Yesterday morning we sat down with Vice President Jim Allchin (aka the guy who is responsible for developing Windows).
Here's an index of the questions we ask. We talk about Longhorn and the recent Winhec conference, as well as get a personal look into Jim's life.
00:00 Where are we and who are you?
00:25 What do you do?
1:10 If you wanted to change the start button to a purple color you could probably get it done, huh?
1:30 What's your average day like?
3:00 What's a Jim Allchin review like?
5:14 What don't we know about you?
7:30 You're dogfooding Longhorn?
8:41 Tell me about your press tour last week. (Discussion about what Jim's passionate about; 64-bit, peer-to-peer, stuff happening around edge).
14:35 What's going to be thrilling in Longhorn? (Reaction to Winhec reaction. Discussion of Metro. Discussion of what Winhec was for).
18:17 Why are you so passionate about 64-bit Windows?
22:13 When did you get into this industry?
22:35 Are you suprised by how far this industry has come in just your lifetime? (Discussion of where industry is heading).
24:53 So the PC is not dead?
25:17 Getting the Channel 9 guys involved. What's coming on the Tablet PC?
27:30 Any guesses on how long it'll take most mobile devices to have inking capabilities?
29:07 What's the developer story on Longhorn?
31:16 What is a business going to get out of upgrading to Longhorn?
36:09 The most exciting thing about Longhorn for me is security improvements (discussion of security improvements in Longhorn).
38:12 What kinds of new applications (or improved ones, like Notepad/Paint) will ship with Longhorn?
39:03 Will Avalon and Indigo be in Longhorn?
39:40 What is the desktop compositor?
41:33 What will Longhorn do with RSS?
43:00 What's different about search in Longhorn?
45:45 When will we get a chance to use Longhorn?
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Thats me anyway, just to say....
"In the future Imagine receiving a CT SCAN FROM HOSPITAL to/on your home or clinical medical records in Longhorn using webservices, in 3D Mesh,and Data 3D,avalon ,3D Diagnostics medicaly,apps,bypassing direct the doctor or your local G.P in your area, even if the hospital is far away, by broadband.Good for patients external and internal,
Great for doctors at work or home with media center and the New windows systems.The systems can also be direct from Doctor to patient, if needed and vice versa."
Just a little richmedia idea in reality attached to processes in hospital to I.T Systems,networked and using the webservices Live on demand medical records,
with SQL2005.
Everything connected, securely, New managed Code
applied, to all.
Scoble, would you be able to find out if he has the nasty directsound bug thats been plauging the WinHEC build?
I'm starting to really look forward to using Longhorn, pity it's still such a long way off.
Good answers about the compositior, registry virtualisation, application updates, new controls, etc. Sounds like its going to be fun.
How much further up the chain of command can you go with your interviews? There can't be many people above him, apart from one obvious example...
Something tells me Steve Ballmer may be up next for the big shot interviews.
Stay tuned.
C
I thought it was a good video, I'm surprised he managed, at such an important time, to get Mr. Allchin's time. All I have to say is after learnign of his interest in P2P I would like to see this in MCE soon, I gather it will be in Longhorn so MCE should hopefully benefit.
And not to mess up Notepad, the review of this as well as Paint and some new apps, well I won't ho;d my breath but I can't see Notepad being changed for the better unless Edit/Undo is given greater attention.
Samuel
interesting shift in the point of view. maybe this is because users have gotten used to the web so much now, that it's taken for granted. it's nothing special any more.. so we've to focus on the client side again (also from a vendor's perspective). innovation in the structure of the internet might be achievable much harder with a sane amount of vision, time and money...
i'm very much aware that microsoft is trying hard to change the way information can be shoved through the internet with new standards, the indigo platform, etc. i'm more refering to the excitement and focus of the industry (not so technical a post).. just my random thoughts, much too late at night.
btw, i have to say i'd really love to see an interview with Steve Ballmer. keep on your (more than) good work guys!
more off-topic than anything i might have written here before: channel9 needs to get a hold of Jim Allchin's desktop wallpaper!
That said Longhorn does not seem to interesting from a web developer perspective. Now if I can start developing some avalon apps that's a different story.
He played it at the company meeting a couple of years ago. He's really good.
It's nice to have cool execs.
Yeah Robert, what is with these 'I want to give you an early look' messages? You give them to your blog readers, and apparently to other relevant websites as well, and then you point us in the forums to it before release as well.
Why bother?
As a consumer I fully (and enthusiastically) agree with your "Get it out in bits, quickly" attitude. To be blunt, We want bits on Looking Glass!!!
Would it be possible to know why the WinHEC release is not going to be available on MSDN?
