Don;t get too fired up in regards to the list of Windows seven feedback that select local community members supplied to Microsoft – a ranked checklist of which ran on Neowin.net this past weekend.As ArsTechnica noted (repeatedly, to its credit) in its coverage, the record will have little — and more likely absolutely no — bearing on what Microsoft ends up incorporating into Windows seven.Microsoft collected feedback in December 2006 from invited participants in relation to features and functionality they;d like to see the company include in future Windows releases. In July 2007, some of that feedback leaked to the Web. This past weekend,
Windows 7 Home Premium, Neowin.Net posted what they said was a checklist from the team in charge of Microsoft;s Early Feedback Program of “(what they consider to be) the top 61 suggestions to be presented to your development team of Windows 7.”On the Windows seven request list: Everything from new entertainment packages to be delivered as “Ultimate Extras,
Office 2007,” to saving desktop icon arrangements, to more “Notify Only” options in Automatic Updates.While the record is interesting,
Windows 7 Activation, in terms highlighting what users want in future Windows releases, it;s somewhat disturbing that this feedback seemingly will have little or no impact on what Microsoft;s planning to build. ArsTechnica quotes “anonymous sources at Microsoft” who say that the itemized listing ” bear(s) no relationship to your actual feature set Microsoft is currently writing for Windows seven.”From other feedback,
Office 2010 Product Key, it sounds as if Microsoft;s already nicely on its way to planning and coding Windows seven,
Office 2007 Product Key, even though it isn;t slated to hit until 2010.