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Variables generated for this change
Variable | Value |
---|---|
Name of the user account (user_name) | 'HarpHarpaster' |
Groups (including implicit) the user is in (user_groups) | [
0 => 'extendedconfirmed',
1 => '*',
2 => 'user',
3 => 'autoconfirmed'
] |
Whether or not a user is editing through the mobile interface (user_mobile) | false |
Page ID (page_id) | 49802 |
Page namespace (page_namespace) | 0 |
Page title (without namespace) (page_title) | 'Windows 8 build 7867' |
Full page title (page_prefixedtitle) | 'Windows 8 build 7867' |
Action (action) | 'edit' |
Edit summary/reason (summary) | '' |
Old content model (old_content_model) | 'wikitext' |
New content model (new_content_model) | 'wikitext' |
Old page wikitext, before the edit (old_wikitext) | '{{Infobox Windows build
|build of = [[Windows 8]]
|buildtag = 6.2.7867.0.fbl_core1_kernel_npc_ext.101101-1728
|image = Windows 8-6.2.7867.0-Desktop.png
|family = nt
|version = 6.2
|build = 7867
|revision = 0
|lab = fbl_core1_kernel_npc_ext
|arch = ARM32 (ARMv7)
|compiled = 2010-11-01
|timebomb = 2011-02-05
|winver = Windows8-6.2.7867.0-Winver.png
|rivals = {{Rivals|TCB=https://www.thecollectionbook.info/windows/rt/7484}}
}}
'''Windows 8 build 7867''' is an internal build of [[Windows 8]]. It was first shown running on an ARM-based Qualcomm Snapdragon QSD8660 SoC and NVIDIA Tegra 250 development kit at the [[w:Consumer Electronics Show#2011|CES 2011]] [[w:trade show|trade show]] to demonstrate the capabilities of the then-evolving [[w:ARMv7|ARMv7]] architecture, along with builds [[Windows 8 build 7898|7898]] and [[Windows 8 build 7900|7900]].<ref>[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rvzJmRBS84w Microsoft CES 2011 Windows OS Announcement - YouTube]</ref><ref>[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xKc_XGuvNIk Microsoft shows off ARM processors running Windows - YouTube]</ref> A low-quality camera recording of the build which showed demonstration of the [[Paint]] application running on the same Qualcomm SoC prior to the event was later uploaded by former [[Windows]] division president [[w:Steven Sinofsky|Steven Sinofsky]] on 30 October 2022, along with video footage of builds [[Windows 8 build 7792|7792]] and [[Windows 8 build 8090|8090]] in issue 104 of their account of events during his time at Microsoft, titled ''Hardcore Software''.<ref>Sinofsky, Steven. [https://hardcoresoftware.learningbyshipping.com/p/104-built-it-and-they-will-come 104. //build It and They Will Come (Hopefully)], ''Hardcore Software: Inside the Rise and Fall of the PC Revolution''. 30 October 2022.</ref><ref>Various Authors. [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mWGzcfKM5lw Windows 8 on NVIDIA Tegra running in Microsoft labs], ''Hardcore Software: Inside the Rise and Fall of the PC Revolution''. Late 2010—20 August 2011.</ref>
The original partner drop for both the retail and debug client releases of the build's unstaged ARMv7 installation media and [[Preinstallation Environment]], including software development kits and raw symbol sets for [[w:Nvidia|Nvidia]] were eventually uploaded on 8 September 2024. The [[w:Qualcomm|Qualcomm]] drop was uploaded on 4 December 2024.
