
"…on this one, the market will decide"
Published: 6 March 2009 08:51 GMT
Microsoft will continue to offer Windows XP for netbooks even after it starts selling Windows 7 for the subnotebooks, a company executive has revealed.
Neil Holloway, Microsoft International's vice president of business strategy, told silicon.com sister site ZDNet UK on Thursday, that the company expected Windows 7 to be more popular than XP. However, Microsoft will ultimately decide which operating system it will offer for netbooks depending on customer preference, he said.
Windows 7 in pictures
1. Photos: From robot teachers to Microsoft Surface
2. Photos: Sneak peek at Windows 7 beta
3. Photos: The "beachfront property of Windows 7"
4. Photos: Getting hands on with Windows 7
5. Photos: Taking the wraps off Windows 7
"Let's see what the market does," Holloway said at Microsoft's Growth and Innovation Day in Brussels. "As we introduce Windows 7 for netbooks, the availability of XP will be less and less. I think, on this one, the market will decide on Windows 7."
The unanticipated success of the netbook market over the past year-and-a-half has forced Microsoft to repeatedly postpone the retirement of Windows XP, mainly because its newer Vista operating system was too processor-hungry to run on the devices.
Holloway's comments suggest Microsoft will delay the demise of XP even longer. That will effectively bring the ageing operating system into competition with the upcoming Windows 7 Starter Edition, which is aimed explicitly at netbooks and is expected to arrive around the end of 2009 or beginning of 2010.
Although Windows 7 is built on the same underlying architecture as Windows Vista, Microsoft has repeatedly stated that the upcoming operating system is more lightweight than Vista and therefore more suited to netbook use.
Last month, Microsoft chief Steve Ballmer said people who buy a netbook with the Starter Edition of Windows 7 will be offered the opportunity to trade up to a more fully featured version of that operating system. Holloway confirmed that this would happen.
"You could have a low-end [Windows 7] netbook or a high-end netbook," Holloway said. "The question is, do you have reduced Windows 7, or the next level up, with more functionality?"
Holloway compared it to the situation with Vista: people will be able to select the version of Windows 7 that suits them, in the same way they can choose the Home Basic edition of Vista rather than the Ultimate edition, depending on their computing need. He added, however, that the offer of a choice of versions of Windows 7 will depend on the outcome of Microsoft's licensing negotiations with netbook manufacturers.
The first netbook - the seven-inch Asus Eee PC - was introduced in 2007, and it used a Linux-based operating system. A year ago, Microsoft announced a deal with Asus to provide netbooks running XP. Since then, Windows XP has become the dominant operating system in the broader netbook market.
"When [netbooks] first started they were 100 per cent Linux. We didn't have an operating system or pricing," Holloway said. "These days we are tracking 90 per cent-plus running on Windows. If we are late to the party but still end up with that market share after 12 months, then we are not doing too badly."
Original article: Windows 7 to compete with XP in netbook market from ZDNet UK
Since the MINIMUM install for Windows 7 x86 is 6Gb...
Anthony Hunt
"The unanticipated success of the netbook market o...
Karen Challinor
Desirable to have a MSCE in windows XP and exposure to windows Vista. Desktop Support Engineer x 6 – Loughborough, Leicestershire – 17.59 ...
The candidate will come from a Investment Banking/Trading Support background and will be out-going, confident self-starter with a pro-active ...
You'll be working as the technical lead for a small team of engineers on our customer site to deliver 2nd line support of our Windows-based technical ...
Agenda Setters 2009
Welcome to the ninth annual Agenda Setters poll – silicon.com's list of the top 50 most influential individuals in the technology and IT industries, from techies and CIOs to entrepreneurs and business leaders. Find out more in our latest special report.
Is Your Enterprise Architected for Tomorrow's Growth?
Improving IT service delivery through an integrated approach to software asset management...
TechRepublic Resource Guide: Software as a Service (SaaS) for Small and Midsize Businesses...
Download a Free Trial of SmartDraw: Learn why SmartDraw is the ideal alternative...
Stories from the web...
Copyright © 2008 CBS Interactive Limited. All rights reserved. Top of page
Clive Longbottom Windows 7: Not perfect - but ready for prime time Microsoft's latest OS fixes most of Vista's ills - but still has challenges ahead
Stephen Kleynhans Mind the details with Windows 7 Just because it might work better than Vista, it doesn't mean you can be sloppy