To print: Click here or Select File and then Print from your browser's menu
This story was printed from silicon.com, located at http://www.silicon.com/
Story URL: http://software.silicon.com/os/0,39024651,39165546,00.htm
Vista unravels the Da Vinci codex
Bill Gates at UK launch
By Steve Ranger
Published: Tuesday 30 January 2007
Bill Gates, Leonardo da Vinci and even pop darlings The Feeling all made an appearance at the UK launch of Microsoft's long-awaited Vista operating system.
Vista was first made available to business customers back in November but the software behemoth has now officially launched the operating system to consumers, calling the debut its most important since Windows 95.
Speaking at the launch, which was held at the British Library in London, Microsoft chairman Bill Gates said: "This is a special occasion, we've worked hard to build a new software platform and we are so excited to see what people will do with it."
Microsoft executives showcased elements of Vista including updated security and improved search technologies, as well as the new 'Ribbon' user interface for Office 2007. For more details on the functionality offered by the revamped Vista, see silicon.com's Cheat Sheet.
Microsoft revealed a number of businesses that will be using Vista's desktop 'Gadget' technology - i.e. desktop mini applications such as a clock, share-ticker and currency converter.
The new operating system is being used to digitally reunite two of Leonardo da Vinci's manuscripts - the Codex Arundel and Codex Leicester - for the first time since the dispersal of the manuscripts in the 16th century.
Codex Arundel, one of the British Library's greatest treasures, and Codex Leicester, which is owned by Bill Gates, are compilations of the notes, diagrams and sketches da Vinci made on subjects ranging from mechanics and engineering to optics and the properties of the moon.
Gates said: "His work is amazing. Every one of these notebooks are amazing documents."
Vista will power the latest version of the British Library's 'Turning the Pages' technology, which allows users to browse high resolution online versions of both texts.
It will allow viewers to compare the volumes side-by-side in a 3D workspace, magnify and rotate the pages and even reverse Leonardo's famous 'mirror writing' so that it reads the right way around.
Copyright © 2008 CBS Interactive Limited. All rights reserved. Top of page