New peeks at a post-Windows future
By Chris Gaylord | 08.04.08
A curious leak from Microsoft offered a glimpse of life without Windows.
Software Development Times claims to have peeked at internal Microsoft documents about Midori, a prototype operating system that could one day replace Windows. This is not the media’s first glance at Midori, but these fresh rumors have analysts again imagining a future of “cloud computing.”
For decades, Microsoft’s business model has relied on tethering each copy of its operating system to a single computer. The cost of the OS was hidden – rolled into the price of the PC – and there was no easy way of getting your system preferences, desktop layout, or the OS itself off that one machine.
This scheme worked wonders for Microsoft: “Eighty percent of Windows sales are made when a new PC is sold,” a Gartner analyst told the BBC.
But as web browsers grow more powerful, the importance of an operating system deflates. Facebook doesn’t care if you use a Mac or PC – or a cellphone for that matter. Nor does Google Docs, nor Photoshop Express, nor many of the websites that are increasingly acting like applications. So if browsers are the new operating system, where does that leave Windows?
Midori latches onto the imagined next major step for PCs: cloud computing. Midori would be an Internet-anchored OS. Unlike Vista, which is largely based on older versions of Windows, this will be completely rewritten software.
Even these new rumors offer little insight into the real mechanics of the operation. Who knows what form, name, or relevance it could take? Perhaps future technology will rev so fast that it blows past the “cloud” concept behind Midori.
The official word from Microsoft is equally hazy: “Midori is one of many incubation projects under way at Microsoft. It’s simply a matter of being too early in the incubation to talk about it.”
The common daydream is that this OS takes up a fraction of your hard-drive space but offers many more features. Your computer wouldn’t need much processing power, because number-crunching could be done on a distant machine and the results would beam back to your monitor. This could mean smaller machines (no need to pack so many chips into one box), more communication between PCs and pseudo-PCs (e.g. cellphones and PDAs), and the ability to load your personal desktop from any device (turn on the machine and Midori downloads everything you’d need to feel at home).
<< Video-gaming strives for respect. Is it a sport? | MainComments
2. Bill Stanley | 08.05.08
Thank you MS but I will put up with the OS taking up space on my PC and allow the number crunching as well. My OS will remain at home NOT on your server. Thanks, but no thanks!
3. Sean Bires | 08.05.08
it’s cool in concept, and all aspects of computing are becoming a bit less centralized every day, but our internet infrastructure needs to be exponentially faster and more reliable for the end user for it to be practical to transition the desktop “online” for all users. A lot of (say) media production work, whether we’re talking about illustration, video editing or (the digital half of) music production is still a centralized affair due to the sheer volume of data involved. The internet is not going to transfer several gigs/minute at low latencies in its current state. However if all you’re looking to do is browse facebook, write documents, stream some web media and log into your company’s remote system to do work, Microsoft Midori doesn’t sound like much of a stretch from there…
Trackbacks/Pingbacks
Leave a Comment
We do not publish all comments, and we do not publish comments immediately. The comments feature is a forum to discuss the ideas in our stories. Constructive debate - even pointed disagreement - is welcome, but personal attacks on other commenters are not, and will not be published.
Tip: Do not write a novel. Keep it short. We will not publish lengthy comments. Come up with your own statements. This is not a place to cut and paste an email you received. If we recognize it as such, we won't post it.
Please do not post any comments that are commercial in nature or that violate copyrights.
Finally, we will not publish any comments that we regard as obscene, defamatory, or intended to incite violence.






1. Gyula Bognar, Jr. | 08.05.08
We are all enthusiastic about the next step, called “cloud computing”, without thinking about the reliability and safety of the Internet, which works in peace time. We may have some disasters, loose the Internet for a day or two, but we can manage it and live through.
The realization, that complete reliance on the Internet and on computers is a debilitating handicap and the inability to do simple tasks without computers will spell total disaster and cripple our civilization during the next World War in a not too distant future. First we should be concentrating on improving our skills and create enough energy for our needs and recycle all of our resources to be completely self reliant, then we may turn our attention to less important tasks.