Windows 7 alpha at Professional Developers Conference
In a post to the PDC website, Microsoft says developers will get a “pre-beta” release of Windows 7, the successor to Windows Vista.
Mike Swanson, a Microsoft technology evangelist working on the PDC, says attendees will receive a 160GB external USB hard drive that will contain all the developer bits from the conference. The USB drive will presumably include the pre-beta version of Windows 7.
“Keynote attendees will be among the first to receive the pre-beta build of Windows 7,” the company says. Steven Sinofsky, who heads Windows development, will deliver a keynote address on the second day of the conference in Los Angeles.
“We now know they’re making progress. They at least have something they’re confident enough in to share,” Cherry continued. “But the next question is, how far along is it? And we won’t know that until people load it up,” he says.
“When that many developers come together, you want them to go home with something that they can play with,” Cherry said at the time. “Microsoft will want to do more than just tell developers about Windows 7.” More recently, he was cautiously optimistic that the announcement meant Microsoft was on track with Windows 7. “If they didn’t do this, you would have to wonder if they could make the schedule,” Cherry said. But the fact that Microsoft’s handing out an alpha doesn’t necessarily mean the operating system will be done by 2009, the date most often circulated by analysts.