Reports across the blogosphere attempt to confirm that Windows 7, after nearly two years of development and hysteria, has been released to manufacturing. It will be available to purchase before the ...
Reports across the Web are pointing to a build 7600 for both Windows 7 and Windows Server 2008 R2. This is significant because the bump in the build number would suggest that Microsoft has christened ...
Gavin Clarke releases the news: Microsoft has signed off on Windows 7, closing a tightly controlled chapter in Microsoft product development. On Wednesday, the company released the Windows 7 bits to ...
Microsoft is expected to officially announce the Windows 7 RTM this week at their Worldwide Partner Conference, but a few users are reporting the OS is actually available today with build 7600.
Let’s look back at the week that was in Microsoft news, which was heavy on Windows 7 nuggets: First screenshots of Windows 7 build 7600 leak: Windows 7 build 7600 and Windows Server 2008 R2 build 7600 ...
Update: The Windows 7 development team announced on their blog this afternoon that the operating system has been released to manufacturing (RTM). Windows 7 Build 7600 (7600.16385.090713-1255) has been ...
Few periods in Microsoft’s existence have been as bruising as the past two-and-a-half years. Ever since the company shipped Windows Vista, it’s been one public relations catastrophe after another.
In context: Windows 7 as a proper computing platform has long been dead, but leakers are still playing with the corpse of one of Microsoft most successful software products. A new preview build of the ...
Based on what I've seen first-hand, along with what third-party sources have been telling me, Windows 7 RTM build is build 7600. I've had a look at this build today (I don't have a personal copy yet ...