Windows 8 is Enough? Microsoft OS Family Gets Confusing
Microsoft suddenly has more Windows than a skyscraper. Is Windows 8 just the newest member of a sprawling OS family that's growing too big too fast?
CIO — With leaked slides igniting rumblings about Windows 8 this week, it dawned on me how much the Windows operating system family is expanding. Microsoft's (MSFT) goal is clear: cover an increasingly diverse hardware landscape.
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The alleged Windows 8 slides indicate that, with its next client operating system, Microsoft will push for near-instant startup times, integrated facial recognition technologies, support for USB 3.0 and Bluetooth 3.0, compatibility across different devices through the cloud, and simpler streaming of movies and TV shows to any screen.
Trouble is, the growing Windows family is starting to get a little confusing and dysfunctional, if you ask me.
Microsoft has never streamlined its product lines very well. Yes, it has a vast portfolio, but it always seems to create customer confusion with too many versions, complex pricing schemes and long and winding product names.
Windows Phone 7 Series (the "Series" was later dropped), Windows Embedded Compact 7, Business Productivity Online Suite (BPOS) and System Center Configuration Manager (SCCM) jump to mind as Microsoft products with names that will never win any awards for brevity. Hell, even the acronyms are confusing.
I suppose we've gotten used to Microsoft's byzantine branding and version confusion, but now even the Windows operating system, which is usually fairly easy to understand, is proliferating in perplexing ways. Suddenly, we've been hit with a new crop of Windows operating systems for different devices — not versions of operating systems mind you, but different operating systems.
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There's no question that today's hardware landscape is complex with its desktops, laptops, netbooks, "slates" (aka tablet PCs), smartphones, e-readers and ruggedized mobile devices. Fear not, Microsoft is here to make sure its Windows operating systems are just as complex. OK, more complex.
Here's a rundown on the burgeoning Windows family. I hope this leaves you less dazed and confused about the various members and where they live.
Windows 8: It's early to be making judgements about the follow up to Windows 7, but leaked slides charting Microsoft's strategy with its next client OS reveal an emphasis on instant startup times, facial recognition technologies and seamless compatibility across laptops, tablets, TVs and smartphones.
Windows 7: The successor to the embattled Windows Vista, Windows 7 rolled out last October with a fresh interface and networking and security features that have largely won over the trust of consumers and businesses. Windows 7 currently runs on desktops, laptops, netbooks and tablet PCs.


