WinHEC 2007 Day 1: Gates: 'The Phone is Going to Be the PC...'

By Scott M. Fulton, III | Published May 15, 2007, 12:16 PM

WinHEC Big WhiteLOS ANGELES - The keynote sessions have begun at WinHEC 2007, with Chairman Bill Gates taking the podium at about 9:05 am this morning. Soon thereafter, he began a kind of retrospective, including a look not only at how the serial port looked in 1992, but how Gates himself looked (like many of us, he had more hair).

What's the theme? About five minutes into the speech, it looked like Gates was fishing for a theme. His retrospective is already treating Windows Vista as a milestone that has already passed. While developers here are looking for guidance in how to start developing hardware drivers and interoperability tools for Vista, some starting even now, at ten minutes into the speech, Microsoft began showing a quick-cut retrospective tape of last January's launch of Vista and Office 2007.

The tape was greeted by several seconds of dead silence. Gates waited...and waited for the thunderous applause that never came. From there, he stuttered into the next phase of his presentation.

9:20 am PT - Gates has started showing off some UMPCs, including one concept prototype from Intel that may have been a UMPC prototype from a previous year - it does not look like the MID prototype that Intel began showing in early April.

9:30 am PT - The first general applause since Gates took the stage came during a demonstration by Windows senior program managers Glenn Ward and Jim Barber, showing a type of wireless peripheral connection protocol called Windows Rally. Think of it as "Bluetooth by Microsoft." Digital cameras can pair with Windows-enabled PCs wirelessly. In a demo, Barber took a photo of Ward after having paired a camera with a Vista PC. With the wireless pairing having already taken place, the picture Barber took showed up in the open Windows directory.

Next, Ward and Barber showed a wireless media extender, designed to stream media between Windows Media Center enabled PCs and Xbox 360 consoles elsewhere in the household. The wireless stream takes place over an 802.11n connection, streaming at 5 GHz. In a few seconds after the PC started up "Top Gun," the stream showed up on the TV to which the Xbox 360 was connected. Again, "Windows Rally" connection technology was responsible.

As we were seeing this, the first press releases were going live regarding the new nomenclature for "Longhorn:" Windows Server 2008. This naming despite the fact that as recently as last Friday, a Microsoft spokesperson confirmed to BetaNews that the release to manufacturing date for Longhorn was during the second half of 2007.

WinHEC 2007: Microsoft Unified Communications9:40 am PT - Windows senior product manager Steven Leonard showed new features of Windows Home Server. HP's new media home server unit is about the size of a medium stereo speaker, perhaps suitable for a coffee table.

Among the new features are policy-based home user management. Using a group policy management console like device, senior product manager Steven Leonard demonstrated "punishing his son" for turning off the system firewall, by shutting off his access to his media directory. Leonard did not demonstrate shutting off his son's access to the firewall.

Leonard also stated new purchases of Windows Home Server come complete with a free domain name, so that outside users can log onto home server via the Web, and see their own personal pages, along with new pictures and video streamed from the HP server box and freshly loaded from the digital camera.

10:00 am PT - Windows Server 2008 senior product manager Ian Hammeroff showed off a new feature of the replacement for Systems Management Server, which will disable small devices' access to PCs throughout the network based on very granular policies. For instance, certain unauthorized USB thumb drives may be disabled by policy, even on wireless mobile systems, though USB mouses can connect. This way, businesses can disable thumb drive use if they so choose, without having to use glue to gum up the USB port - a tactic which may have sounded like a joke, but which some businesses have actually done.

10:05 am PT - About the only prophetic declaration Bill Gates has made this morning concerns Unified Communications: "The phone is going to be the PC, the PC is going to be the phone," he professed, showing a slide revealing a conceptual form factor of a VoIP phone with what appeared to be a distinctive little Vista-like screen.

More from the keynote session appears here, including news from Microsoft's chief of research, Craig Mundie.

Comments

View comments by with a score of at least

"Microsoft began showing a quick-cut retrospective tape of last January's launch of Vista.

The tape was greeted by several seconds of dead silence. Gates waited...and waited for the thunderous applause that never came. From there, he stuttered into the next phase of his presentation."