== Installation ==
{{Collapse top|title=[[QEMU]] installation guide:}}
{{:Document:Installing 7xxx-series ARMv7 Windows 8 builds in QEMU}}
{{Collapse bottom}}
== Editions and keys ==
The following SKUs are installable in this build:
{| class="wikitable"
! Edition / SKU Name
! Key
|-
| Starter{{efn|name="StarterExpl"|The Starter edition (and its N and E counterparts), last included in [[Windows 7]], had since been internally repurposed during [[Windows 8]] development to act as a base for new and existing Windows client SKUs. The Web Server edition would also be identically repurposed during development of its [[Windows Server 2012|server counterpart]] for both Desktop Experience and Core editions, although Standard Server would later take its place as the base for Server Core editions during the late development phases of [[Windows Server 2016]], specifically during [[Windows 10 Anniversary Update|Redstone 1]] development.}}
| {{nowrap|7Q28W-FT9PC-CMMYT-WHMY2-89M6G}}
|-
| Starter E{{efn|name="StarterExpl"}}
| {{nowrap|BRQCV-K7HGQ-CKXP6-2XP7K-F233B}}
|-
| Starter N{{efn|name="StarterExpl"}}
| {{nowrap|D4C3G-38HGY-HGQCV-QCWR8-97FFR}}
|-
| Home Basic
| {{nowrap|YGFVB-QTFXQ-3H233-PTWTJ-YRYRV}}
|-
| Home Basic E
| {{nowrap|VTKM9-74GQY-K3W94-47DHV-FTXJY}}
|-
| Home Basic N
| {{nowrap|MD83G-H98CG-DXPYQ-Q8GCR-HM8X2}}
|-
| Home Premium
| {{nowrap|RHPQ2-RMFJH-74XYM-BH4JX-XM76F}}
|-
| Home Premium N
| {{nowrap|76BRM-9Q4K3-QDJ48-FH4F3-9WT2R}}
|-
| Professional
| {{nowrap|HYF8J-CVRMY-CM74G-RPHKF-PW487}}
|-
| Professional E
| {{nowrap|3YHKG-DVQ27-RYRBX-JMPVM-WG38T}}
|-
| Professional N
| {{nowrap|BKFRB-RTCT3-9HW44-FX3X8-M48M6}}
|-
| Enterprise
| {{nowrap|H7X92-3VPBB-Q799D-Y6JJ3-86WC6}}
|-
| Enterprise E
| {{nowrap|H3V6Q-JKQJG-GKVK3-FDDRF-TCKVR}}
|-
| Enterprise N
| {{nowrap|BQ4TH-BWRRY-424Y9-7PQX2-B4WBD}}
|-
| Ultimate
| {{nowrap|D4F6K-QK3RD-TMVMJ-BBMRX-3MBMV}}
|-
| Ultimate E
| {{nowrap|TWMF7-M387V-XKW4Y-PVQQD-RK7C8}}
|-
| Ultimate N
| {{nowrap|HTJK6-DXX8T-TVCR6-KDG67-97J8Q}}
|}
== New features and changes ==
=== HAL extension support ===
This is the earliest available build of Windows to support hardware abstraction layer extensions, which allow platform developers to quickly provide support for [[w:system-on-chip|system-on-chip]] devices by adding interfaces for interrupt timers and controllers, as well as direct memory access (DMA) controllers.
=== Driver management ===
System drivers now use a dedicated registry database located in the <code>Windows\System32\config</code> directory (as <code>DRIVERS</code>). It is used by the Windows servicing stack to facilitate driver installation, and contains a list of relevant driver components,<!-- DRIVERS\DriverDatabase\DriverFiles --> hardware IDs,<!-- DRIVERS\DriverDatabase\DeviceIds --> references to driver metadata (INFs)<!-- DRIVERS\DriverDatabase\DriverInfFiles --> and definition data for each installed driver package.<!-- DRIVERS\DriverDatabase\DriverPackages -->
=== CES 2011 demonstration differences ===
Various aspects of this build were either changed or disabled during the CES 2011 demonstration, two of which are likely a result of file replacement originating from later builds originating from shell development branches:
*The ''User Tile'' seen in builds [[Windows 8 build 7785|7785]] through [[Windows 8 build 7866|7866]] is disabled.
*The branding observed within the watermark was temporarily changed to "Microsoft Pre-release Windows Operating System", in a stark contrast to [[Windows 7|its predecessors']] branding commonly seen in builds such as [[Windows 8 build 7779|7779]] and 7850.
*The [[Windows Fingerprinting Service]] is disabled, as evidenced by the lack of the [[Microsoft Confidential]] leak warning in the watermark and the missing EULA hash.
*The desktop background was changed to the one seen in the [[Windows 7 build 7600.16385|RTM build]] of Windows 7, in place of the blue-green gradient Milestone 1 wallpaper that was used since [[Windows 8 build 7762|build 7762]].
== Bugs and quirks ==
=== ARMv7 port differences ===
Due to the earliness of the ARMv7 port, aspects of the operating system that exist in x86 do not exist on ARM:
* The older CMIv2-style component store (containing the binaries used to assemble the Windows Foundation base image) is present alongside the newer Windows side-by-side (SxS) component store.
* The .NET Framework is not present, despite components depending on the Common Language Runtime (such as [[PowerShell]]) being included.
** Most applications that rely on .NET Framework such as the [[Snipping Tool]] and [[Windows Media Center]] do not exist.
* The Warbird obfuscation layer was not yet ported at this stage in development - components relying on it, such as the Metro shell (provided by <code>twinui.dll</code>), security components (such as the Next-Generation Secure Computing Base (NGSCB) security processor drivers) and software licensing components are not obfuscated.
