planning/coding/testing s**ks not because they didnt have 4GHz P4s! Which is why they gave up on it. Maybe you'll see it in Win 2010 version! Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
deepu 0 Report post Posted August 3, 2005 Intel aur Microsoft bhai bhai log hain!!! Intel usually releases PCs with all latest microprocessors fit in much before it gets to Open market to software companies like Microsoft to test them out. Microsoft uses such PCs to test their OS!!! Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
anujit 0 Report post Posted August 3, 2005 (edited) Yes Deepu while this argument is irrelevent. Testing beta products on top of beta products hardly makes good test cases. Edited August 3, 2005 by anujit Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Vishal Gupta 4 Report post Posted August 3, 2005 thnx rEdshiFt 4 the screenshot. Vista looks gr8. I'm dying to install it... Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Vishal Gupta 4 Report post Posted August 3, 2005 Now some more from myside: Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Chirag 5 Report post Posted August 3, 2005 It all seems jazz on the outside like Windows XP... Hope there is something worthwhile on the inside!! Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
rEdshiFt 1 Report post Posted August 4, 2005 found it on a forum earlier: Longhorn's most useful feature "leaked "as XP tweakAccording to the article,--->Externer Link http://www.microsoft-watch.com/article2/0,...2129TX1K0000535 the Voles in the Redmond Vole Hill will deliver some astounding features. Those include the ability to launch apps 15% faster than Windows XP, boot PCs 50% faster, patch systems with 50% fewer reboots, and let firms migrate to Longhorn 75% per cent faster. The only reason why its faster is they added a superfetch feature to the prefetcher. If you look at the key: HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Control\SessionManager\Memory Management\Prefetcher you will notice in windows xp; EnablePrefetcher = 3 and you will notice in windows longhorn; EnableSuperfetch = 1 Well, guess what? You can put the EnableSuperfetch = 1 in windows xp and get the same speed. Wow, Microsoft just added a feature that was already there in xp. From what I have been reading the tweak is designed for at least Windows XP SP2. So maybe someone who has SP2 installed can see if improves anything. Zitat: One of the many claims Microsoft makes for Windows Longhorn is that it wil launch applications 15% faster than Windows XP does currently. This is down to improvements in the Prefetch functionality. There's no need to wait until Longhorn arrives; this improvement is already in Windows XP thanks to Service Pack 2. It just needs to be turned on. To enable super prefetch: * Use a registry editing tool (run>regedit) to navigate to the following key: HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Contro l\Session Manager\Memory Management\PrefetchParameters * Insert a value with the following details: Data Type: DWORD Value Name: EnableSuperfetch Value: 1 * Reboot your computer for the changes to take effect. please back up the registry entry first before you do it. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ It's cool. Here's what to do: Once in the folder you need to add the reg file, PrefetchParameters, right click>new>DWORD value. Call that new file EnableSuperprefetch. Double Click>set value to 1, it was 0, now it should be 1. change value of "EnablePrefetch' to 0 Reboot. Courtesy of ...M@X... of WW and MM im NOT gonna promise anything, it seemed to slow my boot-time...but actually, It does work, takes a day or two and a number of reboots to establish which appz get priority in Prefetch but better than the normal Prefetch setting. post ur comments... Share this post Link to post Share on other sites