Microsoft
has killed the next-generation WinFS file system that was initially scheduled to
become part of
Windows
Vista.
Pieces of the technology will instead be integrated into the
SQL
Server database,
ActiveX
Data Objects and other Microsoft products.
Quentin Clark, director of program management at Microsoft, explained on a
Microsoft
blog that the company wants to make WinFS more general purpose.
"These changes mean that we are not pursuing a separate delivery of WinFS,
including the previously planned Beta 2 release," he wrote.
Microsoft has been hyping the WinFS technology since 2003. A beta was
released in August.
Instead of looking for files, WinFS was meant to identify relationships
between items such as images, documents, email messages and calendar
appointments, allowing the user to search for objects dispersed over several
applications.
When it was first pulled as a feature for
Windows
Vista, Microsoft promised that the technology would be made available as an
update at a later stage.
Clark suggested in his blog posting that pieces of the technology might still
find their way into future operating systems, but did not provide any details.
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