Thanks, that gave me a good *rolling on the floor laughing* :D
What a moron. Did he seriously expect someone would applaud for that Vista garbage? How retarded can you get!?

Score: 0

|

Microsoft is years behind of whats out there. Sorry they need to get more programmers and have Mr. Gates retire with his billions.

Score: 0

|

wtf?

Score: 0

|

"The phone is going to be the PC, the PC is going to be the phone,"

Yep, and it will be called an Apple iPhone - you know, that product that actually exists in physical form and not just as a concept slide.

Score: 0

|

A few years back, didn't he say the "PC was going to be the Phone"???

I think we just downgraded!

Score: 0

|

What if I don't want a phone, period? Not on my PC, not in my house, not in my hand, not hanging off my ear. I want peace, not interruption. And isn't this just another "tail" chasing Apple's dog for Microsoft?

Mmmm, can you smell the desperation? Maybe Microsoft can sue Apple for infringing on their phone idea, ya ya? Hey, it makes sense in toolie's bizarro world!

Score: 0

|

Proving, yet again, his complete inability to think for himself:

What if I don't want a phone

Um....I know it's a tough one, but here's a thought: Don't buy one. You try to wrap your head around that one.

And isn't this just another "tail" chasing Apple's dog for Microsoft?


Duh? It's called competition. Tech Company A releases new product, Tech Company B releases competing product. Of course, because the names of these companies are "Apple" and "Microsoft", you've been blinded by your consumer angst. Isn't it cute...

Mmmm, can you smell the desperation?

From a mile away. You really need better material. New, not original. I wouldn't want you to strain yourself.

Score: 0

|

"Windows Server 2008. This naming despite the fact that as recently as last Friday, a Microsoft spokesperson confirmed to BetaNews that the release to manufacturing date for Longhorn was during the second half of 2007."

Aren't most MS products shipped in the second half given the next year's nomenclature?

Score: 0

|

Sounds like the Car Manufacturer's calendar has spread to software devs?

Score: 0

|

Man, what is it with media center PCs, HTPCs, home servers? I'm trying to shed all the extra wattage draw by using low power NAS devices hooked into printers and media players like the Netgear EVA8000.

Score: 0

|

Warning: You are connected to your PC and phone, more so than you think....thanks to Microsoft you have rediscovered yourself.

Score: 0

|

'A pivot from war to peace:' The AMD + Intel armistice, in their own words

An extraordinary day in technology history is recognized by two long-time rivals that mutually decided it's futile to fight anyplace else except the marketplace.

PS3, Xbox to soon get Twitter, Facebook integration

Both Microsoft's Xbox 360 and Sony's PlayStation 3 will integrate with Facebook in the near future.

Windows Marketplace for Mobile now available in browser, iTunes' App Store still not

You can now check out what Windows Marketplace for Mobile has to offer without a Windows Phone.

Microsoft damage control after marketer claims Win7 inspired by Mac

Have you ever said anything you wish you could take back? Ever? No? Not even once? Well then, you won't sympathize with a mid-level Microsoft manager today.

Blockbuster's way down, but poised for a comeback

Though it took a serious beating in 2009, Blockbuster CEO Jim Keyes says the company can turn it around.

iTunes Preview deson't go far enough to create Web-based option for store

Apple has rolled out iTunes Preview, a Web interface for browsing iTunes.

PDC 2009 Preview: The move to Office 2010 and Visual Studio 2010

The major focus of Microsoft's conference next week will likely be explaining why two pillars of its software sales strategy deserve to remain where they are.

Dell's first smartphone aids the Android onslaught

Longtime PC leader Dell has finally announced its Android-based smarphone.

After the Intel + AMD armistice: Do we really want a level playing field?

Scott Fulton On Point: One by one, the reasons for us to continue suspending the course toward open and fair competition in IT, are dropping like flies.

FLO TV launches pocketable, smartphone-like TVs

Qualcomm's FLO TV Personal Television made by HTC launches in retail today.

Google acquires Gizmo5, builds IP telephony portfolio

Google Voice today confirmed rumors that it would acquire IP telephony company Gizmo5