By
Ina Fried
Friday, February 27 2004 05:25 PM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/software/0,39044164,39169839,00.htm
update
Microsoft is considering updating Windows XP before it releases Longhorn, the
code name for a major overhaul of the industry's dominant operating system that
is not expected for about two years.
Issuing an update to XP would represent a significant shift for the software
maker, which for months has insisted that it had no plans to create a separate
version of Windows before Longhorn. A company executive
confirmed to CNET News.com on Thursday that Microsoft is now discussing a
product internally referred to as "Windows XP Reloaded."
Any further release would follow Windows XP Service Pack 2, a
security-oriented upgrade that is slated to arrive before midyear. The features
that would be included in an update are still under discussion, Windows lead
product manager Greg Sullivan said in an interview.
"Calling it an interim release is overstating the current plan," Sullivan
said. "We are exploring ways to add value to Windows XP."
However, Directions on Microsoft analyst Rob Helm said that any new version
of Windows is likely to slow Longhorn's
arrival.
"There's one Windows team and there's one core group of people (developing
it)," Helm said. "If they do plan an interim release, it will have an impact on
the schedule. How much will depend on what's in it."
Helm said that Windows XP Reloaded sounds like what he would term an interim
release. "To my mind, a service pack with features that has the potential to
impact compatibility is an interim release."
Helm did say that one option available to Microsoft is to try to boost some
of the surrounding programs that are bundled with Windows while making fewer
changes to the core OS. Such a "feature pack" could mean less of a delay.
In addition to adding further question to the already uncertain timing of
Longhorn, Helm said Microsoft's constantly changing release schedule makes it
harder for customers to plan.
"In the consumer market it's less important, but in the enterprise market,
it's really important for Microsoft to provide a roadmap--and not just of major
big-bang releases, but also of service packs. Right now that road map is still
pretty hazy."
Executives have said for some time that there was no major release of Windows
planned before Longhorn. At the Windows
Hardware Engineering Conference in May, Senior Vice President Will Poole
said: "Don't expect an interim release."
Poole said at that time that Longhorn would ship in 2005. Microsoft later
backed away from that date, saying only that it would ship when it is ready.
However, until now, Microsoft has reiterated that no new versions of Windows
were planned before Longhorn.
Microsoft had been planning to update to its two specialized versions of
Windows--Media Center and Tablet PC--before Longhorn. Those updates, which are
now in testing, will include service pack security enhancements and new
features.
Delaying Longhorn could further benefit Linux, considered the chief threat to
the dominance of Windows, said RedMonk analyst Stephen O'Grady.
"With any delay of Longhorn, Linux desktop advocates have potentially gained
an extension to the window for getting their respective offerings established
within enterprises," O'Grady said. Already, analysts had cautioned that the long time frame
between Windows XP's debut and the arrival of Longhorn represented perhaps the
best opportunity for Linux to make headway on the desktop.
"While Longhorn's promise of an overhauled user interface and database/file
system blend will undoubtedly set the bar for desktops when it's ultimately
released, the longer it's delayed the more time Linux has to get a foothold in
the desktop market."
The release of Longhorn is seen as critical for Microsoft, with the company
having tied new versions of Office and much of its server software to coincide
with the new OS, which Chairman Bill Gates has called the biggest advance since
Windows 95.
Sullivan said that the possible release of XP Reloaded does not indicate a
delay for Longhorn. Microsoft has not said when that OS will ship, but analysts
have said they expect it in late 2005 or 2006.
It is too soon to say if any development resources will be needed for XP
Reloaded beyond the current teams working on Windows XP maintenance, he added.
The move comes as Microsoft is looking for ways to ensure that existing
Windows XP users upgrade to the more secure Service Pack 2 code base.
"We're very interested in having as many people as possible--new PC buyers
and installed base--take advantage of the work we've done in SP 2."
News.com's Stephen Shankland contributed to this report.