| | |
Official: Windows 7 has more than 2000 bugs
Steven Sinofsky, the Senior Vice President for the Microsoft Windows and Windows Live Engineering Group, in an attempt to quell a beta tester rebellion over a perceived lack of feedback concerning bug reporting has made an astonishing confession: Windows 7 has at least 2000 bugs.
Sinofsky states that more than a million people installed and used the Windows 7 beta in the first few weeks of release, and admits it has been a lot of work coping with the feedback. How much work?
How about one feedback report every 15 seconds during one week in January, and a total of more than half a million such reports so far. Sinofsky explains that this equates to more than 500 feedback reports for every Windows 7 developer to deal with, and that only 6 weeks into the testing process.
With more than 10 million device installations for the Windows 7 beta I guess that bugs were inevitable, that is he point of testing after all. Although Microsoft is not saying how many bugs have been reported and verified, Sinofsky is happy to reveal that it has the "fixes in the pipeline for the highest percentage of those reported bugs than in any previous Windows development cycle."
Which is good news, especially when you consider that those fixes concern around 2000 reported crash causing bugs in the Windows 7 code alone, not including third party driver or application problems.
Sinofsky also explains what a bug is, as far as Microsoft is concerned: "a bug is any time the software does something that someone one wasn’t expecting it to do. A bug can be a cosmetic issue, a consistency issue, a crash, a hang, a failure to succeed, a confusing user experience, a compatibility issue, a missing feature, or any one of dozens of different ways that the software can behave in a way that isn’t expected."
Fair play to Microsoft and Steven Sinofsky for having the balls to reveal that 2000 bugs figure, I am sure it will draw plenty of flack from the usual suspects. However, the fact that these are being dealt with and fixed show that the beta testing process is working. The fact that Microsoft are telling us show that it is getting a grip on the hearts and minds issue. For once, I'm on the side of the Microsofties.
Sinofsky states that more than a million people installed and used the Windows 7 beta in the first few weeks of release, and admits it has been a lot of work coping with the feedback. How much work?
How about one feedback report every 15 seconds during one week in January, and a total of more than half a million such reports so far. Sinofsky explains that this equates to more than 500 feedback reports for every Windows 7 developer to deal with, and that only 6 weeks into the testing process.
With more than 10 million device installations for the Windows 7 beta I guess that bugs were inevitable, that is he point of testing after all. Although Microsoft is not saying how many bugs have been reported and verified, Sinofsky is happy to reveal that it has the "fixes in the pipeline for the highest percentage of those reported bugs than in any previous Windows development cycle."
Which is good news, especially when you consider that those fixes concern around 2000 reported crash causing bugs in the Windows 7 code alone, not including third party driver or application problems.
Sinofsky also explains what a bug is, as far as Microsoft is concerned: "a bug is any time the software does something that someone one wasn’t expecting it to do. A bug can be a cosmetic issue, a consistency issue, a crash, a hang, a failure to succeed, a confusing user experience, a compatibility issue, a missing feature, or any one of dozens of different ways that the software can behave in a way that isn’t expected."
Fair play to Microsoft and Steven Sinofsky for having the balls to reveal that 2000 bugs figure, I am sure it will draw plenty of flack from the usual suspects. However, the fact that these are being dealt with and fixed show that the beta testing process is working. The fact that Microsoft are telling us show that it is getting a grip on the hearts and minds issue. For once, I'm on the side of the Microsofties.
0
•
•
•
•
So Microsoft is admitting their operating system has bugs. "The first step toward recovery is admitting that you have a problem" :-)
0
•
•
•
•
Given the size of Windows 7, the numbers of bugs doesn't seem all that large. All software has bugs, regardless of the author.
Similar Threads
- News Story: Windows Live OneCare AntiVirus is crap. It is official. (Windows Vista and Windows 7)
- Windows 2000, Windows XP and Windows Vista in 1 bootable DVD (Windows NT / 2000 / XP)
- Computer Bugs out After Login after a Windows Update (Windows NT / 2000 / XP)
- Minimizing Outlook 2000 to the systray in Windows 2000 Pro (Windows Software)
- Windows 2000:Unable to install Office 2000 (Windows NT / 2000 / XP)
| Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Tag cloud for betatesting, bugs, development, microsoft, operatingsystem, os, windows, windows7
7 advertising age amd android apple avatar ballmer beta bing bluegene browser business chips cloudcomputing computer console database dell desktop development dos economy energy enterprise firefox game games gaming google hardware hp ibm ibm.news ie8 intel intelibm internet internetexplorer iphone ipod itunes java leopard linux mac malware medicine memory microsoft mobile mozilla netbooks news nintendo novell office openoffice opensource openvz operatingsystem operatingsystems os pc photonvps programming ps3 recession redhat registry russia search security server software sun supercomputer supercomputing technology tiger trends twitter ubuntu unix unmanaged upgrade virtualization vista web windows windows7 working x86 xbox xbox360 xen xp yahoo yahoo! zune




