This posting is provided “as is” with no warranties, and confers no rights. All of the information herein could easily be right, wrong, up, down, in, out, backwards, forwards, heavily dated, or totally false. You can interpret it as you wish, or not interpret it at all. Also, in case you haven’t figured it out, all of this is non-static and heavily subject to change.
The old idea where Microsoft bases an operating system on central pillars? It’s back, and with a complete refocus of priorities. Looking back, the original pillars of Longhorn were Avalon (WPF), Indigo (WCF), and WinFS, as well as the pseudo-pillar which was referred to as “Fundamentals.”
No longer does Microsoft’s basis for an operating system focus on key architectural developments such as the various frameworks of yore. Now, it seems, pillars are at least tentatively being redefined as design and usability concepts upon which to build the operating system.
Over the next five days, I’m going to spend some time on AeroXP presenting to you the separate pillars upon which the Windows 7 experience (and indeed, Windows 7 as a whole) will be built. What you’ll see are the five pillars of Windows 7 and the specific scenarios which the Windows team plans to enhance. Wherever possible, I’ll enhance the scenario depictions with visual aids (read: screenshots). The first pillar is after the jump.
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