* The Windows Search indexing engine does not exist at this stage in development.
== Gallery ==
=== UI-Interface ===
<gallery>
Setup7867.png|Setup
</gallery>
=== Internal recording ===
<gallery>
Windows8-6.2.7867.0-SnapdragonDevKitInternal.png|Snapdragon SoC running this build's [[Paint]] application
Windows8-6.2.7867.0-SnapdragonDevKitPaintDemoInternal.png|Closeup; full build tag visible
</gallery>
=== CES 2011 still frames ===
<gallery>
Windows8-6.2.7867-Desktop.png|Desktop
7867.png|Ditto, without [[DWM]]
Win8-7867-1.jpg|Command Prompt
Win8-7867-2.png|Start menu
Windows8-6.2.7867-MediaPlayer.png|[[Windows Media Player]]
</gallery>
== Notes ==
{{notelist}}
==References==
{{reflist}}
[[Category:Windows 8 builds]]' |
New page wikitext, after the edit (new_wikitext) | '{{Infobox Windows build
|build of = [[Windows 8]]
|buildtag = 6.2.7867.0.fbl_core1_kernel_npc_ext.101101-1728
|image = Windows 8-6.2.7867.0-Desktop.png
|family = nt
|version = 6.2
|build = 7867
|revision = 0
|lab = fbl_core1_kernel_npc_ext
|arch = ARM32 (ARMv7)
|compiled = 2010-11-01
|timebomb = 2011-02-05
|winver = Windows8-6.2.7867.0-Winver.png
|rivals = {{Rivals|TCB=https://www.thecollectionbook.info/windows/rt/7484}}
}}
'''Windows 8 build 7867''' is an internal build of [[Windows 8]]. It was first shown running on an ARM-based Qualcomm Snapdragon QSD8660 SoC and NVIDIA Tegra 250 development kit at the [[w:Consumer Electronics Show#2011|CES 2011]] [[w:trade show|trade show]] to demonstrate the capabilities of the then-evolving [[w:ARMv7|ARMv7]] architecture, along with builds [[Windows 8 build 7898|7898]] and [[Windows 8 build 7900|7900]].<ref>[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rvzJmRBS84w Microsoft CES 2011 Windows OS Announcement - YouTube]</ref><ref>[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xKc_XGuvNIk Microsoft shows off ARM processors running Windows - YouTube]</ref> A low-quality camera recording of the build which showed demonstration of the [[Paint]] application running on the same Qualcomm SoC prior to the event was later uploaded by former [[Windows]] division president [[w:Steven Sinofsky|Steven Sinofsky]] on 30 October 2022, along with video footage of builds [[Windows 8 build 7792|7792]] and [[Windows 8 build 8090|8090]] in issue 104 of their account of events during his time at Microsoft, titled ''Hardcore Software''.<ref>Sinofsky, Steven. [https://hardcoresoftware.learningbyshipping.com/p/104-built-it-and-they-will-come 104. //build It and They Will Come (Hopefully)], ''Hardcore Software: Inside the Rise and Fall of the PC Revolution''. 30 October 2022.</ref><ref>Various Authors. [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mWGzcfKM5lw Windows 8 on NVIDIA Tegra running in Microsoft labs], ''Hardcore Software: Inside the Rise and Fall of the PC Revolution''. Late 2010—20 August 2011.</ref>
The original partner drop for both the retail and debug client releases of the build's unstaged ARMv7 installation media and [[Preinstallation Environment]], including software development kits and raw symbol sets for [[w:Nvidia|Nvidia]] were eventually uploaded on 8 September 2024. The [[w:Qualcomm|Qualcomm]] drop was uploaded on 4 December 2024 with [[W:Texas Instruments|Texas Instruments]] drop on 2 days later in BetaWiki Discord Server.
