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Preparations of Reports: The Windows 7 assembly shop


Marik

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And so, on the 7th of July, we are entering the final stage of assembly and selection for the final RTM release candidate of Windows 7 and Windows Server 2008 R2. You reasonably ask, why in the 7h, and not in the 6th of June. from 4 to 7 June in the United States holidays, Microsoft is not working therefore assembly rests :smoke:

On the 10th of July will be determined the final candidates and will begin with the major vote of two engineers of Microsoft, in order to determine which of the latest WIN7_RTM assemblies will be the final RTM release. This procedure starts with the 13-14 July and will end only on July 24 posting of the RTM release on Microsoft Connect. According to our data on the 10th of July, data will be collected and the final candidate for this assembly may receive the GO approval.

Supposed that such a candidate in the final assembly will be either build 7268 or build 7270 from the assembly branch win7_rtm (build 7270 has not yet been collected for the assembly, and the same goes for build 7269), and assume that it will be signing (sign-off). Then immediately after that happens, the rebuild of this assembly to the final RTM release will begin, but already in another assembly line, assume it will be build 7300, and only then can we confidently say that is has reached its final form.

But even this can be repeated after the rebuild of the final RTM release, so be sure to save the final assembly when it comes out.

This is a brief on what we all expect in the coming weeks.

P.S: Generally speaking, what we are doing by providing such information to a wide audience is unprecedented in the history of Microsoft, which was not previously possible to provide details of such life-corporate radio on the Internet. We are very grateful to everyone who is helping us

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And it continues, some people are too excited I think. The ones who didn't use the betas (like me) may be disappointed if they have such high hopes for something that won't be the best thing since sliced bread. The same thing happened with Vista over here, people looked at aesthetics only & then when usability came into play they bashed it. For good reason from what I hear but still...

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