Tuesday, May 27, 2008

Don't Hold Your Breath for a New Windows 7 Kernel

Just in case you were holding your breath for a new Windows 7 kernel, you might as well exhale. Microsoft has infirmed speculations that the successor of Windows Vista would deliver a new kernel. Rather than revolutionary, the core of Windows 7 will be evolutionary building on the heart of Vista. One of the biggest arguments against the genuine nature of Windows 7 Milestone 1 leaked details was the fact that the release featured a kernel version similar to that of Vista. Microsoft now only provides a sneak peek at the direction it is heading with the

Windows 7 kernel, as well as pointing out what is the starting point. "Contrary to some speculation, Microsoft is not creating a new kernel for Windows 7. Rather, we are refining the kernel architecture and componentization model introduced in Windows Vista. While these changes will increase our engineering agility, they will not impact the user experience or reduce application or hardware compatibility," revealed
Christopher Flores, Director Windows Communications. The confusion around a potential new kernel for Windows 7 was started by a presentation delivered by Microsoft Distinguished Engineer Eric Traut
in 2007. Traut informed that Microsoft was building the MinWin kernel for Windows 7, looking to cut as much as possible the dependencies between the core and the rest of the operating system and to isolate carve the smallest standalone component of Windows. Mark Russinovich, Microsoft Technical Fellow explained later on that the Redmond company was not diverging from the Windows Vista kernel in a way that would irremediably affect the environment of hardware and software products designed for Windows, but that it was simply taking the core to its next stage in evolution.

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