Thursday, January 18, 2007
Microsoft Offers Discount on Multiple Copies of Vista for Families
Posted by Jason Dunn in "NEWS" @ 02:24 PM
This has been a personal quest of mine for a couple of years: I've always found it frustrating, and downright unacceptable, that Microsoft hasn't offered any sort of discount for multiple-computer households. Back in the early Windows XP days I was extolling the virtues of Windows XP to a friend who had four kids and five computers total in his house. Since XP was the first version of Windows to have activation, when I explained that he'd have to purchase five copies of the XP Home Upgrade ($149 CAN each), he suddenly wasn't very keen on dropping $600 to upgrade all his computers. Apple has their 5-license family pack for $199, and the most Microsoft offered was a 10% discount if you ordered digital keys online.
Apparently Microsoft listened to people like me who told them over and over this was a problem, because they've come up with a solution: if you purchase a retail copy of Windows Vista Ultimate (the upgrade is $259 USD) you'll be able to purchase two electronics keys for Vista Home Premium for $49 USD each instead of the normal $159 USD price tag. That's a savings of $210 USD, which is excellent. The total cost of that setup would be $357 USD, which is $120 USD less than the $477 USD that three upgrades of Home Premium would cost. So it's a much better deal than Microsoft's original pricing, though it depends if you really want Vista Ultimate.
It's not perfect, but this is a good first step for Microsoft and I applaud them for it (and listening to people like us). It's obviously not as impressive as Apple's $199 family pack with five licenses, but given that Apple releases a new OS almost yearly, over the lifespan of Vista (assuming it's three to four years) I think Microsoft's new solution ends up being less expensive in the long run.