Microsoft fixes Windows 8 Consumer Preview launch event for February 29

New name for beta, but provides no new details

Microsoft will host a launch event for the Windows 8 beta on February 29 in Barcelona, the site of the Mobile World Congress.

Previously, Microsoft had promised that it would distribute a public beta - the company used the label "Consumer Preview" instead - in "late February." Wednesday, February 29, is the last day of the month.

Microsoft did not offer any additional details on the Consumer Preview, including whether it planned to also introduce it at a similar US event. A spokesperson said that Microsoft would provide more information at a later date.

The company will not present the Windows 8 preview at the Mobile World Congress (MWC), but instead at a Barcelona hotel between 3pm and 5pm local time. The MWC runs from Feb. 27 through March 1.

Microsoft will open the Windows Store to the public at the same time it ships Windows 8 Consumer Preview.

Although the company again declined to comment on a ship date for the final edition of Windows 8, the Consumer Preview's timing hints at a fall 2012 debut assuming the company paces Windows 8's development and testing as it did Windows 7's.

Windows 7's first developer-oriented release was at the end of October 2008. Microsoft offered a public beta of the OS in January 2009, and the final version hit shelves the third week of October, 2009.

Although Windows 8's Consumer Preview will appear about seven weeks later - at the end of February compared to Window 7's early January - its Developer Preview launched a month earlier, in mid-September rather than Windows 7's October, perhaps making the two schedules a wash.

Microsoft would certainly prefer not to duplicate the release timetable of Windows Vista, which missed 2006's holiday selling season, not shipping until January 2007.

The company has revealed some details of Windows 8 and offered a Developer's Preview since September 2011, while other tidbits have leaked from recent builds, including the apparent death of the Start button, an iconic element that's been part of the operating system for nearly 17 years.

Windows 8 will feature a dramatic overhaul of the OS's user interface by introducing a tile-based component suggestive of Windows Phone, specially-design apps for that interface and a digital distribution site -- the Windows Store -- that will be the only outlet for those Metro-style apps.

How Microsoft will distribute Windows 8 Consumer Preview is unclear, but it probably won't reprise Windows 7 beta's launch, which was plagued with problems, including an early overload of its servers that forced it to halt downloads, an on-then-off limit on the number of copies it would supply, and a hard stop to availability just a month after its introduction.

Since Windows 7, Microsoft has been more inclusive in distributing early editions of Windows: The Windows 8 Developer Preview was opened to all -- as opposed to Windows 7's similar offering, which was not -- and that early edition remains available months after its launch.

If Microsoft sticks to previous practice, the Windows 8 Consumer Preview will not expire until this summer, perhaps as late as August or even September.

Gregg Keizer covers Microsoft, security issues, Apple, Web browsers and general technology breaking news for Computerworld. Follow Gregg on Twitter at @gkeizer , or subscribe to Gregg's RSS feed . His e-mail address is gkeizer@ix.netcom.com .

Read more about operating systems in Computerworld's Operating Systems Topic Center.

More about: Apple, Microsoft, Topic
References show all

Comments

Post new comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
Users posting comments agree to the TechWorld comments policy.
Login or register to link comments to your user profile, or you may also post a comment without being logged in.
Related Coverage
Related Whitepapers
Latest Stories
Community Comments
Tags: desktop pcs, hardware systems, Microsoft, operating systems, PCs, software, Windows
Whitepapers
All whitepapers

Twitter Feed

  • rohan_p RT @Techworld_AU: Gear and gadgets at @CeBITAUS 2012, Sydney http://t.co/J1Sch1sX #cebit2012
  • Techworld_AU Gear and gadgets at @CeBITAUS 2012, Sydney http://t.co/J1Sch1sX #cebit2012
  • HamishBarwick CeBIT 2012: Will NBN speed up freight delivery times? http://t.co/gaZyjOlH #cw #cio #tw #CeBIT2012 #nbn
  • HamishBarwick CeBIT 2012: NAB calls for mobile app security overhaul http://t.co/3Z3ZPUPq #cw #cio #tw #CeBIT2012 #infosec
  • rohan_p RT @Techworld_AU: BigPond Games Arena, Games Shop hit by hackers http://t.co/OXNPeDfL #bigpond #infosec #security