Windows 8 Pricing (Plus Other Confusing Facts and Rumors) - Comments Page 2

Category: Windows-8



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Posted by:

Frank
29 Sep 2012

I am tired of companies forgetting how they got where they are. It is "us" the consumer. Microsoft needs to wise up. I will be moving to a Mac soon.

Posted by:

JohnL
29 Sep 2012

How will this work? If, I download the 90 day trial ver. of win 8 and don't like it can I go back to win 7 w/ no probs.

Posted by:

Lee
29 Sep 2012

Windows 8 for the majority retail, corporate, and educational communities is too much, too soon, too radical,too expensive on many different levels (training, hardware upgrades, and deployment costs), and not conducive in the short term to enhanced productivity. If the corporate sector can not realize a profit by making any investment, they simply won't do it. Many CEO's and CIO's of very large corporations are already on record as saying "Thanks but no thanks, we don't need it." Intel and Google are at the top of that list. Windows 8, IMO, will be another Vista. It will also be the best friend that Apple and Linux will have for a while. I will recommend Windows 7 or Linux to my friends and clients. Windows 7, all versions, is supported till January, 2020, Apple is simply too expensive, and Linux is supported quite well on a long term basis, particularly the Ubuntu and Fedora distributions and the cost is the time to download them, burn the software to a CD/DVD, and install it. The only reason that any user would have to stick with Windows 8 is for gaming. Otherwise you could do just fine without. The best solution would be to run Ubuntu or Fedora, install a virtual machine, and run Windows in it. You then have games and productivity all on one unit. Thanks for all your hard work, Bob, and the contribution that you make to all of us. We sincerely appreciate it.

Posted by:

Robert
30 Sep 2012

In a nutshell, I've never really met a Windows "upgrade" I liked... Sounds like the same old same old where the end user also gets to be the beta-tester. I have XP on my old laptop, and it's more than adequate for my purposes. The desktop has Vista and it is a pain (I keep having to "fix" things). The netbook has Win7 and it's tolerable - no problems so far. IMO if I have to do any upgrading at all it will stop at Win7 until Microsoft wises up (which may be never). Maybe I should be picking up some "spare" Win7 OS packages for future use if I buy a newer system.

Posted by:

Nancy
30 Sep 2012

Does one HAVE to use the stupid touchscreen. I have two laptops and could care less about a touchscreen.

Posted by:

Colin Barnhorst
30 Sep 2012

Do you think there will even be a retail Windows 8? Microsoft has not announced retail availability of Windows 8. Only Windows 8 Pro. It may be that Windows 8 will be only available to royalty OEMs for installation on new computers. It appears that Windows 8 Pro will be the ONLY edition available at retail, either with an upgrade license or with the System Builder license.

And what about the hobbyist standby, OEM System Builder? I also haven't see any announcement concerning OEM System Builder copies. I suspect there won't be any, given the new pricing and the reuse of "System Builder" to refer to the full license retail sku. If so, the hobbyist abuse of the OEM System Builder license will finally have been dealt with.

Posted by:

Brian
01 Oct 2012

I like the Classic Shell from, http://classicshell.sourceforge.net/

I have a desktop and it's not a touch screen so this shell makes Windows 8 easier for me.

Posted by:

Edward
01 Oct 2012

I downloaded the free Enterprise trial and have played with it for about three weeks. If what Bob says in the article is correct and Microsoft offers a deeply discounted full version of Windows 8 Pro, I think it would be a mistake not to buy it before the discount goes away. If you're timid, you don't have to install it right away. You can just wait until Microsoft releases the first service pack, then install the O.S. and the Service Pack at the same time.

For those who don't want to jump through all the designed-for-touchscreen hoops, just do as Brian said: Install Classic Shell. The interface will be almost the same as Windows 7, but the system will run faster.

For me the deal-breaker is those two words: "runs faster". Of course, my little three-week trial isn't enough to determine its speed and stability under extreme pressure, but so far, it seems to be pretty bullet-proof.

Posted by:

Abi Calcano
01 Oct 2012

Thanks again Bob , good feedback I will upgrade my rig to Windows 8 as soon as I can get my hands on it .. :-)

Posted by:

East-Slope Charlie
11 Feb 2013

I am working on a dissertation and had my (14 year old XP up graded to XP-PRO using Windows 2000) looked at by my ISP who'd dumped an applet on it so they could see why it was SEEMING to slow down. Applet did not go away. They were going to charge me between $700(lowest end) and $1300 (highest end) (and for those who care $1, 800 was the outlier) to 'fix' it. Right. So I got a NEW computer to finish up, and it came with Win 8 on it. I was told that I HAD to take the WIN 8 and like it. A kinder Tech told me I could DOWNGRADE to Win 7 if I bought the disk.

After meeting a lawyer who was bitching about his 'Brand New $5, 100 computer system' He had flyers printed up that said $2, 000 cash take the entire thing! -- in the parking lot he said for you: $1, 500 tomorrow, cash - bring you car, take it all away!" -- sure was tempting to cancel the 2 hour old order --

But, after HOURS of trying to type (re-write or type new) on a couple of chapters of my dissertation on a new Win 8 at the library, I'm FAR more than happy that I can have the windows 8 turned back into a Win 7 machine where my learning curve will be minimal -- not screaming frustration. And I only have a few more days until it shows at my door and I can be on the phone with a Support Tech who understands what the problem is without having to explaining all over. I can't have steep learning curves going on in classes, research, and writing without having to worry about a new system which has from what I am told, a learning curve that starts out at the cube of the exponent. Then gets harder.

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