MS Trying To Spur Vista Sales With Discounts 329
Ang writes "Is Microsoft having worries about selling Vista already? Ars reports that Microsoft has announced yet another 'discount program' for Vista, but these new discounts work out to only about 10% off list price — not much when you notice that retailers already sell Vista below list. To make matters worse, the discount program would still end up costing you $100 more than the older 'family' discount built around Vista Ultimate in some situations. Ars spends seven paragraphs explaining this convoluted offer. Is all of this complexity supposed to help sell Vista?" If you must buy Vista, it might be advisable to sit on your wallet for a while. The discounts are bound to get sweeter.
Costco... (Score:5, Interesting)
Good deals for retailers (Score:5, Insightful)
Apart from generating revenue, MS has to prove to share holders that the $5bn that was spent on Vista development was worth doing and they can only do that by showing an increase in sales vs XP. There must be a lot of shareholders wondering whether it would have been better to just put the money in the bank and ride XP for longer. After all, anyone not buying Vista would still buy XP, so what motivates spending $5bn?
Re:Good deals for retailers (Score:5, Interesting)
Re: (Score:2)
Software costs more than duplication and distribution; you have to recoup the initial production costs (plus profit) spread across every sale.
Re: (Score:2)
I wonder what Microsofts hurry is, they now that they will dominate, most people aren't going to but a new PC without Vista, so why not just wait? Microsoft knows that they are sitting on a gold mine.
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
What the poster is saying that it doesn't really cost anymore to have 100 boxes on the shelf, than it does to have 500, so they are encouraging shops to take lots of boxes rather than a few, in the hopes they will create massive displays. This is marketing 101.
It's called "channel stuffing" [wikipedia.org] and while it is indeed marketing 101, companies can't get away with it for too long before the channel becomes mighty pissed off and starts sending the product back.
Rich.
Re:Good deals for retailers (Score:4, Informative)
Due to the disparity between the OEM copy included on new hardware and the retail price, my older hardware has upgraded to Ubuntu instead. Not everyone not buying Vista would still buy XP. Apple sales has been doing quite well with the Core 2 Duo machines.
The TCO for MS products has become a problem for many with the required number of batteries not included items such as demo photo editor, demo CD writer, Wordpad (nuf said), and the endless AV patches.
The TCO on Ubuntu has been much lower for me. Scanning, full e-mail, office suite, and photo editing is included. Media codecs, Flash 9, and DVD playback are a free download away. AV is generaly not needed yet.
There is lots of history to show consumers that a MS release is a batteries not included distro. You will have to buy something to add some basic functionality such as burning an ISO to a CD or risk a malware freebe with a free program. (free rigntones, animated cursers, weather on the taskbar, video player, audio player, etc.. bundled with adware.)
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
What I liked about Ubuntu was discovering them installed and working.
Ever hit a freeware site and try to figure out what is a demo, nagware, crippleware, etc. Having a configured machine ready to run is a nice break.
Re:Good deals for retailers (Score:4, Informative)
Bad example. That functionality is built into XP SP2.
Which part? The burning an ISO or malware freebe?
**ducks**
I'll have to re-check my wife's XP machine. I tried to use it to burn a Ubuntu ISO and couldn't find any way to burn an ISO with the provided (by Dell) CD application. I had to hit a shareware site to get an ISO burner. I thought we had SP2 installed, but if it's built in SP2, either I couldn't find it or we don't have SP2.
From a search online I find no refrence to the built in ISO burning application. I did find that it is a toy as an additional downloadable add-in.
http://isorecorder.alexfeinman.com/isorecorder.ht
In other words.. not included in SP2.
I now use Ubuntu to burn ISO's.
Re: (Score:2)
Which shareholder knows anything about technology or cares about technology-decisions made by s/w vendors? Every shareholder ought to be truly frightened when MS PAID Novell for the privilege of distributing Linux.
Except for the eye-candy, there is nothing new in Vista that's not a
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
But this isn't too much of a concern for Microsoft since they only accounted for 10% of XP's
Re: (Score:2)
Surprisingly driver and hardware compatibility issues for Vista are actually not that bad, I've installed it on 3 PCs so far, two older systems (1 1/2 and 2 years old) and one newer system (1 month old)
I've not had any hardware incompatibilities so far but YMMV. The closest I've gotten to driver incompatibilities was one of the motherboards had an onboard Creative SB Live 5.1 chip. But a visit to Creative's website solved that, though it took some digging.
Ther
Poor drivers with Vista (Score:2)
You: I've not had any hardware incompatibilities so far but YMMV. The closest I've gotten to driver incompatibilities was one of the motherboards had an onboard Creative SB Live 5.1 chip. But a visit to Creative's website solved that, though it took some digging.
