New
#90
More like this:
Thats what waiting/getting the SP1 Beta is likeYou go into a a store, and buys the most delicious cake, and the next day you go back to buy more of them in the same. But the store is closing up and closing down due to not being able to pay their electric bill. You ran around the city, confused, looking for a cake like it, but you can't find any. You get stressed and finally looks across the street, and there it is. The cake you have been looking for. You run for it, jumping to reach it, but you fall to the ground, as your shoe lace gets stuck in a piece of gum. You try to get out, then you see it, a russian bloke buys the cake and leaves the store. Now you cannot get the cake anymore.
You are now so stressed you agreesivly runs toward the russian and rips the cake out of his arms and runs off. When you get it home, it was worth it all.
For anyone who doesnt know how to decipher dates from build strings: Charting Windows 7 development Icrontic Tech
Windows 7 Service Pack 1 (SP1) Beta in Mid-April 2010 - Build 7601.16518.100302-1530 is the latest assembly - Softpedia
Windows 7 SP1 Beta Builds Escrow and pre-Escrow - Beta in April, Release in November, claims third-party source - SoftpediaAs far as the 7601.16518.100302-1530 build string is concerned, 7601 represents the major build number, 16518 the minor version, and 100302-1530 the date and time at which the release was compiled, namely March 2, 2010 at 15:30.
According to MuyWindows, the current Builds of Windows 7 SP1 for the demo versions sit between 7600.20500 and 7600.20,700.Dumb question (and food for thought)?
What is (or would be) the differences between these (if any)?
W7SP1build7601.16502.100208-1500
and
7600.20652.100223-1505
7601.16518.100302-1530
7600.20652.100223-1505
Source?