David Flynn03 June 2009, 2:06 PM
Microsoft has confirmed a late October lift-off for Windows 7, confirming the date leaked last month by a loose-lipped Acer executive.
The clock is set at 141 days and counting for the official debut of Windows 7. Microsoft overnight confirmed its Vista-done-right operating system would be released on October 22nd.
The relatively robust state of the Beta 1 and subsequent Release Candidate editions have helped Microsoft deliver the OS ahead of the originally slated “early 2010” timeframe.
The code itself is expected to hit RTM (Release To Manufacture) status sometime in August, at which time copies will fly out to PC builders and DVD duplication centres.
This will ensure that come October 22nd the floors and shelves of PC stores will be populated with Windows 7 retail boxes – for which Microsoft has yet to disclose pricing – as well as new desktops, notebooks and netbooks all pre-loaded with Windows 7.
A program to provide free Windows 7 updates to people who buy a new Vista PC in the interim is expected to begin on
June 26th, provided the system runs Windows Vista Home Premium, Business and Ultimate.
These will all qualify for a free copy of the equivalent edition of Windows 7, although budget-priced systems running Vista Home Basic will not qualify.
Microsoft’s deal will however extend to PCs which have ‘downgraded’ at the factory to XP, because they were still sold carrying a Vista licence, although there’s confusion over if Windows XP Home will be considered as the equivalent to Vista Home Basic or Vista Home Premium because XP had only one home-tagged edition.
The decreed launch date is one day earlier than the October 23rd release accidentally
revealed by the UK marketing director of Acer last month.