|
Microsoft
Corp. on Saturday ditched the download limit on Windows 7 beta, saying that
users will be able to grab the preview through Jan. 24 -- even if the total
exceeds the 2.5 million cap it had set earlier. The company also apologized
for the stalled servers that prevented users from obtaining the operating
system preview the public beta was originally slated to launch.
"I know many of you have had issues with the Windows 7 beta site over the
last 24 hours," company spokesman Brandon LeBlanc acknowledged in a posting
to Microsoft`s Windows 7 blog late Saturday. "We apologize for the
inconvenience that it caused some of you." Rather than cap the number of
beta activation keys at 2.5 million -- the original plan to limit the test
pool -- Microsoft will instead make Windows 7 available for two weeks,
though Jan. 24, said LeBlanc.
If fewer than 2.5 million people request and receive activation keys during
that time, Microsoft will continue to offer the beta until the limit is
reached. "However, the more likely scenario is that we will surpass 2.5
million downloads, and so the beta downloads will be stopped after the
24th," wrote Kevin Remdes, a Microsoft-employed IT evangelist, on his blog
Sunday.
The move came after Microsoft fumbled the Windows 7 public beta launch on
Friday. At midday, it postponed the beta, citing "very heavy traffic" and
saying it needed to beef up its servers and bandwidth to meet demand.
Earlier in the day, Microsoft`s main page and other URLs had been brought to
their knees by users eager to download the preview. Hours later, when a link
to the download was added to a page dedicated to IT professionals, users saw
only messages such as "Server is too busy," and, "This site is currently
experiencing technical difficulties, please check back in the next business
day" when they tried to grab the file.
Microsoft restarted the beta launch Saturday, posting links to the download
on its main Windows 7 page. Computerworld had no difficulty on Monday
morning reaching the download page, receiving activation keys or initiating
downloads of the 32- and 64-bit versions of the new operating system. After
Jan. 24, users will still probably be able to download the beta because
Microsoft rarely removes previews from its servers, instead relying on
activation-key limits to restrict the number of testers.
People who grab the beta after Microsoft stops delivering keys can install
the operating system, then run it under Microsoft`s usual 30-day trial
policy. By using the same "slmgr -rearm" command that gained notoriety after
Windows Vista`s debut, they can extend that trial period to a total of 120
days. Microsoft`s decision to put a time limit on Windows 7 beta`s
availability mimics its practice more than two years ago, when it launched
Windows Vista Beta 2. That beta, launched June 7, 2006, was available for
just over three weeks, through June 30. |