has designed a stripped-down edition on the Windows core, identified as MinWin, which will be at the heart of long run Windows solutions,
Windows 7 Starter, starting up with Windows seven, the Windows consumer release because of in 2010. the Windows staff has been working for many years on lowering the dependencies in Windows which have designed the operating procedure increasingly bloated and difficult to maintain and upgrade, it’s only been recently that the group has long been able to create a separate, usuable new core. forward, MinWin might be with the heart of foreseeable future versions of Windows Media Center,
Office Pro Plus 2010, Windows Server, embedded Windows products and more. Distinguished Engineer Eric Traut described some with the work the Microsoft Core OS group has done to build the MinWin core during a recent talk he gave with the University of Illinois. The full video of Traut’s talk is here. Blogger Long Zheng clipped out the piece of Traut’s talk which highlighted how the MinWin core will work in Windows 7 and posted it to his site. is internal-only and “won’t be productized but it will probably be the basis for future services,” Traut said. But “it’s proof there is a really nice little core inside Windows.” is 25 MB on disk; Vista is 4 GB, Traut said. (The slimmed-down Windows Server 2008 core is still 1.5 GB in size.) The MinWin kernel does not include a graphics subsystem in its current build, but does incorporate a “very simple HTTP server,
Windows 7 Home Basic,” Traut said. The MinWin core is 100 files total,
windows 7 64bit, while all of Windows is 5,000 files in size. said he is running a staff of 200 Windows engineers functioning on the core kernel and Windows virtual technologies. acknowledged tat the Windows kernel is between twelve and fifteen many years old right now. He said that Microsoft is running under the premise that “at some point, we’ll have to replace it (the kernel),” given that it “doesn’t have an unlimited life span. did not mention Singularity — Microsoft Research’s built-from-scratch microkernel-based running technique — during his talk. Traut spent most of his time describing Microsoft’s thinking around virtualization, and how virtualization can be used to ease backwards compatibility and other problems Windows users incur. He did not speak specifically about how Microsoft plans to incorporate virtualization in Windows seven, but did stress that virtualization should not be viewed as a crutch,
Office 2007 Standard Key, in terms of improving existing code. He said Microsoft considers application virtualization, like that it provides via SofGrid, presentation virtualization (Windows Terminal Services and “enhancements to core Windows functionality” are all other ways that the company can improve users’ Windows experience.
me. Image by Sue P. CC 2.0)