101. Reimagining Windows from the Chipset to the Experience: The Chipset [Ch. XV]

101. Reimagining Windows from the Chipset to the Experience: The Chipset [Ch. XV]

Author: Steven Sinofsky October 9, 2022 Duration: 1:08:21

Welcome to Chapter XV! This is the final chapter of Hardcore Software. In this chapter, we are going to build and release Windows 8—reimagining Windows from the chipset to the experience. First up, the chipset. Then there will be sections on the platform and the experience. Following that, we’ll release Windows to developers and then the public. Then a surprise release of…Surface. There is a ton to cover. Many readers have lived through this. I’m definitely including a lot of detail but chose not to break things up into small posts. There are subsection breaks though.

This first section covers the chipset work—moving Windows to the ARM SoC. Before diving right in, I will quickly describe the team structure and calendar of events that we will follow, both of which provide the structure to this final chapter while illustrating the scope of the effort.

Back to 100. A Daring and Bold Vision



This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit hardcoresoftware.learningbyshipping.com

There’s a story behind every line of code, every product launch, and every industry shift, but rarely do we hear it from someone who was in the room for decades of defining moments. Hardcore Software by Steven Sinofsky (Audio Edition) offers exactly that: a firsthand narrative from the trenches of the PC revolution’s peak and its complex evolution. Host Steven Sinofsky doesn’t just recount history; he unpacks the visceral realities of building software at scale, the management dilemmas faced under immense pressure, and the human decisions that propelled successes or led to stumbles. Having joined Microsoft in 1989 as a software design engineer on C++, his 23-year journey weaves through critical projects like Visual C++, six major releases of Office as its Senior Vice President, and the era-defining development of Windows 7 and Windows 8, culminating in his role as President of Windows overseeing internet services. Each episode of this podcast feels like a detailed retrospective, blending personal anecdote with hard-won lessons on technology, leadership, and strategy. It’s for anyone curious about the intersection of business, engineering, and history, told with a level of specificity and reflection that only an insider can provide. You’ll hear not just what happened, but how it felt to make those calls and what those experiences mean for building things today.
Author: Language: English Episodes: 100

Hardcore Software by Steven Sinofsky (Audio Edition)
Podcast Episodes
037. Capone and Email Without Typos [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 17:51
All we wanted to do was bring the rich formatting and lack of typos people experienced with Word to email. We saw how email was replacing many uses for Word and figured it seemed like a good idea to reuse all that code t…
036. Fancy Wizard and Red Squiggles [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 22:28
Office94 (still the working name for what would become Office 95) was primarily about working with Windows 95 and shipping on the same day. That led to the constraint of having a relatively small team, less than 20 softw…
035. Windows 95, August or Bust [Ch. VI] [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 21:15
1994 to 1995: Sharing code and processes to build Office pays off and the concept of the suite takes hold in the market. The Windows schedule becomes a death march to finish what is hoped to be a revolutionary new operat…
034. Office94, Office96 [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 16:44
With the Office Product Unit in place, and the outline of a plan to release with Chicago in about a year (whenever Chicago was finishing, which was unclear) and a second major release of Office a year after that, we stil…
033. Creating the Office Product Unit, OPU [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 19:53
The most difficult transition for most new companies is going from a single product to multiple products, something Microsoft managed to pull off fairly early. Inevitably, the next transition is one based on combining pr…
032. Winning With the Suite [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 21:12
Strategically, the bundling-unbundling arc or cycle is one of the most common dynamics in technology. Something that starts off as a single product or category inevitably becomes part of a bundle of features or products.…
031. Synchronizing Windows and Office (the First Time) [Ch. V] [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 19:14
Welcome to Chapter V. Subscribers, if this were a printed book then you’ve just read through a typical trade press book by word count. Since we’re only in 1994, now you know one good reason why Substack makes for a bette…
030. My Performance Review (and an Expense Report) [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 9:38
Summertime at Microsoft was also performance review time. I was also busy trying to figure out what job to do next and was quite stressed. While this is a brief look at my own performance review, there was a great lesson…
029. Telling the Untold Story [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 27:56
A more interesting aspect of being in a staff role is how your perspective changes from day-to-day execution to strategic milestones. From this perspective, one doesn’t see the daily progress as much as the experience of…
028. Pivotal Offsite [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 13:20
There was no shortage of energy around the internet. It was clear that a bunch of stuff would happen. Turning that energy into something resembling a strategy was an open question. For all the excitement, each group seem…