Jump to content

Microsoft to “Change the Way Windows Is Shipping,” Stop Releasing New Versions


Matsuda

Recommended Posts

screen_shot_2014_09_04_at_3_08_25_pm.png

In a new job ad posted on its Careers website, Microsoft says that it’s looking for software engineers that could help “create a new system that will fundamentally change the way Windows is shipping to put the ecosystem at the center of Windows.”

While this doesn’t say too much about what Microsoft is actually planning for Windows 9 users, previous speculation as pointed by Neowin.net indicated that the company was working on a new updating system which could help the company update OS builds without asking users for clean installations.

Nothing is confirmed so far, but Microsoft is holding a press event on September 30 to discuss the changes it makes to Windows, so more information will be provided by the end of the month.

“Modify the Start menu in less than a week”

Microsoft doesn’t provide too many details on its Windows strategy, but the job posting indeed hints at new OS updates that could be delivered via the integrated update system independent of the current Windows Update tool.

“Online services are shipping every week, why not client software? What would it take to modify the windows start menu on every Windows user machine in less than a week? To issue a video driver fix and to offer all the people who have run into issues it in less than 2 days?” the job description reads.

Sources previously revealed that Microsoft could implement the new update system in Windows 9 preview in order to automatically ship new testing builds to users without the need for a clean installation, as was the case with old Windows versions.

At the same time, Microsoft is believed to be working on a new solution that would divide users in subsets in order to deliver specific features only to those who need it, and thus get more accurate feedback on the features that it brings in Windows 9.

Windows 9 could be the last standalone Windows version

While the information that Microsoft published in the job ad is pretty vague, we’ve already heard that this update mechanism could make Windows 9 the last standalone Windows version. The trick is that instead of releasing new Windows versions every once in a while, Microsoft would switch to large updates delivered on a regular basis and bringing significant improvements.

All these updates would be shipped to computers via the built-in update system, although we expect the company to also make them available separately.

At the same time, Microsoft is also considering dropping its numbering naming scheme for the operating system, so Windows 9 could be simply called “Windows” when it hits the market in April 2015.



Hjqhvtg.pngOriginal Article

Link to comment
Share on other sites


  • Replies 7
  • Views 1.5k
  • Created
  • Last Reply

wow, what a change if this news is true.

Unfortunately, I hate the continuous, monthly downloading of a GB load of patches and your Windows OS increase in size by a few GB every month. Bad news for SSD users. Oh, and if MS make similar mistakes like the one it made for the Aug update, many computers will be hosed upon installing the patches.

I am seriously thinking about ditching Windows if this news turns out to be true.

Link to comment
Share on other sites


Thanks digimon for the Windows cleanup tips! I actually are using some of these tricks after Windows Update, and could reduce the size of the OS somehow. However, the thing is you can only reduce the increased update size partially, so that your OS still increase in size by around 1GB (if you have both Windows and Office 2013). And it takes a long time to complete the cleanup even on an SSD drive.

It will be much better if MS still use its old release scheme - RTM, SP1, SP2, ....etc. This way, you can perform a clean install upon the release of every SP integrated ISO. It's my preference anyway.

Link to comment
Share on other sites


you can get it down even more but it means you cant uninstall any of the updates just add the reset base command

"Dism.exe /online /Cleanup-Image /StartComponentCleanup /resetbase"

it makes every update you installed permanant so if there is a bad update released you cant uninstall it

Link to comment
Share on other sites


Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
×
×
  • Create New...