Latest report from Neowin.net said that Microsoft will deliver a release candidate to the public in late May this year.
Microsoft will also give out an "escrow build" of the release candidate and offer it to a small invitation-only group of testers end of April, said Neowin, citing information from a Russian-language Web site and sources within Microsoft's technical adoption program, which gives large corporations sneak peeks at pre-release software. An escrow build is a post-development edition given to testers for one final examination for any show-stopping problems or bugs.
No ship date issued yet for Windows 7 RC, although program managers have recently revealed details about the changes that developers have made to the operating system since the public beta was released Jan. 10. Last week, for example, Chaitanya Sareen, a senior program manager on the Windows team, blogged for the second time in two weeks about RC progress.
Pirated post-beta builds of Windows 7 have also been regularly leaking to the Web. The latest, build 7057, reached BitTorrent last week and contained references to "Release Candidate 1" in its end-user licensing agreement.
While Microsoft has not promised that it will issue Windows 7 RC to the public, Steven Sinofsky, senior vice president in charge of the Windows engineering group, has repeatedly hinted that it will do so.
Microsoft today declined to comment on Neowin's projected delivery date, saying through a spokeswoman that it had "nothing new to share" on the subject.
No comments:
Post a Comment