your Windows® embedded community
Meanwhile, the company has announced a second CTP said to contain "many updates and bug fixes as well as some new features." In an email sent last week to those who had downloaded the first CTP, Microsoft said "you can expect our second public CTP build to be available within the next month."
According to the email, CTP2 will bring a bevy of potential new features to embedded devices, including anti-malware, DVD creation, parental controls, backup/restore, a photo viewer, plus faxing and scanning. Of course, a typical device will not include all of these features, but developers will be able to choose one or more of them by selecting "packages" as they build the operating system, Microsoft explains.
Microsoft says CTP2 will also include "footprint optimization for key scenarios," new and updated templates in the ICE (image configuration editor), import and export of templates, and a Static Dependency Analyzer (SDA). The new release will also offer "more intuitive package naming," plus updated documentation that is more detailed, the email noted.
Last month, Microsoft already added to the documentation originally supplied with Quebec, releasing a 51-page Windows Embedded Standard 2011 CTP Lab Manual. This supplement, downloadable now, provides detailed steps for building, deploying and servicing a Windows Embedded Standard 2011 image, as well as several other scenario walkthroughs, according to the company.
New capabilities and features
According to Microsoft, Windows Embedded Standard 2011 "delivers the power, familiarity and reliability of the Windows 7 operating system in a highly customizable and componentized form, enabling OEMs in industrial automation, entertainment, consumer electronics and other markets to focus on their core competencies and create product differentiation."
Touting "familiar, easy-to-use development tools and embedded-enabling features," the company adds that the OS will reduce development costs and increase speed to market for thin-client, point-of-service (POS), kiosk, medical, multifunction printers, and other devices.

Key Windows Embedded Standard 2011 features highlighted by the company include the following:
Availability
According to Microsoft, the CTP2 of Windows Embedded Standard 2011 will be downloadable from the company's website, here, where the initial CTP and Lab Manual mentioned in this story can already be found.