Microsoft's in a tough spot, regarding the flood of Vista upgrade projections issued by a variety of firms over the past couple of weeks. of the reports I've seen are warning users that they should expect to have to upgrade their existing machines, or preferably, buy brand-new ones, in order to run Windows Vista. of these studies have been issued by companies who make their bread and butter from selling new PCs,
office 2007 Enterprise key, PC components and/or software. Sure, these firms might have separate research and sales divisions, but it still seems like somewhat of a conflict of interest to me.) same time, Microsoft and others (including our own ZDNet blogger Ed Bott) have publicly claimed that Vista won't be as much of a hardware hog as many are claiming, and that a large number of existing PCs will be able to run Vista just fine, thanks. does the truth lie? In that fuzzy area in between, according to Brad Goldberg,
buy microsoft office 2010 pro plus, general manager of Windows client product management. of the opinion that businesses tend to replace up to one-third of their PCs each year, Goldberg said. And "the majority" of the new PCs going in these days are definitely Vista-Premium-ready, he said. is aligning with PC refresh" on the enterprise side of the house,
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buy microsoft office 2007 key," Goldberg acknowledges. on the consumer side? What's Microsoft expecting, in terms of Vista deployment strategies, among users who will be able to get their hands on code starting January 30, 2007? Microsoft is predicting "the vast majority of consumers also will receive Vista when they buy new PCs," Goldberg says. a balancing act for Microsoft. The company wants to encourage users to upgrade (preferably via new PC preloads),
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