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From the Editor
WinHEC   
Nothing Too Big, Nothing Too Small! We're at WinHEC this week with a few thousand of our closest friends. As you may have heard, this morning Bill Gates announced and demo'd key features of the Windows Server 2008 operating system.
Our Microsoft developers and managers together with our industry partners are presenting key information to help product designers and driver developers take advantage of crucial new features for server products--like Windows Hardware Error Architecture, the new boot environment, and more. If you can't attend WinHEC in Los Angeles this week, you can read about many of these topics in Hardware Support and Directions for Windows Server, which provides reference material for engineers who design servers and components.
Although Windows Server 2008 features are generating a great deal of interest, here at WinHEC we're looking across the full range of the hardware platform--from large-scale solutions for servers to the pocket devices that work with Windows Vista client systems. A lot of the question-and-answer exchanges and labs at WinHEC are focused on solutions for media devices. If you're not in Los Angeles this week, you can still get your hands on the design and implementation advice that the Microsoft crew is sharing. For example:
Windows logo Accessing WMDRM APIs from a Windows Portable Devices (WPD) Application: Guidelines for how to access the Windows Media Digital Rights Management (WMDRM) application APIs from a WPD application--including all supported devices for Windows Vista and Windows XP with Windows Media Player 11.

Windows logo Building a Network Device Compatible with Windows Media Player 11: How to take advantage of new Media Sharing capabilities in new designs for network audio/video devices that work with Windows Vista and Windows XP.

Windows logo Building Devices with the MTP Porting Kit v12: How to bring up the MTP stack on your device, with recommendations for sequence of actions and code organization, and supported features for devices that work with Windows Vista and Windows XP.

Windows logo Creating a WPD Driver for a Microcontroller-Based Sensor: How to create a simple driver that connects a temperature sensor through the WPD API to a sample application for devices that work with Windows Vista and Windows XP.

Windows logo Taking Advantage of Windows Image Acquisition 2.0: How to write drivers and applications that use the new stream-based transfer model and other new features introduced in Windows Vista.

There's a host of new material that you can find on our WinHEC 2007 Conference Papers page. Still -- we wish you were here!
-- Annie Pearson
for the WHDC Web team

WHDC After Dark:
Can't come to Los Angeles? Visit Virtual WinHEC: Check out the videos, the blogs, and the day-to-day news!

Advancing the Windows Hardware Platform: Tell Us What You Think
vista logo   
With advances in device and interconnect technologies, new requirements are emerging for Windows support of direct memory access (DMA) for I/O devices. The Windows base team is seeking specific information from hardware and system manufacturers about their needs for improving Windows DMA support.

With the many changes to the Windows Logo Program for Hardware in the past year--including new tools for testing, submitting, and viewing requirements--the Logo Program team is seeking your feedback about communications and tools in support of the program. If you create, test, or submit products for the Windows Logo Program for Hardware, please provide your input and insights.

The Windows Driver Kit (WDK) documentation group would like your feedback on the documentation provided with the kit and on MSDN. Please help us improve the documentation by taking 15 to 20 minutes to fill out this survey. The survey contains three separate sections: 1) Overall, 2) WDK documentation-specific, and 3) Windows Logo Kit (WLK) documentation-specific. Please fill out the Overall section, and either the WDK or the WLK section, depending on which documentation set you use in your work. We take your feedback very seriously, and look forward to improving our product based on your input.

The Beta Program for Windows Vista Hardware Assessment v2 is now open and seeking participants. Windows Vista Hardware Assessment v1, a key solution accelerator used in Windows Vista upgrade planning, is an inventory, assessment, and reporting tool designed to use one computer to assess an organization's system network-wide for hardware and device driver compatibility. Join the Beta Program today!

Microsoft Hardware Newsletter
Edition for

May 15, 2007
In This Issue:
Advancing the Windows Hardware Platform: Tell Us What You Think
Events
TechEd 2007
June 4-8, 2007
Orlando, FL
UEFI China Testing Workshop
June 11-15, 2007
Nanjing, China
WinHEC Taipei
June 13-14
Taipei Int'l Conv. Center
Taipei
WinHEC Tokyo
June 18-19
Meguro Gajoen
Tokyo
WinHEC Beijing
June 21-22
Central Garden Hotel
Beijing
PDC07
October 2-5, 2007
Los Angeles, CA
Windows Driver Developer Kits, Tools, and Programs
Debugging Tools for Windows v.6.7.5.0 (April 2007)
WDK - Windows Server Longhorn Beta 3 Version (April 2007--includes KMDF, UMDF, and DIFx)
Windows Symbols (May 2007)
Logo Point (Windows Logo Program requirements, erratum, and news)
Developing Drivers with Windows Driver Foundation
Are your computers ready for Windows Vista?
Hardware and Driver Developer Community
XML Paper Specification (XPS) Developers Forum
Blogs, Newsgroups, and Video on WHDC 
Notes from Windows Development Teams 
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