Leakers appear to possess gotten their hands on what could be the final Windows 7 Support Pack 1/Windows Server 2008 R2 SP1 builds.(I had heard rumors that Microsoft had put the finishing touches on SP1 in December,
Office Enterprise 2007, but don;t know for positive whether which is true.)Microsoft officials aren't stating whether or not the most recent leaked edition could be the “real” SP1 release-to-manufacturing version. As usual, the advice to customers is to wait for the official Microsoft-provided SP1 before deploying to avoid potential malware and security risks.Unlike previous first company packs of Windows — which were an absolute must-have for many business users before they;d even think about deploying the newest Windows variant — the coming SP1 feels a bit anti-climactic. (At least on the client side.)Microsoft officials have said not to expect any new features in Windows 7 SP1. (There was a Microsoft blog post last year that acknowledged there would be some “feature enhancements” in SP1 around federation services,
Windows 7 Home Basic 64, audio devices and printing.) They;ve also said to expect a couple of new virtualization updates in the server edition of SP1,
windows 7 Professional x64, specifically RemoteFX and a dynamic-memory adjustor for Hyper-V.RemoteFX is a new graphics acceleration platform that's based on desktop-remoting technology that Microsoft obtained in 2008 when it acquired VDI vendor Calista Technologies. The new Hyper-V feature in SP1 will dynamically adjust memory of a guest virtual machine on demand.For months, Microsoft execs have been telling business users there is no need to wait for SP1 to begin their Windows 7 deployment processes. Quite a few have heeded this call,
Office 2010 Home And Student, with Forrester Research estimating that 10 percent of business PCs in North America and Europe already were running Windows seven as of last fall. Forrester said at that time that 90 percent of those users it surveyed eventually planned to move to Windows seven.I;ve asked Microsoft officials when MSDN, TechNet,
Microsoft Office 2010 Standard Key, volume and other customers should expect the last SP1 build and was told the company had nothing more to share at this time.