Microsoft says Vista still 'on track' despite Gartner doubts
The research firm notes that Windows 2000 took 16 months from Beta 2 to final release
May 2, 2006 12:00 PM ETComputerworld - While Microsoft Corp. has a good track record of hitting its release targets for minor operating systems, its history with large, complex overhauls such as Windows Vista is far spottier, according to Gartner Inc., which in a Monday research note predicted a further delay in Windows Vistas release (see Microsoft may delay Windows Vista again, Gartner says).
Take Windows 2000, for example. Originally called Windows NT5, the operating systems development became problematic as requirements kept being added late in its development, Gartner analysts noted. Those development changes meant the time between the Windows 2000 Beta 2 release -- in August 1998 -- and the final release to manufacturing in December 1999 took 16 months.
One should never overestimate how much Microsoft will underestimate the complexity and time needed to deliver a major new client OS, wrote Gartner.
By contrast, Windows XP, which the research firm described as a relatively minor release built on Windows 2000 took only five months of polishing from its second beta to its final release in October 2001. Windows 98 Second Edition and Windows Millennium Edition also came out largely on time, wrote Gartner.
Vista, which includes major new security improvements and graphical user interface enhancements, was originally due out in 2004 as part of Microsofts preferred schedule of releasing new client operating systems every three years. But its release date was pushed back several times until Microsoft committed last year to have the operating system out in time for the Christmas 2006 season. Then, in March, the company announced that the release would be delayed into early 2007 (see Update: Microsoft Delays Consumer Release of Vista to January 2007). But Microsoft has yet to deliver Beta 2 for Vista, which will be tested by as many as 2 million users.
We remain on track to deliver Windows Vista Beta 2 in the second quarter and to deliver the final product to volume license customers in November 2006 and to other businesses and consumers in January 2007, said a spokeswoman for Microsoft.
Even if Microsoft meets its goal for Beta 2, Gartner pointed out, that would leave only five months before Vistas scheduled release to large business customers.
We believe more time is required between a stable, feature-complete Beta 2 and [release to manufacturing] to accommodate the issues expected during broad testing and allow for at least two Release Candidates, wrote Gartner. The research firm said Microsoft will likely need at least nine to 12 months to clean up and fix bugs found in Vista after the Beta 2 release, moving a final release date to between April and June 2007. Microsoft is unlikely to let Vista slip past that because of internal pressure related to financial targets surrounding its fiscal year end in June.
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