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Posted by Parm - Tue 29 Aug 2006 15:52
3. Microsoft Windows Vista Ultimate Upgrade DVD-Rom (Windows XP)
Buy new: $259.00 Available for Pre-order

That'd be the one for me and it seems pretty reasonable I think.
Posted by Consumption - Tue 29 Aug 2006 15:55
Parm
3. Microsoft Windows Vista Ultimate Upgrade DVD-Rom (Windows XP)
Buy new: $259.00 Available for Pre-order

That'd be the one for me and it seems pretty reasonable I think.
What's the difference between the Ultimate Upgrade at $259 and Ultimate DVD-Rom at $399?
Posted by Parm - Tue 29 Aug 2006 15:57
I don't know for certain but my understanding was that the Ultimate DVD was for new customers and the Ultimate Upgrade DVD being for those who are upgrading from legitimate versions of Windows XP.
Posted by Bob Crabtree - Tue 29 Aug 2006 16:14
Parm
I don't know for certain but my understanding was that the Ultimate DVD was for new customers and the Ultimate Upgrade DVD being for those who are upgrading from legitimate versions of Windows XP.

That would be my expectation, too.

Have to say, though, that if I was a retailer, I'd be pretty hacked off at being expected to stock 16 versions of XP.
Posted by Bull Dog - Tue 29 Aug 2006 17:08
MS should have kept it down to 3 versions—maybe 4 TOPS.
Posted by Lee H - Tue 29 Aug 2006 17:17
:surprised:

How many windows variants?

The training on this is going to be a long one by the look of it, pin-pointing all the differences and changes between the plethora of versions available.

:woowoo: I'm looking forward to that shortly ;)
Posted by Bob Crabtree - Tue 29 Aug 2006 17:24
Four versions really, by my reckoning, each with an upgrade variant:

Vista Ultimate (and upgrade version)

Vista Home Premium (and upgrade)

Home Basic (and upgrade version)

Vista Business (and upgrade version)
Posted by starbuck - Wed 30 Aug 2006 08:53
I'm gonna wait for the oem version, planning a hardware upgrade about that time anyway.
Posted by Synergy6 - Wed 30 Aug 2006 15:22
One problem with the upgrade/OEM versions is you may have to install “from” XP, which can mess up the partitions (Vista main may not end up as C:\". Another is reformats, if you have to wipe the machine for any reason, MS may require special treatment (think ringing some damn callcentre) to let you reinstall, reactivate, etc etc (whatever other security rubbish they bung in next time).
Synergy6
Posted by Parm - Wed 30 Aug 2006 16:59
Synergy6
One problem with the upgrade/OEM versions is you may have to install “from” XP, which can mess up the partitions (Vista main may not end up as C:\". Another is reformats, if you have to wipe the machine for any reason, MS may require special treatment (think ringing some damn callcentre) to let you reinstall, reactivate, etc etc (whatever other security rubbish they bung in next time).
Synergy6
Is it usually that strict?

I've used an upgrade once in the past and if I recall, I think it just asked for the serial key of the previous product? Not entirely sure though.
Posted by Bob Crabtree - Wed 30 Aug 2006 17:13
Even if you are starting from a blank system disc drive, the normal situation is that you only need to put in - at some point during the procedure - an original CD of the OS from which you are upgrading and also key-in the serial number for it.

I'd like to think MS is unlikely to change that arrangement cos, in truth, an install from scratch will remain the best route for a stable system.
Posted by luke284 - Wed 30 Aug 2006 19:16
ive got a Student licence upgrade of XP pro, would a vista Ultimate upgrade work from my version of XP? or would i need a propper version?

or is it too early to tell?
Posted by DeMilo - Thu 31 Aug 2006 11:56
Parm
Is it usually that strict?

I've used an upgrade once in the past and if I recall, I think it just asked for the serial key of the previous product? Not entirely sure though.

Yeah. You can lie to MS down the phone until the cows come home and they believe all of it. EG- If you cannot register or activate your new version of XP, (legally or not) phone them up and tell them it “isn't working” and they will supply you with new LEGAL codes every time.
Posted by dannyweb - Wed 06 Dec 2006 08:25
Can you purchase Vista Home Premium from the states and install it on a machine in the UK? When you convert the cost of the US version to the UK version there is something like a £90 difference between the two. UK always get swindle with everything we pay higher for nearly everything single thing on the planet :mad:

I did a quick price conversion using the listed £219.00 price of amazon.co.uk for Vista home premium and the result was:

UK £219.99 = US $435.32

Now its gonna be pretty obvious that in the US they aint gonna be charge $435.32 to home premium heck i'll be suprised if they get charged that for Ultimate. Makes me :crazy: