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After Win2000, it's Whistler and Blackcomb

Windows 2000 already is history -- at least for Microsoft's development
team. They're working on the upgrades -- Whistler in 2001 and Blackcomb in
2002.
By Mary Jo Foley, Sm@rt Reseller
UPDATED February 10, 2000 7:21 AM PT

Microsoft Corp. wants all eyes on Windows 2000 when it officially rolls out
the product next week. But its Windows development team already has moved on
to work on the next two versions of Windows.

Microsoft (Nasdaq: MSFT) is targeting March 2001 to deliver the first full
upgrade to Windows 2000, code-named Whistler, according to sources close to
the company. The follow-on to Whistler, code-named Blackcomb, is a 2002 or
later Windows release.

Microsoft is looking to one of its executives' favorite retreat
destinations, Whistler Resort in British Columbia, as the inspiration for
its latest code name series. Whistler Mountain and Blackcomb Mountain are a
few hours outside of Seattle.

Microsoft will officially roll out Windows 2000 on Feb. 17 in San Francisco.

Holiday's over
While Microsoft publicly acknowledged the Whistler code name in late
January, company officials first told its Windows development team at the
very start of January about plans to merge the Windows releases formerly
code-named "Neptune" and "Odyssey" into Whistler, a single, NT-kernel-based
release.

But Windows developers returning from their holidays after finally
delivering to manufacturing Windows 2000 received an internal memo outlining
their new marching orders: development of Whistler and Blackcomb, say
sources close to the company.

Lengthy development and testing cycles -- like the four years it took
Microsoft to complete NT 5.0/Windows 2000 -- were to become a thing of the
past. According to the memo, say sources, developers have been charged with
delivering a code-complete alpha release of Whistler by April, with a first
public beta due in July. Microsoft already has delivered internally a number
of internal builds of Whistler, say sources, and was at Build No. 2200 this
week.

Blackcomb on board
Microsoft plans to position the desktop version of Whistler as a superset of
the consumer Windows release that Microsoft is calling Windows Millennium
Edition (Windows Me) and that Microsoft is striving to ship in the latter
half of 2000. Microsoft is expected to tout the Whistler desktop as the
operating system it wants OEMs to preload on their Christmas 2001 PCs, say
sources. The biggest difference between Whistler and Millennium is
Millennium is still based on the current Win9X kernel.

Whistler also will exist in Server, Advanced Server and Datacenter versions.
Whistler is likely to come in both 32-bit and 64-bit flavors, say sources.

While Whistler will be the first full-fledged upgrade to Windows 2000, it
won't be the release upon which the company is betting its next-generation
architecture. Microsoft's Next Generation Windows Services platform --
details of which the company is expected to make public in early May -- will
rely on Blackcomb, not Whistler, as one of its key enabling products, say
sources.

As Microsoft is still in the early stages of working on its Whistler feature
list, it seems to have done little to concretize its planned Blackcomb
lineup.

Microsoft officials said they would not comment on code names beyond
Whistler. They also declined to comment on dates for any future versions of
Windows, calling them "speculative."



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