News

Windows 7 Is 'Rescuing' Apps, Microsoft Says

Windows 7 will feature superior application compatibility over Windows Vista, according to a Microsoft announcement issued on Monday.

Windows 7 will feature superior application compatibility over Windows Vista, according to a Microsoft announcement issued on Monday. A Microsoft team has so far found 30 applications that will work on Windows 7, even though those applications failed to work on the older Vista operating system.

Those positive results constitute "rescuing" applications, according to a post on Microsoft's Engineering Windows 7 blog. The Microsoft team didn't explain why those rescued applications now work on the newer OS.

Microsoft officials have been assuring broad application compatibility in the upgrade path going from Vista to Windows 7.

"We started out with a goal of making sure if an application worked on Windows Vista it should work on Windows 7," the team wrote in the blog. "We have taken that further by bringing applications that never worked on Vista to work on Windows 7 and even future updates to Vista."

The team can't test every application, so it uses market data and street opinion to determine which apps to test. For Windows 7, the team is testing more than 1,200 applications from around the world. Previously, it ran through about 900 apps for its Vista testing.

The rescued apps include titles like "J.K.R. BYZNYS," "PostPet v3" and "Monografias Spanglish." The team also rescued more familiar fare, such as the German and Japanese versions of QuickTime 7.1.6.

To help ensure compatibility, Microsoft typically works directly with application vendors. Last month, the company rolled out its Windows 7 Ecosystem Readiness Program, which provides APIs for Microsoft's hardware and software partners.

Windows 7 is currently in beta release, but it uses the same APIs as will be seen in the final OS product, according to Mike Nash, Microsoft's corporate vice president for Windows product management.

The final Windows 7 product release date has not been publicized by Microsoft, but some reports have suggested that the OS could roll out as early as the third quarter of this year.

About the Author

Kurt Mackie is senior news producer for 1105 Media's Converge360 group.

comments powered by Disqus

Featured

  • Windows Community Toolkit v8.2 Adds Native AOT Support

    Microsoft shipped Windows Community Toolkit v8.2, an incremental update to the open-source collection of helper functions and other resources designed to simplify the development of Windows applications. The main new feature is support for native ahead-of-time (AOT) compilation.

  • New 'Visual Studio Hub' 1-Stop-Shop for GitHub Copilot Resources, More

    Unsurprisingly, GitHub Copilot resources are front-and-center in Microsoft's new Visual Studio Hub, a one-stop-shop for all things concerning your favorite IDE.

  • Mastering Blazor Authentication and Authorization

    At the Visual Studio Live! @ Microsoft HQ developer conference set for August, Rockford Lhotka will explain the ins and outs of authentication across Blazor Server, WebAssembly, and .NET MAUI Hybrid apps, and show how to use identity and claims to customize application behavior through fine-grained authorization.

  • Linear Support Vector Regression from Scratch Using C# with Evolutionary Training

    Dr. James McCaffrey from Microsoft Research presents a complete end-to-end demonstration of the linear support vector regression (linear SVR) technique, where the goal is to predict a single numeric value. A linear SVR model uses an unusual error/loss function and cannot be trained using standard simple techniques, and so evolutionary optimization training is used.

  • Low-Code Report Says AI Will Enhance, Not Replace DIY Dev Tools

    Along with replacing software developers and possibly killing humanity, advanced AI is seen by many as a death knell for the do-it-yourself, low-code/no-code tooling industry, but a new report belies that notion.

Subscribe on YouTube