When Windows Vista will be in the retail stores?

  • Thread starter Thread starter Octavio
  • Start date Start date
But most of those issues were due to apps not the OS. The Upgrade option in
Vista Setup clean installs a completely fresh image copy of the OS (unlike
XP which uses a file-copy type of upgrade). There is no possibility that
some older system files are left behind from the old OS. The part of the
hard drive on which the new OS image is laid down is completely wiped first.
However, the Upgrade option moves and then reinstalls your apps and it is
the retention of some of these apps that caused most of the problems.
 
DCR is saying that you cannot use the Upgrade option to move from 32bit XP
to 64bit Vista. Cross-platform upgrades don't work. They don't make sense
anyway because of issues like drivers.
 
My two cents:

SKU: Stock Keeping Unit, a term usually used by retailer or merchant for
products (tangible and intangible such as service) available for sales.
 
Octavio--

www.msnbc.msn.com/id/15703616/

If you are in the small country as some of these blokes are called the
USA--the one whose moron executive branch arrogantly presides over the
killing of children and family not their own day after day without lifting a
finger to stop it, it will be in stores with the esoteric name Comp USA a
week from today in the form Vista Buisiness which I have learned the
americans pronounce biz ness.

There will also be editions of Office 2007 Small Bizness in Comp USA on
November 30 for those of you who want to have the satisfaction of taking
home that shiny Vista or Office package right away who haven't been given
the freebies by MSFT or taken them by other means.

Microsoft to sell Vista early at CompUSA
Deal will allow retailer to see operating system, Office, two months early
The Associated Press
Updated: 5:21 p.m. ET Nov 13, 2006
DALLAS - Microsoft Corp. will sell licenses for its new Windows Vista
operating system and Office 2007 productivity suite through CompUSA stores
Nov. 30, two months before the products go on sale at other retailers.

The world's largest software company said Monday that customers will be able
to buy licensing agreements to run Windows Vista Business and Microsoft
Office Small Business 2007 on five or more personal computers.

(MSNBC.com is a joint venture of Microsoft and NBC Universal News.)

The move will put small businesses on the same footing as larger rivals, who
also will be able to buy the new operating system and business software
ahead of the general release scheduled for Jan. 30.

The companies declined to discuss financial terms of their agreement. A
Microsoft executive said the Redmond, Wash.-based company expects to sell
Vista licensing agreements through other retailers next year.

This is the first time Microsoft has allowed small business customers to buy
licenses for new operating system before the general public, said Cindy
Bates, general manager of small business sales at the software company.

"Over 50 percent of our small business customers shop (for software) in
retail stores," Bates said. "Last time, if you walked into store you were
only able to buy the boxed product, which is more expensive and less easy to
manage."

Once inside a CompUSA store, small-business customers will need to speak to
a sales representative to buy a license agreement. That interaction will
give the store and Microsoft a chance to sell the customer other products,
such as the software company's support program.

Bates said licensing several PCs would be at least 10 percent cheaper than
if a small business owner simply bought boxes containing discs with Vista
and the office software. The suggested retail price for a boxed copy of
Windows Vista Business is $299, or $199 for an upgrade from a previous
version. The small-business edition of Office 2007 in a box carries a
suggested price of $449 ($279 for an upgrade).

Bill Maddox, an executive vice president at Dallas-based CompUSA, said the
launch of Windows XP was "huge" for privately held CompUSA, "and we expect
this to be the same."

Bates declined to discuss negotiations between Microsoft and CompUSA, but
said at least two other retailers were aware of the agreement before it was
announced Monday.

"They were aware of the opportunity, and I think they will pay a lot of
attention to this," she said, adding that it was "not really a bidding
situation."

© 2006 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be
published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
URL: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/15703616/



CH
 
Chad said:
Octavio--

www.msnbc.msn.com/id/15703616/

If you are in the small country as some of these blokes are called the
USA--the one whose moron executive branch arrogantly presides over the
killing of children and family not their own day after day without
lifting a finger to stop it, it will be in stores with the esoteric name
Comp USA a week from today in the form Vista Buisiness which I have
learned the americans pronounce biz ness.

Why don't you just shut the **** up. You know you Brits are
just like us, but without any *balls*. We also know the real queen
is Elton John.

Learn what a run on sentence is.
 
Hey guys, I was wondering, I have XP Home upgrade disk will it be ok for a
Vista upgrade? Also why doesnt Microsoft give us (beta testers) the option to
use the upgrade disk so we dont have to pay full price? They should. But my
main question is the Xp upgrade disk. Also another question, like the guy
with the gateway comp, what do we if, My laptop came with XP pro, I
reformated and went Vista Ultimate RC1. How do I prove that this laptop came
with XP Pro, without a disk???
 
No. If what is being discussed in other threads here today is true, the
Vista Upgrade Editions can only be used to upgrade XP from the XP desktop.
The story is that the Upgrade Edition dvd's are not bootable so there would
be no request for you to insert your cd for verification.
 
NO WAY, no way no way, it has to be bootable, cause everyone knows that you
dont want to upgrade from XP to Vista, upgrading is the dumbest thing ive
ever done, (ME to XP) It would really suck if the y didnt make it bootable.
 
Read the other threads. If this is true as Carey Frisch and other
experienced folks are saying I am sticking to full Editions only. The
savings from the Upgrade Edition pricing simply can't be worth it.

As far as your concerns about the upgrade process (whether done with an
upgrade option in the full edition or by running an Upgrade Edition, those
have changed also. While XP and earlier upgrades were done with file
copying, Vista uses a new procedure (image files) that is more like block
copying. The result is that whether you upgrade or do a custom install you
are getting a clean install of the OS. All files, settings, and apps are
moved to another part of the hard drive, the area where the OS will be
installed is wiped, a fresh copy of Windows is laid down and installed, and
then all the other stuff is moved back or reinstalled. No vestige of the
prior OS remains even when the upgrade option is used. I too had problems
going from ME to XP and wound up doing a clean installation of XP. Those
kinds of problems don't happen in Vista upgrades. Where the problems do
come in with upgrading is the apps.
 
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