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Windows 7 Starter Edition removes three-app limit imposed on Vista and XP Editions

by Tarinder Sandhu on 1 June 2009, 09:13

Tags: Windows 7, Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT)

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Microsoft has divulged details of the various incarnations of its upcoming operating system, Windows 7, and the betting is that the various SKUs will be available on October 15th.

Beginning with the Starter Edition, the cheapest of the bunch, Microsoft has now confirmed that Windows 7 Starter will drop the three concurrent application limit imposed on the current XP and Vista counterparts.

"We believe these changes will make Windows 7 Starter an even more attractive option for customers who want a small notebook PC for very basic tasks, like browsing the web, checking email and personal productivity," commented Brandon LeBlanc on the Windows 7 Blog.

Whilst removing the three-app limit can only be seen as a positive move, Windows 7 Starter is very much a subset of the other editions: it does not include:
  • Aero Glass, meaning you can only use the “Windows Basic” or other opaque themes. It also means you do not get Taskbar Previews or Aero Peek.
  • Personalization features for changing desktop backgrounds, window colors, or sound schemes.
  • The ability to switch between users without having to log off.
  • Multi-monitor support.
  • DVD playback.
  • Windows Media Center for watching recorded TV or other media.
  • Remote Media Streaming for streaming your music, videos, and recorded TV from your home computer.
  • Domain support for business customers.
  • XP Mode for those that want the ability to run older Windows XP programs on Windows 7.
Still, Starter should be good for low-priced netbooks, we feel.



HEXUS Forums :: 3 Comments

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But instead they use pricing to limit screens to 10.2 inches or smaller :(
most of the “do not include” make sense apart from being able to personalize desktop background??? and maybe media streaming (although im guessing you can still use other programs to do this)
That all sounds like reasonable ways to cut down to a “Starter Edition” - I'd disable most of that myself on a Netbook anyway… so long as the price is very low as well, I think this could be a big win for MS on the larger Netbooks (I'm thinking EEE, Wind etc) - of course smaller ones with ARM CPUs will always be Linux only…