== Installation ==
{{Collapse top|title=[[QEMU]] installation guide:}}
{{:Document:Installing 7xxx-series ARMv7 Windows 8 builds in QEMU}}
{{Collapse bottom}}
== Editions and keys ==
The following SKUs are installable in this build:
{| class="wikitable"
! Edition / SKU Name
! Key
|-
| Starter{{efn|name="StarterExpl"|The Starter edition (and its N and E counterparts), last included in [[Windows 7]], had since been internally repurposed during [[Windows 8]] development to act as a base for new and existing Windows client SKUs. The Web Server edition would also be identically repurposed during development of its [[Windows Server 2012|server counterpart]] for both Desktop Experience and Core editions, although Standard Server would later take its place as the base for Server Core editions during the late development phases of [[Windows Server 2016]], specifically during [[Windows 10 Anniversary Update|Redstone 1]] development.}}
| {{nowrap|7Q28W-FT9PC-CMMYT-WHMY2-89M6G}}
|-
| Starter E{{efn|name="StarterExpl"}}
| {{nowrap|BRQCV-K7HGQ-CKXP6-2XP7K-F233B}}
|-
| Starter N{{efn|name="StarterExpl"}}
| {{nowrap|D4C3G-38HGY-HGQCV-QCWR8-97FFR}}
|-
| Home Basic
| {{nowrap|YGFVB-QTFXQ-3H233-PTWTJ-YRYRV}}
|-
| Home Basic E
| {{nowrap|VTKM9-74GQY-K3W94-47DHV-FTXJY}}
|-
| Home Basic N
| {{nowrap|MD83G-H98CG-DXPYQ-Q8GCR-HM8X2}}
|-
| Home Premium
| {{nowrap|RHPQ2-RMFJH-74XYM-BH4JX-XM76F}}
|-
| Home Premium N
| {{nowrap|76BRM-9Q4K3-QDJ48-FH4F3-9WT2R}}
|-
| Professional
| {{nowrap|HYF8J-CVRMY-CM74G-RPHKF-PW487}}
|-
| Professional E
| {{nowrap|3YHKG-DVQ27-RYRBX-JMPVM-WG38T}}
|-
| Professional N
| {{nowrap|BKFRB-RTCT3-9HW44-FX3X8-M48M6}}
|-
| Enterprise
| {{nowrap|H7X92-3VPBB-Q799D-Y6JJ3-86WC6}}
|-
| Enterprise E
| {{nowrap|H3V6Q-JKQJG-GKVK3-FDDRF-TCKVR}}
|-
| Enterprise N
| {{nowrap|BQ4TH-BWRRY-424Y9-7PQX2-B4WBD}}
|-
| Ultimate
| {{nowrap|D4F6K-QK3RD-TMVMJ-BBMRX-3MBMV}}
|-
| Ultimate E
| {{nowrap|TWMF7-M387V-XKW4Y-PVQQD-RK7C8}}
|-
| Ultimate N
| {{nowrap|HTJK6-DXX8T-TVCR6-KDG67-97J8Q}}
|}
== New features and changes ==
=== HAL extension support ===
This is the earliest available build of Windows to support hardware abstraction layer extensions, which allow platform developers to quickly provide support for [[w:system-on-chip|system-on-chip]] devices by adding interfaces for interrupt timers and controllers, as well as direct memory access (DMA) controllers.
=== Driver management ===
System drivers now use a dedicated registry database located in the <code>Windows\System32\config</code> directory (as <code>DRIVERS</code>). It is used by the Windows servicing stack to facilitate driver installation, and contains a list of relevant driver components,<!-- DRIVERS\DriverDatabase\DriverFiles --> hardware IDs,<!-- DRIVERS\DriverDatabase\DeviceIds --> references to driver metadata (INFs)<!-- DRIVERS\DriverDatabase\DriverInfFiles --> and definition data for each installed driver package.<!-- DRIVERS\DriverDatabase\DriverPackages -->
=== CES 2011 demonstration differences ===
Various aspects of this build were either changed or disabled during the CES 2011 demonstration, two of which are likely a result of file replacement originating from later builds originating from shell development branches:
*The ''User Tile'' seen in builds [[Windows 8 build 7785|7785]] through [[Windows 8 build 7866|7866]] is disabled.
*The branding observed within the watermark was temporarily changed to "Microsoft Pre-release Windows Operating System", in a stark contrast to [[Windows 7|its predecessors']] branding commonly seen in builds such as [[Windows 8 build 7779|7779]] and 7850.
*The [[Windows Fingerprinting Service]] is disabled, as evidenced by the lack of the [[Microsoft Confidential]] leak warning in the watermark and the missing EULA hash.
*The desktop background was changed to the one seen in the [[Windows 7 build 7600.16385|RTM build]] of Windows 7, in place of the blue-green gradient Milestone 1 wallpaper that was used since [[Windows 8 build 7762|build 7762]].
== Bugs and quirks ==
=== ARMv7 port differences ===
Due to the earliness of the ARMv7 port, aspects of the operating system that exist in x86 do not exist on ARM:
* The older CMIv2-style component store (containing the binaries used to assemble the Windows Foundation base image) is present alongside the newer Windows side-by-side (SxS) component store.
