Windows XP SP2 Delayed Until Late 2004
I guess we will have to wait a while longer for SP2...
** Update ** Scobe posted a link to Paul Thurrott's WinInfo Site where Paul tells us that Windows XP SP2 will be delayed but not as much as previously thought. Now it is only until Q1 2004. The first date was a typo on Microsoft's site.
Windows XP SP2 Delayed Until Late 2004
August 15th, 2003, 9:25 PM ET
By: Nate Mook, BetaNews
Story URL: http://www.betanews.com/article.php3?sid=1060997150
In a surprising turn of events, Microsoft has pushed back
the release date for the second Windows XP service pack to
the third quarter of 2004. SP2 was long expected to debut
before the end of 2003, a year after
SP1 made the rounds.
The change in plans came to light by way of
Microsoft's
Product Lifecycle Web site, which details future support timelines for the company's
products.
"Third quarter next year would put
anywhere from 18 to 24 months between the first two service
packs," Joe Wilcox, senior analyst for Jupiter Research,
told BetaNews. "This is a much longer cycle than between
Windows 2000 service pack releases."
The
possible implications of the move are far reaching. A
yearlong delay gives Microsoft significant time to further
its integration strategy with Windows XP – building more
components directly into the operating system.
"It's possible that Microsoft is preparing a
more substantive-than-usual service pack that would add new
features to Windows XP or hybrids Media Center and Tablet
PC," said Wilcox.
One such potential feature is
Microsoft's
PC Satisfaction package, currently in beta testing. PC Satisfaction extends the
native functionality of Windows XP with services such as an
enhanced firewall and virus scanner that give customers a
better Windows experience out of the box.
Although Microsoft has not yet announced how it
plans to issue PC Satisfaction in its final form, the
company hinted that a new firewall would be enabled by
default in the next Windows XP update.
It is
unclear how the delay will affect the next version of
Windows, code-named Longhorn. Microsoft executives
previously targeted late 2004 for a release to manufacturing
and planned to have
Longhorn on store shelves by mid-2005.
However, an extended Windows XP lifecycle
gives Redmond more time to maneuver and opens the door for
Longhorn to debut in early 2006.
A 2006 release
date puts almost five years between Microsoft's consumer
operating system releases, following the launch of Windows
XP in 2001. Microsoft has previously denied considering an
interim operating system release in the form of Windows XP
Second Edition, but a two-year development timeframe for
Service Pack 2 may raise the possibility once again.
In the meantime, consumers and businesses will
need to be vigilant about keeping Windows XP patched with
the latest updates from Microsoft, rather than waiting for
the convenience of a service pack, noted Jupiter's Wilcox.
The issue of patching came to a head this week
after many Windows users fell victim to the Blaster Internet
worm, despite Microsoft issuing a patch for the hole in
July.
Microsoft has since told BetaNews
it plans to improve the method in which patches are
installed, as well as better educate customers on the steps
needed to protect their systems.
"A second half
2004 release does not have to mean a crisis for consumers,"
said Wilcox. "When used properly, Windows XP's Automatic
Update keeps the OS up to date."
Microsoft was
unavailable for comment by press time.
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