Where's Windows 7 beta? Microsoft posts, then pulls the download
Microsoft's message as of 4:50 PM PST.
(Credit: CNET)Microsoft has been in the software game long enough to know that when you're announcing a release as big as an operating system to millions of itchy-fingered techies, you release it when you say you will and you have the foresight to get your servers in a row.
Yet, the general release of the much-anticipated Windows 7 beta is overdue by hours, Microsoft having first posted the files late, and then pulled them when servers buckled under the traffic. What's left now is a sort-of apologetic, but mostly noncommittal notice that there's no estimated arrival time for the download links, and a lot of angry people disappointed in Redmond once again.
A Microsoft PR representative I got hold of on the Consumer Electronics Show floor had no additional insight.
Lifehacker posted direct download links earlier Friday for your 32- and 64-bit PCs, with a few cursory instructions for installing the ISO files. We'll also host the Windows 7 beta files when we get them, on CNET Download.com.
Jessica Dolcourt reviews the latest and greatest smartphone apps, in addition to a healthy dose of Windows software. E-mail Jessica and follow her on Twitter.


Firefox 3 = 7.1 MB. Windows = 3.7 GB. As math goes, 1 M Windows downloads x 3.7 GB = 3.7 PB.
3 M Firefox downloads x 7.1 MB = 21 TB. Increasing load by 100x is nontrivial. actually a 3.7 PB load on any website is nontrivial, even according to an "internet standpoint".
setting up product keys direct from the website just doesn't seem like such a good idea. Having a certain number randomly created, then released as people install the beta would be a much better idea. Have a basic OS, limited, able to connect to the internet, but not able to surf. Let it get its random key, then restart. MS would know where the OS is and people wouldn't be crowding the site all at the same time.
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by dabrace1984
January 10, 2009 7:56 AM PST
- I got it. I am an MCP and I subscribe to several of Microsoft's weekly newsletter. Their hardware newsletter was sent out yesterday and it had an invitation code which allowed me to download it from http://connect.microsoft.com. I installed it in a VM and it's sluggish in this environment but semi-usable. My biggest concerns are related to the Quick Launch Bar and the Taskbar. I find that the redesign makes it difficult to tell the difference between shortcuts in the QLB and already opened programs in the TB. Also, the time/date section of the notification area takes up to lines by default. I have checked to see if it can be make smaller.
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