The very happy news, besides WHS nearing a 2007 release, is the assurance that there is a planned upgrade path from the RC to RTM. This is going to make a lot of testers very happy, and more inclined to finalize, or upgrade their test rigs as production units.
I have to say, this has been one of the better BETA tests I have worked for. It's a very active community and the product is looking great. I have never seen such direct responses to tester input and suggestions for features, or behaviors as I have in this BETA for WHS - well... I have to take that back... Recently, I have noted that the Windows team is shipping updates and direct resolutions to reported problems in Windows Vista. For example, as newer, more focused and mature drivers and device applications software come online, the instrumentation baked into the OS connects the user with the most recent solution. Similar instrumentation in WHS has been used and seems to have influenced the products rapid development.
Last year I started to write [some here] about the real significance around Vista and that it was "how" it was built, vice what it was initially. Those development processes certainly appear to be influencing all kinds of development at Microsoft and users and testers get a sense that the dev teams at Microsoft are working with them more directly and in personally relevant ways.
As these products have been developed, or in the case of Windows Vista, how it has matured, one has the sense that the rate of maturation has been grossly accelerated - in some cases, stability and the reliability of third party devices and software have been improved, while new versions or direct responses to issues have been resolved very rapidly and again, in what appear to be very granular and individually relevant ways.
I assess that the native Windows/Microsoft Update application in Vista will be extended to products like WHS - where the update application will work with new instrumentation and enabled these kinds of rapid and individually relevant solutions to be delivered far more quickly than we have seen before and in ways that are uniquely applicable to the hosts they are distributed to.
Whomever stated that Microsoft did not know how to ship software, had it dead wrong. From what I am seeing, exactly what I had sensed about the new strategy, is working and Vista's influence is being felt in great new products, like WHS.
This post was edited by lketchum on Friday, May 25, 2007 at 11:17.
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