BBC reporter:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/6407419.stm [bbc.co.uk]
Once online, Creative's website told me that my sound card was a write-off. No Vista support would be forthcoming.
Grudgingly I ordered a new
OS X performance does increase with each iteration (Score:5, Funny)
Many people dismiss this topic of optimization as a conspiracy theory, but I must admit that I am starting to believe that such techniques exist.
Re: (Score:2)
Sorry, 2 years is "old"? I have machine three times that age that work perfectly. I despair at this idea that we all need to buy brand new machines every year.
Well you don't really _have_ to buy a new PC every year, or necessarily even upgrade it. It all depends on your needs, and yours apparently are adequately served by a six year old PC. The upside is that a $500 PC that you buy today should serve you happily for the next 5 to 10 years though.
I personally consider 2 years as "older" considering Notebook models are obsoleted in 4 - 6 months, new GPUs are released in 6 to 8 month timeframes etc, and generally find 4 - 6 year old PCs unbearably slow when running
Re: (Score:2)
I have personally vowed to let XP be my last Windows license due to Vista's DRM and TPM control measures.
Re: (Score:2, Insightful)
ME, on the other hand, which I was running before XP... well... There was definitely a sense of urgency in switching to XP.
Re: (Score:2)
2000, unstable? I agree about ME, but you can't really compare ME to W2000.
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Re: (Score:2)
That would be a nice way to say that customers cannot trust them. People may have relied on their current EOL date for XP, if they suddenly announced a much shorter lifetime for XP, it might make some customers look into other vendors than Microsoft for their computing needs. Microsoft can't be that stupid.
Re: (Score:2)
Oh quit ringing the alarm bells. (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
wtf kind of writeup is this? (Score:5, Funny)
Ok, then they're not worried about selling Vista, if the new discount program is worse than the old discount program. A rational person would draw the opposite conclusion: that they're confident in Vista sales numbers. At least, enough to reduce the incentive.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Microsoft seems confident that there are enough irrational people in the world to boost demand for an inferior, bloated product that lacks many promised features and requires 8 times more hardware to perform essentially the same functions.
Keep on waiting... (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Keep on waiting... (Score:4, Insightful)
Between OEMs putting it on all new systems and people opting for it on their home-builds once games start making use of DirectX 10, Vista will rule the market just like XP, 2000, 98, 95, etc have.
It really sucks having to have a special OS just to play videogames.
Oh well.
Re:Keep on waiting... (Score:5, Funny)
If only there was a computer like that, if only.....
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
They aren't good for every game. How many RTS games or flight simulation games have you played on a console? I also hear FPS games are much better on PCs than on consoles.
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Keep on waiting... (Score:5, Insightful)
Did you ever game in DOS? In Windows 3.1? I guess you don't remember fiddling with your config.sys, messing around with the amounts and types of memory--EMS, XMS, conventional, etc? Do you not remember having to manually change screen resolution and color in windows 3.1 depending on the program? Fiddling with soundcard settings and environmental variables to get the IRQ/DMA/etc all nice and working with said game?
Not to mention, you had to install games for ANY of those operating systems--more so since DOS games usually were on floppies that had compressed files spread across multiple disks.
Geez, talk about rose tinted forgetting glasses!
Re:Keep on waiting... (Score:5, Funny)
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
I currently run Linux, and while attempts have been made to make it easier to play games, it is STILL not a gaming system. It will NEVER be a system you can game on really until you get buy in support from the game designers and they start making games FOR Linux.
Games in Linux for me fall into 4 categories: A) Doesn't work, not supported. B) The fix to actually get it w
Re: (Score:2)
Is it any more aggravating than trying to get Tux Racer or Kstars to run on Windows?
Re: (Score:2)
'95 was a somewhat risky move, but there was enough of a lock-in to guarantee that it would not fail, at least not in the market.
'98 and XP were as safe as you can get with a "new" product. Only a license to print money could've been a more secure investment.
Vista, on the other hand, is squarely in the "too little, too late" category. While Linux has lost some of its steam, it is quietly being rolled out in hundreds of large companies and many parts of the governments around the world. Apple is
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
A Gamecube AND Linux at the same time sounds like Christmas to me, anyway...
Re: (Score:2)
Try to play a fighting game with a keyboard. What a pain, it's a chore to do a simple hadouken! Try a platformer. A racing game. A shmup. Almost anything will be far more enjoyable with a good gamepad than with keyboard and mouse. And if the game is done right, RTSs and FPSs will play just fine with a gamepad too.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
I agree. When I play games, I mainly play RTS games and simulation games, and to my knowledge they all suck on a console. Consoles are good for some games, but not for everything.
Re: (Score:2, Insightful)
I'm evaluating Vista Business on my office desktop atm, its been installed for 2 weeks, aside from it feeling a little bloated its working fine so far. (A64-3500+, 1 GB Ram, nforce 4 mobo, nVidia 6800GS)
I was quite surprised actually when I installed it on a slightly older PC last week, I was having serious problems getting the onboard RAID on the MSI K8N SLI Platinum to work properly with an
Re: (Score:3)
You have a desktop atm?
It'd be cooler if it wasn't running vista, but still, not bad.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
Wrong conclusions. The PC market is unique in the sense the hardware is supposed to be standards-compliant and operating system - neutral; ie it is SUPPOSED to run ANY operating system. The big brand-name vendors are pushing pre-inst
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Tom Peterson (Score:3, Insightful)
And I agree.
At this point, I have no interest in paying for Windows. I do, however, require at least one Windows box (currently XP64) for gaming and testing deployment of some of our enterprise applications at home. I also don't really care to go through the trouble of finding a viable crack on bit torrent or anything. I will probably buy it once there are games which I must have that demand DirectX10 for the coolest gaming experience -- and I will do so when I am in the process of building a new machine so that I can get the OEM version.
Even at that, I will not spend $200. I might spend $140. And that's for the full version (4gb+, multi-core, 64bit, etc). Otherwise they can just eat it. The only reason I ever need to jump off my solaris, debian or OSX boxes is to play games. Period.
Re: (Score:2)
Then get ready to get on your knees and pucker-up because in a few years, games will no longer support XP. And no - you won't get a discount for Vista. Full-price for you bitch. =)
Re: (Score:2)
Have you tried this? It might be the last bit you need. I don't know if WINE will take care of the rest.
http://www.transgaming.com/index.php?module=Conten tExpress&func=display&ceid=2&meid=-1 [transgaming.com]
Cedega , TransGaming's flagship Linux portability product, allows Windows games to run on Linux seamlessly and transparently, right out of the box. With Cedega installed on your computer running Linux, you can simply insert your fa
Re: (Score:2)
unsuprised (Score:2)
And Microsoft is suprised that people aren't jumping into this? Hell, it makes shopping for HDTVs simple in comparrision.
Why ? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
All I know... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
For instance, here is a basic list of the applications I use regularly:
Firefox
Office XP
Notepad
DevC++
ZSNES
MathCAD
Games purchased before 2005
Winamp
Cakewalk Recording Stu
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Funny.... not a single tech where I work thinks it's worth upgrading except to play with and learn to fulfill our job duties. We use it all the time. We field tons of questions that end up being answered with "Sorry you just bought a machine with Vista on it. Now you have to wait for the compatible ___________ (driver/app/game patch) to run that ___________ (piece of hardware/app/game)". We have a ton of HP laptops that dont even have proper webcam support in Vista - even though the webcam is built in to th
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Reason #188 was their restocking policy, if you buy a defective device and they don't have the exact same one on the shelf, they charge you 15% to change to another brand or model. Such a nice company... (gag)
Seriously CompUSA has become the laughing stock of consumer tech PC industry. If your techs had more background or training, this would not be their response to people, the driver issues would be something they would know the workarounds to, and people getting 10-15fp
I had an opposite experience (Score:3, Interesting)
- they eliminated the expanding "All Programs" menu from the Start menu (wtf?), so instead you have to scroll up and down intermi
Re: (Score:2)
Multimedia applications are easy to use on Linux so long as you're not using media that has DRM (with some exc
Re:All I know... (Score:4, Insightful)
Here, I'll give you my opinion too:
I have installed it and I have used it, and I hated it.
Well, I guess you're going to have to toss a coin on who to believe...
Re: (Score:2)
1. UAC (I know it can be turned off, but it is still annoying) for basic stuff.
2. Slow. Why does file copying/moving take longer than XP even without aero stuff?
etc.
Re: (Score:2)
Though if I had actually paid for my copy, I wouldn't of been so happy. Sure Vista is good, but the price to feature ratio is sadly lacking.
Re: (Score:2)
For me, it's been the same all the way back to Windows 95. When I bought a machine with Windows 95, the first thing I did was reformat it and put on DOS and Windows 3.1 (partly because I needed 16-bit windows for a specific project, but also because I didn't like Win95). Guess what - at the time, everybody was grumbling about Win95 being too heavy, slow for ga
All's well in the world... (Score:3, Funny)
Sony is failing,
Windows Vista is failing,
Nothing to see here.
