Vista Prices Leaked On Amazon
profdlp
The Holy City Of Westlake, Ohio
Not exactly bargain basement prices.
Link to currency exchange rate calculator.
Source: RealTechNews
FULL versions (all prices Canadian)
–Windows Vista Ultimate $499
–Windows XP Professional w/SP2 $429
–Windows Vista Business $379
–Windows Vista Home Premium $299
–Windows Vista Home Basic $259
–Windows XP Home w/SP2 $259
UPGRADE versions (all prices Canadian)
–Windows Vista Ultimate Upgrade $299
–Windows XP Professional w/SP2 Upgrade $259
–Windows Vista Business Upgrade $249
–Windows Vista Home Premium Upgrade $199
–Windows Vista Home Basic Upgrade $129
–Windows XP Home w/SP2 Upgrade $129
We Say: Vista Ultimate is $499 CDN? That’s $449 U.S. I can see I’ll only be getting it with a new PC.
Link to currency exchange rate calculator.
Source: RealTechNews
0
Comments
Like forever, I hope.
Edit:
http://www.amazon.com/gp/search/102-0360847-5316953?search-alias=software&keywords=Windows%20Vista
it looks like Jan 30th is the date.
Lets hope so, wait, nevermind. I am not buying it until M$ can pull their heads out and offer it at a reasonable price. I think $250 for the ultimate is fair, and then down from there $400...pfft. Thats only a months paycheck. Who do they think they are selling this too, Bill?
~FA
if they rolled out a patch/SP that changed the NTFS partition limits, or at least allowed GPD disks, XP pro would be perfect in my opinion.
The full retail software versions cost a ridiculous amount of money. I really dislike the way the OEM licence works (especially for people like me who upgrade frequently). I was hoping that the full-retail versions of Vista would be priced significantly lower than XP.
Additionally, the price gouging drives, nay, FUELS the black market. I think MS could make even MORE money if they would just be reasonable with pricing to home users, and I'm not talking about selling a whittled down version of their power software at a reduced price. Give us the full power version at fair, home user, or family plan pricing. I've never seen anything like this before! Most corps get a volume discount so they actually pay less than us poor folks trying to put our kids though college with ungodly expensive OS's on their computers. It makes me sick.
Bring on the black market. Down with MICROSOFT!!! Oppressor of the common man!!
Okay, I'm done venting. Now, I gotta save up for Vista. :banghead:
1) you could build a rig on dell.com for about 800 or less
2) that means thatyou pay about 500 bucks for a new comp (if you extract the cost of windows vista)
3) MS KNOWS that vista will only work with state of the art machines
4) To save their butts they make the price wayyy too high, so people end up buying newer machines too
5) Windows vista can run properly due to the new machinery
6) MS doesn't look like a team of jackbutts cuz their OS is as slow as mollassis
4)
And yes, the new OS will demand better hardware, but is that there fault, when hasnt a new os had higher hardare requirements. That is only natural. Do people expect a new OS to run on old hardware as good as XP did? I hope not.
I've seen XP run on a system that I didnt think it was going to, and it ran well, not fast, but well. It was a Pentium 2 with 64megs of ram. Try that with vista.
Vista is Windows XP Service Pack 3 with a bunch of useless crap and the DRM PLUS! pack.
I am glad the newer version uses half the memory the last version did. 450+\-MB vs 900MB+
I'll be trying to move into Linux, but it ain't gonna happen. Too many programs I depend on require MS and I paid too much for them to switch to a free variant I have no time in learning.
Usually you present your opinion-based arguments with well-rationed logic behind them - but this is below your standards. Vista is quite a bit more than a service pack to XP. It's almost a complete re-write. Dig into it a bit more than a superficial layer, explore the aspects that affect, say, the MCSE skills; the more technical side of things, and you must agree that your assertion is quite an understatement.
Consider its new features:
-Desktop widgets
-IE7
-Aero
-WMP11
-Windows Mail, Calendar
-A centralized control panel
-Prefetching often-used programs to memory
-Updated task manager
-Support for NVFlash drives
-A replacement for netmeeting
And some trusted computing nonsense, including locking down the kernel from security vendors; while an admirable goal to keep the kernel away from everyone, not letting security vendors have access to it will only leave the black hats the luxury of doing as they please... And they will. More than that, the HDCP requirement of Vista is a slap in the face to anyone buying video cards or monitors today, as is BitLocker, the valiant effort to permit people to encrypt their files.... Only if they buy the $299 or $399 editions.
These are touted as the major features of Windows Vista, as seen on the Microsoft pages regarding their new baby. Look at each of those, and honestly tell me they couldn't be distributed in another 125-175mb service pack. All of their features, as listed there, could be provided via simple software packages, new services or new drivers. Many of the features in Windows Vista can already be done with Windows XP, for less memory than Vista demands.
From widgets, to new mail and conferencing clients to new devices, Aero and WMP11... All of it can be done, right now, on Windows XP.
Is Windows Vista still anything more than Service Pack 3 which took an exceptionally long time to develop at the expense of all its really innovative features? I'm not so sure.