Sunday
Oct212007
First talk about Windows 7 (and MinWin)
Sunday, October 21, 2007 at 7:00PM
Windows Vista has merely been out for a year and there's already talk of Windows 7.
Actually, I hadn't expected this to happen to quickly, but it's positive that Microsoft is letting people in on there scheme. Last week, Eric Traut discussed Windows 7 for the very first time, along with the core kernel of future Windows versions, which is called MinWin. The latter is - according to Traut - actually very streamlined, in contrast with Windows Vista. MinWin occupies 25MB of disk space and nearly 40MB of RAM. It doesn't have a graphical interface though, at this point it's only usable as a text prompt. Furthermore, there are no commercial plans with this kernel, as it'll only be used to spawn applications based on Windows (and in the end Windows 7 itself).
The original video was pretty lengthy (about an hour) and pretty dull, too. Long Zheng from istartedsomething.com gracefully clipped out the interesting part, about Windows 7, MinWin and previous versions of Windows - all the way back to Windows 1.0.

A pretty slick ASCII bootscreen.
Watch video at istartedsomething.com
Actually, I hadn't expected this to happen to quickly, but it's positive that Microsoft is letting people in on there scheme. Last week, Eric Traut discussed Windows 7 for the very first time, along with the core kernel of future Windows versions, which is called MinWin. The latter is - according to Traut - actually very streamlined, in contrast with Windows Vista. MinWin occupies 25MB of disk space and nearly 40MB of RAM. It doesn't have a graphical interface though, at this point it's only usable as a text prompt. Furthermore, there are no commercial plans with this kernel, as it'll only be used to spawn applications based on Windows (and in the end Windows 7 itself).
The original video was pretty lengthy (about an hour) and pretty dull, too. Long Zheng from istartedsomething.com gracefully clipped out the interesting part, about Windows 7, MinWin and previous versions of Windows - all the way back to Windows 1.0.

A pretty slick ASCII bootscreen.
Watch video at istartedsomething.com
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