Blue isn't just the code name of the next version of Windows. It's also 
the code name for updates to Windows Phone, Windows Server, and Windows 
Services, sources say.
As we've known for a few months, the Windows client team at Microsoft
 is working on its first "feature pack" update for Windows 8, supposedly
 due this summer/fall, which is code-named Blue.
But it turns out Blue isn't a Windows thing only, according to one 
very accurate tipster of mine who doesn't want to be identified.
Blue also is the way Microsoft is referring to the next substantial 
platform update for Windows Phone, the Windows Services (like SkyDrive, 
Hotmail, etc.), and Windows Server, according to my source. In other 
words, Blue is a wave of product refreshes which are not expected to 
arrive exactly all on the same day, but which are meant to be released 
more or less around the same time.
Before these various Blues come to market, there will continue to be minor fixes, firmware updates, and new features added to
 Windows 8, Windows RT, Windows Services, and Windows Phone. On the phone side of the house, for example, the first minor update, code-named Portico, already has made its way out to a number of Windows Phone users.
Blue represents a major change in how Microsoft builds, deploys, and 
markets software and services. To date, many Microsoft teams like 
Windows, Windows Live, and Windows Server have been focused on 
delivering major platform updates every two to three years. The 
challenge is to get them to pivot around yearly platform updates, the 
first of which will hit as part of the Blue wave. 
On the Windows side, the changes required to make this happen will be
 especially far-reaching and pronounced. Instead of releasing a new 
version of Windows once every three or so years, and then hoping and 
praying that manufacturers can get the final bits tested and preloaded 
on new hardware a few months later, Microsoft is going to try to push 
Blue out to users far more quickly, possibly via the Windows Store, my 
contact said.
There's still no word on specific new features coming to any of the 
Blue wave of products and services. But tweaks to the user experience, 
new developer-platform related bits, as well as new versions of Internet
 Explorer, Mail, Calendar, Bing, and other integrated apps are likely to
 figure into the Blue picture, my source said. Blue will include some 
kernel and driver-level updates which could help with battery life and 
overall performance, according to my source, but backward compatibility 
with Windows 8 and Windows Phone 8 seem to be a priority.
I know there are still some Blue doubters out there, but Charon at Ma-Config.com found a recent mention of Blue in a member of the Windows team's LinkedIn profile:
Windows 9 is still seemingly on the road map, too, by the way, but it's 
not clear when Microsoft intends to deliver it. Charon also found a LinkedIn poster mentioning his work on Windows 9 recently: 
For the time being, as executives like Windows Chief Financial 
Officer Tami Reller have said repeatedly, Microsoft envisions Windows 8 
as something more than a one-season wonder. (Reller has said Microsoft 
considers Windows 8 a product "of multiple selling seasons.")
 That makes more sense if you think about Blue -- and Lilac and Fuchsia 
or whatever Blue's successors are code named -- as updates to Windows 8,
 rather than as Windows 9, 10, and beyond.
I very, very seldom post a single-sourced rumor. But go ahead and Tracour this Blue update. I'm feeling pretty solid on this one.

 





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