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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Microsoft set to unveil Windows 7

Software giant outlines more initiatives

Microsoft Corp. CEO Steve Ballmer delivers the keynote address Wednesday at the International Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas.  (Associated Press / The Spokesman-Review)
By JESSICA MINTZ Associated Press

LAS VEGAS – Microsoft Corp.’s next version of the Windows operating system is almost ready for prime time.

That’s one message Chief Executive Officer Steve Ballmer delivered this week before the International Consumer Electronics Show opened here.

The world’s largest software maker also disclosed deals to make its Live Search programs the default search engines on more personal computers and mobile phones. And it announced a new version of its Ford Sync in-car technology that folds in the voice-operated directory service TellMe, which Microsoft bought in 2007.

“It feels like we’ve entered a period of reduced expectations, a time when we may be tempted to temper our optimism and scale back our ambitions,” Ballmer said, in a nod to the recession. “But no matter what happens with the economy or how long this recession lasts, I believe our digital lives will only continue to get richer.”

The CEO announced that a nearly final “beta” test version of Windows 7 will be available today for regular PC users to download and tinker with.

The new operating system – which could be available for purchase on PCs within a year – uses much of the same underlying technology as its predecessor, the much-maligned Vista. But Windows 7 aims to resolve many problems PC users had with Vista. For instance, Microsoft pledges to make it easier to install peripheral devices and to have the software pump out fewer annoying warnings and notifications.

Ballmer also pledged that Windows 7 will boot faster and drain laptop batteries more slowly.

“I believe Windows will remain at the center of people’s technological solar system,” he said. “We’re putting in all the right ingredients: simplicity, reliability and speed, and we’re working hard to get it right and to get it ready.”

Among the other highlights from Redmond, Wash.-based Microsoft:

•Dell Inc. will put a special Live Search browser toolbar and Windows Live programs, including Microsoft’s e-mail and instant-messaging applications, on most of the consumer and small-business PCs that it sells worldwide. That deal replaces a relationship between Dell and Google.

•Microsoft has formed a five-year partnership with Verizon Wireless that calls for the Live Search tools to be added to all Verizon cell phones in the U.S. that can access the Internet.

•The company added Flash support – required for watching YouTube videos – to its cell phone version of Internet Explorer. And it created a link between Facebook and its own Windows Live social network, so when people update their status message or upload photos on Facebook, that information appears on the Microsoft site, too.