As to the questions about why I posted the video other places than here? Cause I needed to get that video out into the community since our lawyers were messing up relationships. Sorry for the confusion. I can't post here until I get all the pieces uploaded and Thursday night I only had the download piece uploaded (the streaming servers are harder to get stuff up on).
Yeah. Too much. You?
I have do my studies at OSU at night. I am a senior at UAHS. I am kinda busy.
Did you ever get that XBox to boot linux?
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I know Marking has its own ideas, but I would like to see LH, Media Center, and Tablet edition combined into one product. Media Center is really just an application (or set of applications) that could run on standard versions of windows with the right hardware (i.e. TV card). Same with Tablet. The Ink and touch stuff could be installed with LH. Could be used if you have some kind of touch device. It would be cool if display devices could be hooked up on a multi-port card like a 5 port Firewire card (but not Firewire). Then adding displays would be like plugging in some new USP device. If a display device handles touch or ink, then you can get the "tablet" features. If you unplug device (i.e. laptop and go) then you don't have access to them, unless you could still use a mouse or something (ugg.) Kinda like a plug and play tablet feature. Media Center "app" features in LH could downgrade/upgrade same way. If you have a TV card or one gets pluged in (i.e. firewire/USB x.x), you have more features, if not, you get reduced set of features.
Right now I have to decide if I want MC, Tablet edition, or std XP. Don't really want all three as seperate machines. I would not have to choose if they all could be "enabled" on an XPx/LH build. I still might decide to buy a rack box for the entertainment center (with the TV card), so I gotta buy another copy anyway. So its not like you would be loosing an OS sale.
--William
Propagandists out there, trying to make lies common knowledge and common sense, would have their new world order scrambled when people like Jim mention that they were on welfare.
I firmly believe this sort of thing is the future of operating systems - giving processes limited access to resources based on the trust of the actual program rather than the traditional simplistic unix inspired "process has access to everything the user running it does" model. That model was concieved before the days of malware. Smug Linux users are always saying how important it is for users to log on in a non-priveliged account as if that solves all your problems. Of course it stops every tiny buffer overrun opening a route to take over the entire machine, but it still allows malware access to all the files the user has access to which can be massive.
There are solutions to this in other operating systems and it's probably already possible on Windows to write a subsystem that restricts access, but things like ACLs and chroot() and other tools you would use to set up such an environment are difficult to use and you can't expect end-users to get involved in that sort of thing. If I know Microsoft at all I know that they will only implement such a feature if it can be done in a way that is easy for casual end-users. If Microsoft can do this it will be a great triumph and certainly make it worth the upgrade.
Frankly, what I've seen with Avalon and Indigo and how they could potentially run in XP (with faster machines, etc. in a few years) makes me wonder, "Why do I need a new OS again?"
Yes, the big winner would be in terms of security (if and only if Microsoft indeed gets that crucial part right) and some other things he mentioned, but I guess maybe I need to see the pizazz or something because the story isn't complete for me.
woulda loved to HEAR the interview, but then I saw the ONE HUNDRED AND NINETY MEGABYTE FOOTPRINT of this file and I shuddered.
I guess there´s not ONE demo in it?! Could you PLEASE provide an audio file at an apt bit rate for TALK? Needn´t to be HIFI!
Thanks
G
If you use streaming and have low bw, the total footprint will be lower as a lower bitrate version will be output from the MBR. If you on the other hand have a fast line but with daily/monthly quota.. http://www.microsoft.com/billgates/speeches/2005/04-25WinHec05.asp has some answers to questions presented here also.
For the LH demo we have to wait for Beta 1 it seems.
let me repeat again in advance:
I APPRECIATE THIS SERVICE HERE GREATLY!!!
BUT:
Is it really too much asked that those techies seperate the streams for download and provide three D/L buttons?
Example: Millet on Indigo - 138MB d/l
300Kb stream 93MB
110Kb stream 33MB
Work of two minutes on my laptop.
So they can continue filming without the least of a concept. To seperate demos from talk that is.
G
Who was asking the questions? He has the most annoying laugh ever!
Sorry my laugh is annoying. Can't do much about it, it's my laugh and I enjoy what I do.
Really enjoyed listening to what Jim had to say.
Raised a little concern for me at the 40 minute mark where Jim is talking about the "Desktop Compositer". For performance reasons, I hope the architecture is not such that every bit destine for the display has to go through the Compositer.
Intense performance starved graphics applications would not appreciate the overhead.
Holding out for the 64bit verson;)
Steve
I wanted to see how MS will solve Multi-Core problems and concurrency without locks.
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