News
Developers Get Windows Vista Beta 1
- By John K. Waters
- August 2, 2005
Microsoft is delivering Beta 1 of Windows Vista (formerly codenamed Longhorn)
to 10,000 technical beta testers, and making the release available to members
of the Microsoft Developer Network and the Microsoft TechNet program.
Microsoft also released the first beta of Internet Explorer 7 for Windows XP,
along with the IE version that will be bundled with Windows Vista.
This release encompasses two betas, explains John Montgomery, director of product
management at Microsoft. Windows Vista Beta 1 is a developer-focused release
that lacks some user-oriented features expected in 2006—no Windows Media
Player or support for tablet and Media Center PCs. But it comes with the .NET
Framework 2.0, the Windows Presentation Foundation (WPF—formerly codenamed
Avalon) and the Windows Communication Foundation (WCF—formerly codenamed
Indigo) as well as an extensive set of new APIs for security, reliability, deployment,
search and other features.
For the public, Microsoft is providing the WinFX Runtime Component Beta 1,
which comprises the .NET Framework, the WPF and the WCF in a downloadable file
that can be run on Windows XP and Windows Server 2003. (WinFX is the new API,
replacing the Win32 API, to allow access to these new technologies. It shouldn't
be confused with the WinFS file system expected to go into its first beta about
the time of the Vista launch.)
“At a certain level, this release is less about getting feedback and
more about figuring out how to talk to people about [the technology], how to
inform them about what’s going on and just getting that conversation going,”
Montgomery says. “There are thousands of new APIs, in addition to all
the managed code classes. It’s a huge surface area, and to some extent,
we don’t know yet what people are going to latch on to, find fascinating
and get excited about. And history has shown us that developers can take a long
time to work out how they might have to change their applications to take advantage
of the new features.”
The WPF is Vista's presentation system, designed to unify the way Windows creates,
displays and manipulates documents, media and user interfaces. The WCF is the
service-oriented messaging system, designed to unify and extend distributed
technology stacks to deliver a consistent, composable experience for building
connected systems.
The beta release comes with APIs focused on:
- User experience: New AERO controls complement WPF.
- Security: Developers will be able to create stable applications that leverage
frameworks such as User Account Protection.
- Reliability: New APIs are designed to enable developers to build applications
that will behave as a user expects them to.
- Deployment: to allow developers to write robust installers with less complexity
- Mobility: to support development of Windows apps for laptop, notebook and
tablet PC users
- Data: to allow developers to make data easier to discover and share across
applications—most notably, system-level APIs that enable developers to
find and consume RSS feeds to aggregate information from multiple sources
- Connectivity: Vista promises faster data transmission and easier user-to-user
connectivity; peer-to-peer functionality lets users discover and interact with
nearby devices, while WCF APIs make it simpler to consume and expose Web services,
enabling communication across a range of hardware and software.
- Search: to allow developers to leverage new file search and organization
features
More information about the release is available at Windows
Vista. The WinFX Runtime Component Beta 1 is available for download at:
Microsoft.
About the Author
John K. Waters is a freelance writer based in Silicon Valley. He can be reached
at [email protected].