June 25, 2009

Microsoft Sets Windows 7 Pricing

Preorder Software Will Be Available At Substantial Discount

  •  (Microsoft)

(CNET)  Microsoft on Wednesday announced retail pricing for Windows 7 that was at or below comparable Windows Vista prices, while also offering a chance for people to preorder the software at a substantial discount.

From Friday through July 11, consumers in the U.S. will be able to buy an upgrade copy of Windows 7 Home premium for $49 or Windows 7 Professional for $99. That offer is good for both XP and Windows Vista PCs, regardless of whether someone has been trying out the pre-release version of the operating system. That matches the details in a memo from Best Buy that leaked earlier this month.

The offer, however, is limited in both duration and by the number of copies Microsoft is willing to sell, although Microsoft would not specify that figure. The upgrade will be available at Amazon, Best Buy, Microsoft's own store, Office Depot, OfficeMax, Costco, Staples, Wal-Mart and several other retailers.

"That truly is a price that we have never even come close to in terms of an operating system release," Corporate Vice President Brad Brooks said. "We've still got a business to run."

Of course, even at the preorder price, Microsoft still finds itself undercut by Apple, which has said it will only charge $29 for Leopard users moving to Snow Leopard (those on older versions of the Mac OS will have to buy a full-boxed copy combining Leopard and Snow Leopard).

Brooks, however, said that comparing the two upgrades is unfair.

"Even their chief software architect called (Snow Leopard) an upgrade of Leopard," Brooks said. "The way I look at it, its a service pack and we don't charge for service packs."

Microsoft also confirmed, as expected, that a program offering Vista PC buyers a free copy of Windows 7 will kick off on Friday.

When boxed copies of Windows 7 go on sale on October 22, Microsoft plans to charge $119 for Home Premium, $199 for Professional and $219 for Ultimate. The Home Premium upgrade is down $40 from the product's original price, although the Vista product had already gotten a price cut along the way. The Professional and Ultimate versions are priced similar to where Microsoft was with Vista. The upgrade prices apply to those moving from a previous version of Windows to Windows 7, but only those from Windows Vista will be able to upgrade without doing a clean installation of the product.

The full versions of Windows 7--the editions for those without a copy of Windows--will be priced at $199 for Home Premium, $299 for Professional and $319 for Ultimate. The Ultimate and Professional editions are again on par with their Vista counterparts, while Home Premium is down from the $239 that Microsoft had charged with Vista. Microsoft also plans to offer the operating system in an easier-to-open box.

Things are trickier in Europe, where Microsoft has said it will only ship a special "E" version, which has the browser removed. Because of that, Microsoft is requiring all users to do a clean installation of the product. So there, Microsoft has said it will offer the full version of Windows 7 for the upgrade price.

Brooks said Microsoft made that move to avoid having to delay its launch in Europe and added that boxed copy sales make up only a fraction of its total Windows sales in Europe and throughout the world. "It does not delay the introduction of Windows 7 into the market and it gives our European customers the best possible price."

The software maker is speeding up the pace of the international launch of Windows 7 compared with past launches. Computer makers will be able to ship new PCs in all languages on launch day.

As for the retail product, Microsoft plans to have 14 languages ready by October 22: English, Spanish, Japanese, German, French, Italian, Dutch, Russian, Polish, Brazilian Portuguese, Korean, Simplified Chinese, Traditional Chinese, and Hong Kong Chinese.

Then, on October 31, Windows 7 will be available in the remaining 21 languages--Turkish, Czech, Portuguese, Hungarian, Swedish, Danish, Norwegian, Finnish, Greek, Ukrainian, Romanian, Arabic, Lithuanian, Bulgarian, Estonian, Slovenian, Hebrew, Thai, Croatian, Serbian Latin, and Latvian.

"It truly will be a global release and make it a Windows 7 holiday for everybody this year," Brooks said. "People wanted it faster. We're giving it to them."


