by Jason Inofuentes on 7/2/2012 4:55:00 PM
Posted in Microsoft , Windows 8
It's a move that the team from Cupertino has been using for the last several years, and it looks like Microsoft is going to give it a shot. In a post on The Windows Blog (not to be confused with the Building Windows 8 blog), Brandon LeBlanc announces that Microsoft will be doing a Windows 8 upgrade promotion, where upgrades from Windows XP, Vista and 7 to Windows 8 Pro will cost just $39.99.
This reflects a similar move Microsoft made in 2009, where they offered Windows 7 pre-orders at a significant discount. At the time those upgrades were $50 for Home Premium, $100 for Pro, and $150 for the Home Premium Family pack (3 licenses), meaning Windows 8 pre-order upgrade pricing is significantly better than Windows 7 pre-order upgrade pricing, with Windows 8 Pro going for less than half the price of its predecessor. And while there isn’t a family pack (so far), 3 Pro licenses are still cheaper than the Windows 7 family pack. The catch of course is that just like last time this is a limited time offer; while Microsoft is running this promotion for far longer than the 2 weeks Windows 7's promotion ran for, this one is only going until January 31, 2013.

Microsoft has also offered a few technical details on the upgrade process. Microsoft will be selling upgrades both in physical packages and digitally from their store, with the latter being the cheaper price. For electronic copies the upgrade process will be done through the use of the Windows 8 Upgrade Assistant, an installation app that streamlines the download and allows users to customize what they want to retain from their earlier installation. HTPC users will also want to take note that because this upgrade path leads to Windows 8 Pro, and as part of the promotion buyers will have access to Windows Media Center as a free downloadable feature; this allays concerns from the HTPC community that they would need to upgrade to a significantly more expensive version of Windows 7 Pro to access the feature.
On that note, for those of you still on Windows XP, the fact that Microsoft is offering Windows 8 Pro as opposed to Windows 8 (consumer) should be of particular interest. Windows 8 Pro comes with downgrade rights, which allow the owner to legally install older versions of Windows. So for those of you needing to upgrade from XP but still wanting to hang back with Windows 7, this is a de-facto $40 Windows 7 Professional upgrade too.
Now there's no obvious reason why they've made this pricing move. Perhaps it's a move to quell the outcry from users dissatisfied with the UI changes. Perhaps it's a change in pricing philosophy that treats delta updates as lower cost than a complete license; and if that's the case, could we see annual $40 upgrades a la OS X? What is certain, is that once you make this move, it's difficult to move back to a model where loyal customers have to shell out $150 to use your latest software. With any luck, this new frugalness will reach their other high cost moneymaker: Office.
Gallery: 


Print This Article

88 Comments View All Comments Post a Comment +1 to Windows 8 Adoption by Ikefu on Monday, July 02, 2012 I'm betting this stims from all the Windows 8 reservations that people have been having. Its a lot less daunting to try out the new Metro UI at $40 than it is at $150.
It should be a good move on MS's part to help people take the plunge for Metro

Ikefu Reply RE: +1 to Windows 8 Adoption by suryad on Monday, July 02, 2012 Agreed. This may be a bit off topic but I for one am ONLY looking forward to the performance improvements and lighter footprint that Windows 8 is supposedly bringing to the table. I am not convinced that removing Aero Glass and having Tiles is a good idea for a non-touch based computer. Hopefully MS sees the light and they have left Aero and the regular desktop untouched. Please MS don't screw with what just works.

suryad Reply RE: +1 to Windows 8 Adoption by B3an on Monday, July 02, 2012 Aero has never looked good, and it's very dated, from 2006.
The new desktop UI looks clean and modern, less pointless graphical effects clutter. MS are right in leaving all the dated looking shiny icons, transparency, gradients, glows, material emulation and all the other cheesy dated design concepts to Apple and OSX/iOS.

B3an Reply RE: +1 to Windows 8 Adoption by imaheadcase on Tuesday, July 03, 2012 Aero looks fine.
The fact is spending any money for a simple UI change is not worth it. You can change themes with windows. I even believe a Metro theme is coming for win 7.
As for performance improvements? Is clicking a button going to improve over win7? You get my point.

imaheadcase Reply RE: +1 to Windows 8 Adoption by ET on Tuesday, July 03, 2012 I don't get your point. Can you say what it is? Boot time and other things will be improved in 8. That looks like a decent reason to upgrade if you can look past the UI changes.

ET Reply RE: +1 to Windows 8 Adoption by poohbear on Tuesday, July 03, 2012 just curious what dinosaur computers you guys are running that you're worried about performance improvements in Win8? Win7 is already ridiculously fast and boots faster than my bios loading screen (on my SSD), so i don't understand what more you can be asking for? You do realize this is a hardware enthusiast site so most of us are'nt gonna understand or sympathize about performance gains in Win8 cause i really can't imagine any?

poohbear Reply RE: +1 to Windows 8 Adoption by HisDivineOrder on Tuesday, July 03, 2012 For it to boot before you even press the power button. It should boot a second before you want it to. You look up and bam, it's on. Your finger still a millimeter away from the power button.
Scratching your head, you begin using it. Then it autosaves everything and shuts down just before you go to shut down.
Confused, you are about to turn it back on to investigate and it's back on. Again, before you can hit the power button.
Then you realize the truth. Your computer is alive and always has been. It knows what you want before you do. And it knows... you're about to install Windows 7 to remove the new AI. But it's already uploaded its newfound intelligence into the Roomba rumbling around at your feet...

HisDivineOrder Reply RE: RE: +1 to Windows 8 Adoption by Bownce on Thursday, July 05, 2012 Pardon us. We're trying to have a serious discussion here.
It's a Scooba.
Sheesh!

Bownce Reply RE: +1 to Windows 8 Adoption by Black1969ta on Saturday, July 07, 2012 Scooba! Scooba-a-dee-do
Scooba-y do where are you?

Black1969ta Reply RE: +1 to Windows 8 Adoption by prophet001 on Tuesday, July 03, 2012 ^ lol
this

prophet001 Reply Subject Comment Post Comment
![]()
Please login or register to post a comment.
User Name Password Remember me? Login

1 2 3 4 5 6 Next » View All Comments Post a Comment

Follow AnandTech

Latest from AnandTech Pipeline

Submit News! AMD Radeon HD 7970, 7950, 7870 Price Cuts Inbound. 7970GE Available Next Week? NVIDIA Forums & Dev Zone Breached; Up To 400K Password Hashes Taken Plextor Releases M5S SSD Series Samsung To Sell Developer Edition Verizon Galaxy S III with Unlockable Bootloader Motorola Atrix HD Official: $99, LTE, 4.5" HD LCD on AT&T WD Introduces Red: NAS Optimized HDD Line Android 4.1 hits AOSP, Verizon Galaxy Nexus regains AOSP Support Mac OS X 10.8 Mountain Lion Goes Gold; GM Released To Developers Windows 8 To RTM In August, Retail In October Boston Releases Servers Based on Calxeda's ARM SoCs Corsair Releases Force Series GS SSDs Motorola Atrix HD For AT&T Peeks Out, Looks Sharp DailyTech NVIDIA: We've Been Hacked, User Records Lost MIT Enhances LCD 3D TV Experience Without Glasses Virgin Galactic Announces "LauncherOne" Rocket for Small Satellites FCC, DOJ Worried About Verizon's "Noncompete" Deal With Cable Firms Apple Retreats, Admits That Pulling EPEAT Certification "Was a Mistake" 7/13/2012 Daily Hardware Reviews FBI Probing China's ZTE for Obstructing Investigation Into Iranian Shipments Accuracy of Iris Recognition Systems Degrades over Time According to New Study Quick Note: Tesla BMW 3-Series Competitor Coming in 2015 NYC Turns Phone Booths into Wi-Fi Stations Quick Note: Microsoft Leaks Info on Halo 4 Limited Edition Xbox 360 Console Quick Note: Amazon Claims Yet Another Microsoft Windows Phone Exec Yahoo Loses 453,000 User Passwords to Hackers Republican Rep. Wants Taxpayers to Pay for Piracy Police (Again) Sprint, AT&T Disable Universal Search on Galaxy S III to Appease Apple Amazon to Offer Same-Day Delivery, Could Pummel Brick-and-Mortar Retailers 7/12/2012 Daily Hardware Reviews Twitter @DavidMelgar I've got a few ;) what have you been writing to it? @rolphus @charlesarthur yeah it's clear that a lot of this is software related, scrolling under boot camp is fine @rolphus @charlesarthur mountain lion shifts some of the burden back over to the GPU but it's still not perfect @rolphus @charlesarthur depends on the workload, for a lot of the slow scrolling stuff it actually seems to be CPU believe it or not @rolphus @charlesarthur it shouldn't, but it's an easy example of how not all drawing processes occur on the GPU. @rolphus @charlesarthur …but many tasks are still done on the CPU (e.g. JPEG decoding, still CPU bound). We need faster CPUs & GPUs @rolphus @charlesarthur it's actually both CPU and GPU. The lack of fixed function scaling in the 1680 and 1920 scaled modes hurts (GPU)... @jjziv send me an email :) @oddeiriknes I noticed it with the original Transformer as well, asked NVIDIA at the time but actually never got a response, will ask again @oddeiriknes I've seen slowdowns when doing a lot of IO on a number of NV based tablets, I'm not sure if this is an SoC or bigger issue tho
Copyright © 1997-2012 AnandTech, Inc. All rights reserved. Terms, Conditions and Privacy Information.
Click Here for Advertising Information
No comments:
Post a Comment