Yeah, but... (Score:5, Interesting)
Re: (Score:2, Insightful)
See my
Re: (Score:2)
See my .sig line.
[...] Outlaw "bundling" -- all items should be discretely negotiable!
Yeah. I just can't *wait* to have to buy a car one component at a time, and wear the extra cost the manufacturers and sellers will be passing on to consumers...
Who gets to decide what constitutes an "item" ? On what basis ?
Re: (Score:2)
So, you want to be stuck with a $3K Recaro seating system in your next car, just because Recarro (hypothetically) has mananged to gain a monopolistic position in the car seat industry? (I like Recaro seats, BTW.) Is it OK with you if your car dealer specifies what brand of automotive consumables you must use to keep it under warranty?
No. OTOH, I don't want to have to work my way through a multi-page list of tickboxes to choose each and every component that goes into building the car, which is what your
The Choice Is Clear (Score:3, Informative)
* "FREE AT LAST" [freemarketnews.com] by David Bond [freemarketnews.com] 03/19/2007
Quotes from the "FREE AT LAST" linked article above: (bold emphasis mine)
"But we were prepared for this Microsoft gambit. Why, we asked, after thousands of dollars already expended, should we feed the Microsoft maw again? Why this kilobuck penalty because we're getting a new machine? Made no sense."
"So down it came to the nut-cutting time. Brand-new computer, sitting here on top of the desk. Chicken-out, go with Windows, or take the Linux plunge. Let's see: $800 for Vista and Office 2007, single install, or Ubuntu, Firefox and Open Office, all for free."
IMO, I feel the title of that most excellent article pretty much sums up the growing change going on today. Why spend when a free and open alternative exists?
Riiiight (Score:2, Insightful)
Yeh, sure...Microsoft is crying all the way to the bank.
Is this that slow of a news day?
Buy a low end mac (Score:2)
I can't believe Microsoft can sell their expensive O/S at that price, no wonder they rely on discounts.
In Australia the list price for Ultimate is something like $750 !
Can almost buy a full hardware computer for that kind of money... insane.
The Only problem (Score:5, Interesting)
having so many editions is part of the problem (Score:4, Insightful)
IMO, Vista Enterprise shouldn't exist with the bitlocker and other "enterprise" features being either made available in Vista Business or as some kind of add-on.
The "N" versions need to exist to comply with anti-trust rulings and really are just the normal versions with windows media player files removed from the CD/DVD
and the installer.
That would basically leave 4 editions of vista, Home Basic, Home Premium, Business and Ultimate
Re: (Score:2)
You have Vista Home, Vista Home Premium, Vista Business, Vista Enterprise and Vista Ultimate.
IMO, Vista Enterprise shouldn't exist with the bitlocker and other "enterprise" features being either made available in Vista Business or as some kind of add-on.
Vista Enterprise is only available to volume licensing customers, so it really doesn't "exist" to the vast majority of buyers, especially those that are considering the "home" versions.
That would basically leave 4 editions of vista, Home Basic, Home Premium, Business and Ultimate
I agree that's more editions than necessary. IMO, Vista Ultimate should not be offered in retail boxed versions because 95% of retail buyers shouldn't even consider it. Those uber-users that need Ultimate can get it in an OEM version, bundled with their high-end computer, or via Anytime Upgrade. The retail boxed versio
Re: (Score:2)
Granted I haven't actually used Vista for more than an hour (one time was installing
This is a fun game. (Score:3, Interesting)
The only way to sell Vista (Score:4, Funny)
* High Productivity. None of those annoying UAC messages!
* Device Driver Compatibility. Hardware will work out of the box!
* Applications just work: Even Firefox! Even Visual Studio 2003!
* No DRM. Watch your movies and listen to your music when you want how you want.
* More efficient code, so works on today's hardware! Not only tomorrows!
* XP is cheaper and doesn't have a dozen different versions: 'Oh sir you'll need the Vista Sub Pro Business Home Basic Version!'
* Doesn't make you call Microsoft everytime you want permission to pee
Vista is to XP what New Coke(R) was to Classic Coke(R).
Windows Vista is the New Coke of Operating Systems (Score:3, Funny)
Finally faced with reality, Coca Cola took New Coke off the market and replaced it with Coca Cola Classic or Classic Coke.
Once Microsoft figures out that Windows Vista is New Coke, maybe it will do the right thing and offer Windows Classic?
