that only applies actual machines purchased most likely, not OEMs or system builders versions.
I wonder what the policy will be like with retail versions... not that I'd ever buy a retail copy of Windows.
Well it's just stupid to pay for what you can get for free, aint it?
Whoever says Vista is a pile of crap and windows 7 is awesome is a hypocrite. Yeah windows 7 is better, but it's not night and day difference by any means.
Yeah I had this long discussion a month or two ago with an engineer from Apple who as visiting us. One of his really good friends is an engineer at Microsoft, mainly the server side OS coding, but they both kind of have similar jobs but one at Apple and one at MS.
He was saying that Vista was headed by the 80/20 approach. Meaning that 80% of the new features and updates that are under the hood, or in underlying technologies either being utilized or not utilized just yet, and only 20% into the end user experience, which can be summed up by the eye candy add ons.
So, what Windows 7 will be, is taking advantage of those existing underlying technologies that either were barely or not utilized in Vista, which the average user will have no idea that they are even being utilized, and the rest of it will be done with bug working and tweaking the end user experience.
It will be hard to tell if it is truly worth the upgrade from Vista since a lot of the technologies already exist in Vista but perhaps Win7 just takes better advantage of them, and how much better is yet to be seen since it is in beta.
After the horrible pile of crap that is Vista, this is the least they can do for compensation!
I don't get it... you mean they spent most of the time under the hood and then later just kinda slapped the eye candy on top?
Wait. I got a vista ultimate 32bit in 2007. Does that mean I'm eligable for windows 7?
Yeah I had this long discussion a month or two ago with an engineer from Apple who as visiting us. One of his really good friends is an engineer at Microsoft, mainly the server side OS coding, but they both kind of have similar jobs but one at Apple and one at MS.
He was saying that Vista was headed by the 80/20 approach. Meaning that 80% of the new features and updates that are under the hood, or in underlying technologies either being utilized or not utilized just yet, and only 20% into the end user experience, which can be summed up by the eye candy add ons.
So, what Windows 7 will be, is taking advantage of those existing underlying technologies that either were barely or not utilized in Vista, which the average user will have no idea that they are even being utilized, and the rest of it will be done with bug working and tweaking the end user experience.
It will be hard to tell if it is truly worth the upgrade from Vista since a lot of the technologies already exist in Vista but perhaps Win7 just takes better advantage of them, and how much better is yet to be seen since it is in beta.