The dust has yet to settle from last month's Windows 7 launch, but
Microsoft may already have set a 2012 target for releasing Windows 8.
Last week, the Microsoft Kitchen blog posted a pair of Windows
Server roadmap slides that list 2012 as the timeframe for Windows 8's
release. Microsoft showed the slides to attendees of last week's
Professional Developer Conference in Los Angeles, the blog suggests.
The slides offer no additional information other than a reiteration
of Microsoft's practice of launching 'major' releases about four years
and 'updates' about every two years, which means Windows 8 will be a
major release.
Microsoft hasn't said anything about its plans to develop a Windows
8, but there are signs that it's already begun recruiting the talent to
help build it. Earlier this month, a job listing on Microsoft's careers
site indicated that Microsoft's Worldwide Partner Group would begin
focusing on Windows 8 in the software giant's 2011 fiscal year, which
begins July 1, 2010.
Meanwhile, published reports suggest Microsoft is currently working
on the first service pack for Windows 7 and plans to release a beta in
January 2010, with release to OEMs slated for the summer and public
availability in the fall.
Microsoft claims to have sold twice as many units of Windows 7 as
any other OS in its history in a comparable time period, and last week
at Microsoft's annual shareholder meeting, CEO Steve Ballmer said
Microsoft is off to a "fantastic start" with Windows 7.