
Critics who blasted Microsoft three months ago for failing to deliver Windows Vista add-ons have
again called the company on the carpet, this time for missing its self-imposed deadline to provide promised extras. In late June, bloggers and users were already panning Vista Ultimate Extras as a bust. Extras, available only to customers running the top-end Vista edition, was one of the features cited by Microsoft to distinguish the USD 399 operating system from its USD 239 cousin, Home Premium. Microsoft's online marketing, for instance, touted Extras as 'cutting-edge programs, innovative services, and unique publications' that would be regularly offered to Ultimate users.
Member since:
2006-09-29
Uh, hate to tell you, but enthusiasts generally do not buy Dell or HP. They go to newegg or frys, buy parts that they want and install whatever OS.
I myself, bought an OEM Vista Home Premium two weeks ago for an MPC machine, and also installed Debian 64 on a different machine for doing real computer work (ie: development).
Both machines are my own creation.
The Vista box is the appliance PC -- it's hooked to the big screen TV for movies and games, with digital wireless audio for stereo. It's the brain dead box - a glorified DVR appliance that looks pretty on the TV, and people say - "wow you have your computer hooked up to the TV?" when they visit, and I correct them. "No, my computer is upstairs. This is the Vista media zombie".
btw - an OEM copy of Vista Home Premium on newegg is only a little over 100 bucks. Too bad it's hardware locked - as you can never upgrade a computer with the OEM copy of Vista. (you have to get retail version for that)