Microsoft promises solid Beta 3 of Windows 2000

By Bob Trott
InfoWorld Electric


Posted at 2:59 PM PT, Mar 8, 1999
Beta 3 of Windows 2000, which Microsoft has targeted for a wide release in
April, will go a long way toward fixing many of the problems reported in
earlier versions of the next-generation operating system, a key Microsoft
executive said Monday.

Since Beta 2 of Windows 2000, formerly called Windows NT 5.0, was given to
testers in August 1998, Microsoft has identified several areas of concern
that it will fix in Beta 3, according to Yusuf Mehdi, director of marketing
for Microsoft's Applications and Internet Client Group.

Among the problems were compatibility with existing applications; the
upgrade from Windows 9x systems; broader device coverage in Windows 2000
Professional, the desktop OS formerly called NT Workstation; the large
memory footprint; installation woes with Active Directory; and a lack of
Component Object Model+ (COM+) integration in Windows 2000 Server, Mehdi
said at a briefing for journalists at Microsoft's headquarters.

COM+, the coming COM update, will be a key addition to the beta version of
Windows 2000. Many developers and users have said that COM+, along with the
Active Directory, is the most important new capability in NT 2000.

Additions to Beta 3 of Windows 2000 Professional will include Internet
Explorer 5.0, which will ship next week; other user interface enhancements;
support for a digital cameras and other devices; and setup improvements.

Beta 3 of Windows 2000 Server will include COM+ integration, wizards to
help administrators set up the Active Directory, and integration with
Windows Terminal Server, Mehdi said.

Mehdi said Windows 2000 Server consisted of roughly 23 million lines of
"core" code, a figure that is significantly smaller than other estimates
from other Microsoft officials, beta testers, and others familiar with the
product. Mehdi said estimates of the product having 50 million or 60
million lines of code were erroneous.

Mehdi repeated Microsoft's public statements that it hopes to ship Windows
2000 by the end of this year, although he was quick to add that if the
product is not deemed ready, Microsoft will take longer.

Microsoft also is touting Windows 2000 for laptop computers, the first time
the company has aimed NT technology at portable PCs.

"It will be the best laptop OS, that's for sure -- even if you use Windows
98," Mehdi said.

The oft-delayed Windows 2000 has been under development at Microsoft for
years, and now the successor to the consumer-oriented Windows 98, which
will be based on the NT kernel, has been delayed past 2000 because of work
on the enterprise software. Mehdi acknowledged that Microsoft's
foot-dragging on NT has let competitors such as Novell and Sun Microsystems
get the jump in the enterprise.

"Novell has benefited a little" by NT's delays, Mehdi said. "People think
that Windows 2000 is the migration OS from Novell." However, he pointed to
a release Microsoft issued last week trumpeting the fact that Window NT 4.0
now is licensed on 28 million desktops.

Microsoft Corp., in Redmond, Wash., can be reached at www.microsoft.com.

Bob Trott is InfoWorld's Seattle bureau chief.


From MAILER-DAEMON@cs.depaul.edu Tue Mar 9 10:30:54 1999