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Live News: Microsoft confirms the next version of its operating system will be called Windows 7.   Live News: Apple announces cheaper MacBook, but no netbook.   Live News: Apple puts screen opening under the microscope.   Live News: Dell teams with Red Hat on enterprise Linux.   Live News: IBM testing voice-based web.   Live News: Excel error gives Barclays more Lehman assets than it wanted.   Live News: Intel CEO brushes off economic crisis.   Live News: Intel earnings up, future uncertain.   Live News: Microsoft issues patch to crush 20 bugs.   Live News: Former Google, Yahoo employees behind Hadoop startup. Live News: Microsoft confirms the next version of its operating system will be called Windows 7 but the decision has invoked surprise and confusion among some observers.The announcement was made in a blog posting by Mike Nash, Microsoft's corporate vice president of Windows, who explained that the codename of the operating system would remain when the product is officially released. "While I know there have been a few cases at Microsoft when the codename of a product was used for the final release, I am pretty sure this is a first for Windows. You might wonder about the decision," Nash wrote.The name was chosen to keep things simple, Nash explained. "This is the seventh release of Windows, so therefore 'Windows 7' just makes sense," he said.Nash added that Microsoft had decided against using an aspirational name because the company's aspiration lay with Windows Vista.Windows 7 will represent an evolution and refinement of the "substantial investments" made in the Windows Vista technology, he said.But responses to Nash's blog suggest that Microsoft may not be keeping things simple after all. A number of commentators point out that the release is not Microsoft's seventh at all, whichever way you look at it.According to the general consensus, there have already been seven versionsof Windows: Windows, Windows 2, Windows 3.0, Windows NT, Windows 2000, Windows XP and Windows Vista. This new edition should therefore be Windows 8. If Windows XP is not counted because it is Kernel 5.1, then 'Windows 7' should be Windows 6.1. "What will happen when the 'real' Windows 7.0 comes around in x years? Wait a second I thought Windows 7 was released years ago," said a posting under the name of 'PatriotB'."I guess you guys thought Windows 6.1 didn't slip off the tongue. But still, don't lie to people and muddy everything up."Another reader, called 'Resplendent', said: "It does seem like an odd shift to go from 'names' (Millennium/XP/Vista) back to numbers again."Further details of Windows 7 will be released at Microsoft's Professional Developers Conference and WinHec events, at which Microsoft will share a pre-beta developer only release with attendees.   Live News:Apple claims the designers of its new MacBooks used an electron microscope to examine ‘hundreds of versions’ of the indentation that lets users open the display. The Apple website claims that a well-designed indentation, known as a thumbscoop, ‘makes the difference between a bad experience and a good one’.“If the scoop is too deep, you put too much pressure on the display to open it. If it’s too shallow, you struggle to open the display,” said Apple.Machined changes to the thumbscoop are said to be just one example of the benefits of a new machining process implemented by the company (and correctly identified by The Inquirer a week ago). Apple has made a number of other changes, including a welcome button-less trackpad that also incorporates the popular ‘multi-touch features’ from the iPod Touch and iPhone like swipe, pinch and rotate.The company is also touting the new MacBooks as ‘green’ because a number of toxins such as arsenic and mercury have been removed from the manufacturing process.Moves to reduce such substances from electronics manufacturing are usually attributed to the European Union’s Restriction of Hazardous Substances (RoHS) legislation, although Apple hints that its new process goes beyond these requirements.“Many computer manufacturers have only pledged to eliminate polyvinyl chloride (PVC) and brominated flame retardants (BFRs) from their enclosures and circuit boards,” the company said.“Apple is removing not only PVC and BFRs, but all forms of bromine and chlorine throughout the entire MacBook.”