Is Vista The Last of Windows? | Internet News

Is Vista The Last of Windows?

Written By
Ed Sutherland
Ed Sutherland
Dec 14, 2006
2 minute read

Could the image of a bloated Windows operating system criticized by
competitors for its practice of bundling be on the way out? Although Microsoft is mum on the possibility, Gartner predicts Vista will
be the last major release of Windows.

“The era of monolithic deployments of software is nearing an end,” according
to the research firm’s year-end predictions.

Windows will become more modular by 2009, Gartner said, offering incremental
upgrades rather than major releases, as well as offering applications as options, rather than bundled as part of the OS.

At 50 million lines of computer code, Vista marks the tipping point for the ever-heavier Windows, Gartner analyst Brian Gammage said. “Every release gets bigger.”

However, possibly a more pressing problem for Microsoft is the increasing delays
between releases. The last update, Windows XP, took five years to develop
and release — a period too long for both users and the software giant,
according to Gartner.

Such delays in products result in the need to support older versions for
longer. They also provide greater opportunity for Linux and other
alternatives, the analyst said.

The change will allow Microsoft to deliver incremental upgrades more
frequently.

Where computer systems now comprise a BIOS and operating system, a new layer
of virtualization will be added, offering great modularity through an OS for
Windows.

This would address many of the concerns from enterprises, which want to know why they should sign expensive yearly service
agreements when it could be years before Microsoft issues an update,
Gartner’s Leslie Fiering said.

And according to Gammage, hardware is no longer upgraded when a new version
of Windows is released, so business now considers Windows a cost, not a
benefit.

Another negative for the current Windows has been the bundling
of software that brought legal headaches as competitors complain of unfair practices.

Dropping its reliance on bundling provides even more impetus for Microsoft
to move toward a subscription model for applications and increased competition with online rivals, such
as Google.

For users, applications will be offered as optional building blocks able to
be plugged into the operating system, giving consumers what Gammage called a
“perception of choice.”

One possible Windows plug-in application might manage antivirus
settings, Fiering said.

Although Microsoft could continue with the old model for the next version of
Windows, it isn’t likely, after the delays seen with Vista.

“Who in their right mind would do that to themselves again?”

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