* The .NET Framework is not present, despite components depending on the Common Language Runtime (such as [[PowerShell]]) being included.
** Most applications that rely on .NET Framework such as the [[Snipping Tool]] and [[Windows Media Center]] do not exist.
* The Warbird obfuscation layer was not yet ported at this stage in development - components relying on it, such as the Metro shell (provided by <code>twinui.dll</code>), security components (such as the Next-Generation Secure Computing Base (NGSCB) security processor drivers) and software licensing components are not obfuscated.
* The Windows Search indexing engine does not exist at this stage in development.
== Gallery ==
=== UI-Interface ===
<gallery>
Setup7867.png|Setup
</gallery>
=== Internal recording ===
<gallery>
Windows8-6.2.7867.0-SnapdragonDevKitInternal.png|Snapdragon SoC running this build's [[Paint]] application
Windows8-6.2.7867.0-SnapdragonDevKitPaintDemoInternal.png|Closeup; full build tag visible
</gallery>
=== CES 2011 still frames ===
<gallery>
Windows8-6.2.7867-Desktop.png|Desktop
7867.png|Ditto, without [[DWM]]
Win8-7867-1.jpg|Command Prompt
Win8-7867-2.png|Start menu
Windows8-6.2.7867-MediaPlayer.png|[[Windows Media Player]]
</gallery>
== Notes ==
{{notelist}}
==References==
{{reflist}}
[[Category:Windows 8 builds]]' |
Unified diff of changes made by edit (edit_diff) | '@@ -17,5 +17,5 @@
'''Windows 8 build 7867''' is an internal build of [[Windows 8]]. It was first shown running on an ARM-based Qualcomm Snapdragon QSD8660 SoC and NVIDIA Tegra 250 development kit at the [[w:Consumer Electronics Show#2011|CES 2011]] [[w:trade show|trade show]] to demonstrate the capabilities of the then-evolving [[w:ARMv7|ARMv7]] architecture, along with builds [[Windows 8 build 7898|7898]] and [[Windows 8 build 7900|7900]].<ref>[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rvzJmRBS84w Microsoft CES 2011 Windows OS Announcement - YouTube]</ref><ref>[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xKc_XGuvNIk Microsoft shows off ARM processors running Windows - YouTube]</ref> A low-quality camera recording of the build which showed demonstration of the [[Paint]] application running on the same Qualcomm SoC prior to the event was later uploaded by former [[Windows]] division president [[w:Steven Sinofsky|Steven Sinofsky]] on 30 October 2022, along with video footage of builds [[Windows 8 build 7792|7792]] and [[Windows 8 build 8090|8090]] in issue 104 of their account of events during his time at Microsoft, titled ''Hardcore Software''.<ref>Sinofsky, Steven. [https://hardcoresoftware.learningbyshipping.com/p/104-built-it-and-they-will-come 104. //build It and They Will Come (Hopefully)], ''Hardcore Software: Inside the Rise and Fall of the PC Revolution''. 30 October 2022.</ref><ref>Various Authors. [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mWGzcfKM5lw Windows 8 on NVIDIA Tegra running in Microsoft labs], ''Hardcore Software: Inside the Rise and Fall of the PC Revolution''. Late 2010—20 August 2011.</ref>
-The original partner drop for both the retail and debug client releases of the build's unstaged ARMv7 installation media and [[Preinstallation Environment]], including software development kits and raw symbol sets for [[w:Nvidia|Nvidia]] were eventually uploaded on 8 September 2024. The [[w:Qualcomm|Qualcomm]] drop was uploaded on 4 December 2024.
+The original partner drop for both the retail and debug client releases of the build's unstaged ARMv7 installation media and [[Preinstallation Environment]], including software development kits and raw symbol sets for [[w:Nvidia|Nvidia]] were eventually uploaded on 8 September 2024. The [[w:Qualcomm|Qualcomm]] drop was uploaded on 4 December 2024 with [[W:Texas Instruments|Texas Instruments]] drop on 2 days later in BetaWiki Discord Server.
== Installation ==
' |
Lines added in edit (added_lines) | [
0 => 'The original partner drop for both the retail and debug client releases of the build's unstaged ARMv7 installation media and [[Preinstallation Environment]], including software development kits and raw symbol sets for [[w:Nvidia|Nvidia]] were eventually uploaded on 8 September 2024. The [[w:Qualcomm|Qualcomm]] drop was uploaded on 4 December 2024 with [[W:Texas Instruments|Texas Instruments]] drop on 2 days later in BetaWiki Discord Server.'
] |
Unix timestamp of change (timestamp) | '1733496786' |