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- (Includes 32 & 64-bit versions cd-rom) Combines remarkable ease-of-use with the entertainment features of Home Premium and the business capabilities of Professional–get it all with with Windows 7 Ultimate
- Make the things you do every day easier with improved desktop navigation; start programs faster and more easily, and quickly find the documents you use most often
- Run many Windows XP productivity programs in Windows XP Mode; watch, pause, rewind, and record TV on your PC
- Easily create a home network and connect your PCs to a printer with HomeGroup; connect to company networks easily and more securely with Domain Join
- Recover your data easily with automatic backup to your home and business network; help protect data on your PC and portable storage devices against loss or theft with BitLocker
Product Description
With Microsoft Windows 7 Operating System Software Ultimate, you’ll be able to run many Windows XP productivity programs in Windows XP mode* and recover your data easily with automatic back-ups to your home or business network. You’ll be able to connect to company networks easily and more securely with Domain Join. And with entertainment features like Windows Media Center, it’s great for home as well as for business.Amazon.com Product Description
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November 5, 2009 at 6:58 am
Windows 7 sounds great, but I am not pleased with the upgrade pricing. I purchased a new laptop 14 months ago and paid the premium to have vista ultimate as my os. Microsoft needs to look at ending the pricing penalty currently built in that gives users no credit/discount for their previous purchase.
Rating: 3 / 5
November 5, 2009 at 8:19 am
I’m sure Windows 7 is a good OS. I’ve run the release candidate and it has been much better than Vista. In fact it’s what Vista should have been.
My complaint is the upgrade pricing.
I supported Microsoft by purchasing Vista Ultimate and upgrading from XP for several hundered dollars just a year and a half ago.
And what did I get?
I got to be an unpaid beta tester for their unfinished OS. I got to waste countless hours dealing with Vista problems. And now that most of Vista’s issues seem to have been resolved, I get to pay another couple hundred dollars for the fix know as Windows 7.
And not only that, I get to pay the same amount as those who never purchased Vista, who never had to be an unpaid beta tester for MS, who never had to lose hours of productivity for using an OS that was clearly not ready and should never have been released as it was.
Thanks Microsoft for showing me how you reward your long time loyal customers.
Edit: If you really want to see how ridiculous MS is in their pricing, Google “Windows 7 OEM” and you will find the full (non-upgrade) OEM version of Windows 7 sold by a number of resellers for less than the price of the retail upgrade version.
Rating: 1 / 5
November 5, 2009 at 9:09 am
I have Vista 64 Ultimate and ordered the upgrade to Windows 7.
After 2 hours and several reboots I get an error saying:
“This version os Windows could not be installed…”
I ran the upgrade advisor, I checked the online upgrade advisor from the Upgrade DVD and there were no issues.
The setup did not object and I have more than 50GB free space on the C: drive.
Yet, it fails.
Now I have to hunt down the elusive, and often crappy, MS support.
What a waste of money.
If this is M$ “flagship” OS I am not impressed.
Same old MS BS, some old crap.
Get Ubuntu and save yourself $$$.
Rating: 1 / 5
November 5, 2009 at 9:35 am
Windows 7 Ultimate has nothing noticeably new. It’s 99% similar to Vista Ultimate. I upgraded my Windows Ultimate Vista to Windows 7 Ultimate and let me tell you, DON’T DO IT! I’m still searching for new things on Windows 7 and after a week of searching, still found nothing new.
Windows 7
will take off the Dreamscene,
will not be compatible to old games,
will take longer to load at start,
has Aero that is very annoying will automically control windows even though you don’t want for it to do that,
will not be compatible to OneCare, but will give you Microsoft Security Essential, which is a downgrade of OneCare,
will remove Tinker and Hold’em games from Vista Ultimate,
and still Windows Media Center does not support Blu-Ray.
I already found problems with it:
you can’t move files by dragging in folders, they are organized forcefully
and most downloads that take long always get runtime error.
If you have Vista Ultimate, keep it. It’s way more better. If you upgrade to Windows 7, it will be like DOWNGRADING. Plus, it will be very hard to go back to Vista Ultimate once you have upgraded to Windows 7. I DEFINITELY don’t recommend Windows 7. Just wait until the next OS comes out, maybe it will be the one who would have the noticeable upgrades.
Rating: 1 / 5
November 5, 2009 at 10:18 am
I have a Vista Home Premium Laptop and purchased this ultimate upgrade, and based on the information Amazon provides, I thought I could do this. After installing the Ultimate, I can not enter the vista key to activate the ultimate upgrade. I don’t know what to do, I have 30 days to activate this laptop or I will be unable to use it.
Make sure you fully investigate what version of Windows 7 you can purchase as an upgrade.
I should have purchased Windows 7 home version.
Rating: 3 / 5