Windows 7 is complete, but before we begin, this isn't the exact version of Windows 7 Ultimate that you'll get on a new PC
That's because there are still content deals for Media Center to lock
down and it doesn't have the Windows 7 web browser ballot scren that
users in Europe will see when they set up a Windows 7 PC (new or
upgraded).
PC builders and laptop manufacturers are also busy creating their own
Device Stage interfaces for some PCs and many more peripherals will
have Device Stage interfaces by the release on 22 October.
But this is the final code you'll be using from day to day - the last
few bugs and the debug code of the Release Candidate are gone - and
it's the first time we can tell whether Microsoft has delivered what
Senior VP Steven Sinofsky promised last autumn: "Making Windows 7
compelling and easier to get used to."
Windows 7 has to woo Windows XP users who have resisted Vista by
offering performance and compatibility as well as extra features, and
it has to entice Vista users who feel they should have had the
performance and compatibility all along by convincing them that it's
more than a service pack.
And given how many people have tried out the pre-release versions of
Windows 7, the RTM has to dot the i's, cross the t's and feel truly
finished.
It's a tall order. Can Windows 7 deliver all that, compete with OS X
Snow Leopard and stave off the attack of Android and Chrome OS at the
low end? Is it a Windows you'll actually want to use?