Microsoft Admits Vista Update Glitch
Gregg Keizer, Computerworld
A day after Microsoft Corp. accidentally sent a patch to some users running the Windows Vista operating system, the company updated the preview release of Vista Service Pack 1 (SP1) to a small group of testers, the company confirmed Thursday.
"Microsoft [has] released the latest prerelease build of SP1, Windows Vista SP1 RC Refresh, to approximately 15,000 beta testers," a spokeswoman said in an e-mail. "This group includes corporate customers, consumer enthusiasts, software and hardware vendors, and others. The code is not available for public download."
Four weeks ago, Microsoft made Vista SP1 Release Candidate available to the general public for the first time. The 15,000 testers, however, had earlier beta versions to work with, as well as this most recent update.
The company has slated Vista SP1 for final delivery this quarter, and on Thursday said it remained on track. "We are still on schedule to deliver SP1 RTM in Q1 [calendar year 2008]," said the spokeswoman.
In a separate issue, though, the company Wednesday admitted a snafu in a Windows Vista update it issued Tuesday to prep PCs for the later release of SP1.
The update, which is described in the support document KB935509, was one of three prerequisites for SP1 unveiled Tuesday, and was supposed to end up only on Vista Enterprise and Vista Ultimate machines, since it targeted BitLocker, the full-drive encryption technology bundled with those premium versions of the operating system. Instead, the update was also offered to PCs running Vista Home Basic and Home Premium.
"We had a small number of early customer reports, that in some cases, this update was being offered for installation on all Windows Vista editions versus just Ultimate and Enterprise," said an anonymous poster on the Microsoft company blog devoted to the Windows Update development team. "For systems set to download and install updates automatically, the update will not install even if it has already downloaded, so most people will not be affected by this," the post continued. "Customers who installed the initial release of the update on editions other than Ultimate or Enterprise should not be concerned as the update will have no negative impact on their systems."
Although some users on Microsoft's support forums wondered why they had seen the BitLocker patch when it didn't apply to their machines, no one running Home Basic or Home Premium had reported problems as of midday Thursday.
The remaining pair of prerequisites tweak Vista so that users will be able to roll back to the debut version of the operating system by uninstalling SP1 if they find that necessary.
This week's glitch was the latest in a series of Windows Updates snafus that include the September revelation that, contrary to users' instructions, Windows' update code had updated itself on their PCs, and charges in October that the company's OneCare security suite was also monkeying with users' update settings. Microsoft denied doing anything untoward with OneCare.

For more enterprise computing news, visit Computerworld. Story copyright © 2007 Computerworld Inc. All rights reserved.
With HP wireless printers, you could have printed this from any room in the house. Live wirelessly. Print wirelessly.
Laptop Showcase
Windows Vista FAQ
Tags at a Glance
Related Operating Systems Articles
- 15 Tech Secrets for the Serious Road Warrior Use these smart mobile tech tricks to create your own wireless hotspot out of a phone or laptop in a pinch, protect your laptop from grab-and-dash thieves, and communicate with anyone anywhere.
- Why I Didn't Skip Microsoft Vista: Security Microsoft's Windows Vista OS continues to be dogged by a bad reputation, but some recent security reports give it an edge over Windows XP. And some users say security is precisely why they didn't skip Vista.
- Psystar Deserves a Chance to Compete Analysis: A little competition on its own turf might be good for Apple--and for customers.
- What the Vista Suit Means for Windows 7 Netbooks Will Windows 7 netbooks be partially crippled, as were the "Vista Capable" PCs?
- Hidden Windows 7 Features Exposed A programmer has unlocked several still-unfinished features of Windows 7 that Microsoft didn't demo.
Best Prices on System Utilities
Windows Live OneCare 2.0 (Full Product)Price: $24.50
VMware Fusion (Full Product, Mac)Price: $39.99
Parallels Desktop (Full Product)Price: $20.00
Norton Partition Magic 8.0 Rev1RetailPrice: $17.99
Norton SystemWorks 11.0 (Full Product)Price: $20.99
Parallels Desktop 3.0 for MAC - BoxPrice: $44.99
- Windows Home Server Back up, access, share, and store all your family's digital media.
- CDW Security Center Is your data protected? Visit the CDW Security Center Learn where you may be vulnerable and how to address those risks.
- Lenovo Laptop Showcase Find out how Lenovo IdeaPads and Thinkpads balance performance and portability. Visit the Lenovo Resource Center for more info...








"Microsoft Admits Vista Update Glitch" Comments