Updated: The Windows 8.1 preview has dropped, with the finished version slated for release in the autumn.
The Windows 8.1 preview is now officially available to download, with Microsoft expected to roll out the finished version of the product in the autumn.
The software giant showed off the new release at its Build developer conference in San Francisco earlier today, describing it as a more refined version of Windows 8.
The preview version of the OS is available to download here. At Microsoft's Worldwide Partner Conference earlier this week, CMO and CFO Tami Reller confirmed that the Windows 8.1 is nearing completion and that it will be rolled out to OEMs in late August. Devices will start shipping with the latest version of Windows in the holiday season, and existing Windows 8 users will be prompted to upgrade for free.
The future of Windows is very, very bright.
During the event’s opening keynote, Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer confirmed the release will mark the return of the much-missed Start button, and that users will find it easier to switch between the desktop and modern user interfaces.
“We put Windows 8 systems in the market at the end of last year, and yet what you see and what we will show you...is a heck of a lot of movement, innovation and responsiveness all coming to market in a very [short] timeframe [with Windows 8.1],” he said.
The software giant has dismissed claims the release is an admission that Windows 8 has not sold as well, or won over users, in the same way as previous incarnations of the operating system.
Instead, the company has keenly stressed that Windows 8.1 is indicative of Microsoft’s decision to focus on shorter development cycles and – in turn – push out products faster to customers.
At Microsoft TechEd in New Orleans earlier this month, the company cited the forthcoming releases of its Windows Server 2012 R2 and System Center 2012 R2 - both of which were only launched last autumn - as evidence of its commitment to this faster product release strategy.
This was a point touched on during the keynote by Ballmer in his opening remarks, where he reiterated Microsoft’s focus on “rapid release” cycles.
“[This] rapid pace of innovation...it’s the new normal for everything we do...[and] we’ve undergone this transformation to move to a rapid release cycle,” said Ballmer.
"We stated clearly [that this is our] new rapid release cadence," he added.
Touch up on Windows 8.1
The company has also regularly come under fire from market watchers and end users since Windows 8 was launched, with many complaining the OS was difficult to use without a touch-enabled device.
This is something Microsoft is working to address with its OEM hardware partners, Ballmer assured, and users can expect to see a wider range of touch devices – including notebooks and smaller tablets – coming to market in future.
He also lamented the lack of touch devices available at the time of Windows 8’s launch, because users with touchscreen devices were “much happier” using the OS than those without, he claimed.
Many of Windows 8.1’s features have been publicly spoken about by Microsoft in recent weeks, and have been well documented in IT Pro’s exhaustive list of the operating systems’ key features, which can be found over the page.
During the keynote, the presenters also walked through a few others. These include using a device’s in-built camera as a sensor, which allows people to scroll through onscreen content by waving their hand in front of it.
Gesture controls have also been added to the software’s keyboard function to make predictive typing easier, and Microsoft also claims the OS is the first to provide native support for 3D printing.
Windows 8.1 applications
The release of Windows 8.1 will also mark the arrival of a revamped Windows Store, which Antoine Leblond, corporate vice president of Windows program management at Microsoft, promised developers would make it easier for users to find their apps.
He also promised their apps will work better on Windows 8.1, and that the company has introduced 5,000 APIs for them to take advantage of. He also reiterated the fact developers get to keep 80 per cent of the revenue for the lifetime of their app once it crosses over the $25,000 threshold.
Enterprise appeal
Whether or not the release will be enough to encourage enterprise users to embrace the new operating system is anyone's guess, but market watcher Forrester recently predicted that many businesses will skip Windows 8 because very few see the release as an improvement on what has gone before.
"With Windows XP's end-of-life date of April 8, 2014, rapidly approaching, most IT shops are still too focused on migrating to Windows 7 to bother with Windows 8 anytime soon, if at all," the analyst said in a statement.
"To be reasonably considered an enterprise standard, approximately half of company-issued PCs must run Windows 8 by the time Windows next hits the shelves. Windows 7 hit that mark. However, Forrester doesn't believe that Windows 8 will become the next commercial standard."
However, the firm did acknowledge that employee interest in Windows 8 is "very high", which suggests the operating system could find its way into businesses through BYOD schemes.
Over the page, we run through some of the standout features of Windows 8.1.
No comments:
Post a Comment