If I was Steve Ballmer or Bill Gates I'd offer the following:
Windows Classic 9X (Based on the Windows 95/98/ME code but with improvements and new drivers for Firewire, USB 2.0, SATA) aimed at the low end consumers market and for upgrades for low-tech and low end systems. Priced at $90USD and $45USD for an upgrade.
Windows Classic NT (Based on Windows 2000/XP code but with improvements and new drivers for Firewire, USB 2.0, SATA) The Home version for $129USD, the Business version for $179, and the Media Center version for $199
Windows Classic Server (Based on Windows 2000 Server/2003 Server code) with server applications, and starting at $300USD for a 10 client license, and offering varied prices based on the number of client licenses.
The Windows Classic 9X I would market towards the low end, people with older systems who cannot run modern operating systems. There are so many older 95, 98, ME systems out there that are not longer patched for security that it leaves them vulnerable to hackers and viruses. Having a new, low cost, version of Windows would stop the viruses and hacking, as well as fit their needs of a low cost operating system because they cannot afford to upgrade the hardware. Of course it won't run 2000/XP or Windows Classic NT software, but there is still plenty of Windows 9X type software out there.
The Windows Classic NT would be marketed towards modern hardware and people who want an OS with more features in it, who don't mind paying extra for it. The Home version is the very basics and the core of the Windows Classic NT OS. Business adds in more supports for networks, logging into a domain, running an ISS web server, etc. Media Center allows better control of media and creating media and sharing it with other devices as a server.
The Windows Classic Server is basically a File, Print, Web, Email, etc general server. I would keep a low cost of $300USD for 10 client licenses so that small businesses can afford it, and then charge more for more client licenses.
Now these Classic operating systems wouldn't have all the features of Vista, and Vista would be kept for those who want to run it. The Classic operating systems would allow security companies to write security software for them like antivirus, firewall, drive encryption, etc.
If Microsoft won't make Windows Classic 9X, just release all of the undocumented 9X API calls so some other company can write a 9X operating system from scratch to cater to those who want to run an older version of Windows.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
I hope at least in your own mind you were trying to be funny.
The Win9x code base with no security and roots to 3.1 and DOS is why developers have screwed up many applications still in use on XP.
Also consider XP runs well on 80MB and a 200mhz processor (faster than Win95 or Win98 did), it is time to let these computers die, as most Linux distributions won't even run on them.
Re: (Score:2)
Why would microsoft want to support multiple code bases that render a display and run binaries in pretty much the same way. And Windows 98 needs to die.
I have a better idea. Layer 3 firewalls at every ISP to watch for identificable Windows95/98/ME traffic and when it is seen, Deny all on that. Screw these horrible people running these horrible old OSs.
Re: (Score:2)
The 9.x branch of Windows should be left as dead. The NT/2000/XP branch has more stability than the the 9.x branch. MS should actually create a slim downed version of NT/2000/XP for low end systems.
Believe it or not, Microsoft has actually done this. It's called Windows Fundamentals for Legacy PCs [microsoft.com]. The reason you haven't heard about it is because Microsoft does not advertise it at all, and also because it's only available to corporate customers.
See the Wikipedia article [wikipedia.org] for more information.
Re: (Score:2)
Have you ever actually used Windows Fundamentals for Legacy PCs, or are you just spouting your mouth off? You can run firefox locally on WinFLP. See screenshot here [bink.nu].
Discounts? What discounts? Don't count on it. (Score:2)
Joel's advice (Score:5, Informative)
XP had Win9x, what does Vista have? (Score:2)
Ubuntu is as compelling.
I turned down Vista for free (Score:2)
Yeah I know, I could have eBayed them, but it would have felt wrong.
Good advice (Score:2)
I'd say: if you are going to buy any software, it might be advisable to estimate how much its benefits are worth to you. If the price is higher than that, don't buy it. Vista probably makes sense for someone who "needs" DX10 (debatable, in my opinion) or a versioning filesystem, but hardly for millions of computer users.
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
Re: (Score:2)
Meanwhile, if I want to drag something from, say, firefox (one of maybe three applications I ever maximize) to an open application, I just hover over its taskbar icon for a second before moving to the program.
A nifty thing I did see was the 'fold and drop' interface for getting shit out of your way when you want to get 'behind' a window.
Re: (Score:2)
OSX will be at the center of many aspects of the home, but most importantly will be the delivery of content like music, TV, and movies. The OS will be what ties all those different devices, (iPod, iTV, and iPhone) together. Apple would be crazy to license the OS.
Goodby Karma! (Score:2)
I've always wondered why it is OK for Apple to restrict to one OS but not Dell?!?! Big outcry went to Dell for not offering other OS choices yet not a peep out of anyone against Apple.
And DRM will
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)