By Ina Fried ©2009 CBS Interactive Inc. All rights reserved.
Share:
  • Share
  • Yahoo! Buzz
  • Mixx
Add a Comment See all 16 Comments
by grabandgo June 26, 2009 9:36 AM EDT
This upgrade should be free after shoving VISTA down our throats.
Reply to this comment
by Samuel-HiLL June 25, 2009 9:23 PM EDT
Anyone who buys Windows 7 before the second service pack is released, is just a glutton for punishment. Micro$oft should send anyone who bought Vista a free copy, and a long apology.
Reply to this comment
by gold_standard June 25, 2009 7:04 PM EDT
"Even their chief software architect called (Snow Leopard) an upgrade of Leopard," Brooks said. "The way I look at it, its a service pack and we don't charge for service packs."

The service pack to fix Vista grew so large they decided to name it Windows 7 and charge for it. Hahaha!
Reply to this comment
by habu99-2009 June 25, 2009 6:29 PM EDT
Microsoft issues products that defend and extend their monopoly, period. Ease of use, security, stability, cost, hardware requirements and speed are secondary considerations if they get any consideration at all. Since they have a vested financial interest in people not staying put OS-wise, their products will always be flawed and inferior, holding out the constant carrot of "if I upgrade, maybe this annoying problem/bug/security hole/virus will have been fixed and will work properly now." They actually outfoxed themselves with XP in creating a stable-enough, secure-enough OS that people stuck with when the next version (the horrible Vista) came out.

Anybody considering an "upgrade" to Win7 may want to wait at least 6 months after the roll-out date to give Microsoft time to fix the inevitable legion of bugs and security holes their ever shoddy work produces, as well as give third parties time to rewrite drivers and software to actually run properly on the platform.

Alternately, there are other OS's out there that are solid, reliable, and not created by an arrogant monopoly. Using them is like driving a Ferrari after being stuck in a beater pickup truck that burns oil and is rusted through.
Reply to this comment
by veils-2009 June 25, 2009 4:42 PM EDT
But, are these 64bit versions of the OS?
Reply to this comment
by rwsmith29456 June 25, 2009 4:30 PM EDT
I'm not going to run out and buy and upgrade. I feel that Windows 7 should be a Vista service Pack. Microsoft has been selling software that aready needed fixing right out of the box since the first version of Windows. I'm going to start making the transition to Apple. I'm really tired of maintaining my computer instead of working with it.
Reply to this comment
by tmittelstaed June 25, 2009 4:09 PM EDT
Who cares! Liunx is free!
Reply to this comment
by grabandgo June 25, 2009 3:24 PM EDT
Windows 2000 was the last good operating system.
Reply to this comment
by barbaram99 June 25, 2009 2:38 PM EDT
Who ever wrote that article better know this olser Macs will not run the new Max OS as the Mac has to have an Intel processor. I am not a Mac user but my room mate is. I had to read up on his. There is no way I will use a Mac. I told my friend this. Older Macs will not run the new Mac OS. My friend loves his Mac and I love my pc. Macs make no sense to me. I have been using Vista Home Premuium for over a year. Give me a reason to move up.What is so different about it.
Reply to this comment
by wilc4u June 25, 2009 1:51 PM EDT
I just got vista to work some what correctly why would I want to Start all over again, with 7? and spend hour after hours trying to make it work been there done that, never the F again, not $49.oo not .49 cents
Reply to this comment
by elpaulito June 25, 2009 1:22 PM EDT
end now.
Reply to this comment
by tomanyt June 25, 2009 1:22 PM EDT
IF Windows 7 is like Vista in any way, shape or form, DUMP IT.
Reply to this comment
by grabandgo June 25, 2009 12:50 PM EDT
Wow will we still get blue screens or will the change the color to green?
Reply to this comment
by veils-2009 June 25, 2009 12:14 PM EDT
"That truly is a price that we have never even come close to in terms of an operating system release," Corporate Vice President Brad Brooks said. "We've still got a business to run."

As Microsoft continues to sell Vista in China and Russia for under $25 a copy, less than 3 times what it is sold for in the US.
Reply to this comment
by ToolMangler1 June 25, 2009 12:10 PM EDT
Up up and away!!!!! Office Depot here I come.
Reply to this comment
by cs4466 June 25, 2009 12:00 PM EDT
Woohoo!
Reply to this comment
See all 16 Comments
Latest News
News in Pictures
Scroll Left Scroll Right
Connect with CBS News

Stay connected with the CBS News using your favorite social networks and online news applications: