n March 24, what appeared to be a build of Windows Blue leaked to the Web.
Some called this build a "partner" build of Windows Blue. One of my trusted
sources has told me that the leaked build, number 9364, is real and is a direct
internal engineering build, current as of the past week or so.
Stephen Chapman of MSFTKitchen did a teardown of the leaked bits. He
discovered mentions of the following Windows Blue SKUs that are apparently in
the works:
Windows Blue RT
Windows Blue Personal
Windows Blue Professional
Windows Blue Standard Server
Windows Blue Enterprise Server
Windows Blue Datacenter Server
Windows Blue Web Server
Update: As Most Valuable Professional Aidan Finn (@joe_elway) reminded me,
as of Windows Server 2012, Microsoft dropped Web Server and Enterprise Server
from its Windows Server line-up. So there may be shadows of the past reflected
in this in-development list. The current Win Server 2012 versions include
Standard, Essentials, Datacenter and Foundation. The only thing that seems for
sure is there will be multiple Win Server Blue editions, which is, again, what
one would expect.
Chapman's discovery means we now have further confirmation that Microsoft
will be almost certainly making a Blue version of Windows RT available,
alongside two new Windows client builds (Personal and Professional), plus
multiple server SKUs.
Windows Blue client and server builds are expected to be released to
manufacturing in late summer this year. There will also be a Windows Phone Blue
product coming some time after that, sources have said. Microsoft officials are
continuing to decline to say anything about any of the Blue releases.
While talking Blue, I want to point out a couple of observations from
around the Web about the leaked build. As many sites have previously reported,
Internet Explorer 11 (IE11) is built into Blue. Neowin noted this past weekend
that IE11 may include tab-syncing functionality, which could potentially allow
users to sync tabs across Windows Phone and Windows, going forward.
And as my Windows Weekly cohost Paul Thurrott (whose image of the leaked
Blue build I've embedded in this post) noted, more and more of the settings that
are currently built into the Windows 8 Control Panel (in the Desktop) are going
Metro. Though Microsoft definitely isn't phasing out the Desktop with Blue, it's
slowly chipping away at making the Desktop less necessary for its own software
and services.
It will be interesting to see when there are enough Metro-style apps to
embolden the company enough to totally remove the Desktop, which allows Win32
programs to run on Windows 8. I'd bet that won't be any time soon.
http://www.windowsanyway.com/microsoft-office-for-mac-home-and-business-2011-product-key-p-3551.html
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