I don't want to call this buyer's remorse.
Back in July, I ordered an upgrade copy of
Microsoft 's (Nasdaq: MSFT) Windows 7 Home
Premium. The
pre-orders were just $49before July 11 -- less than half
of today's $119.99 price -- but I'm still unlikely to crack
open my copy when it arrives later this week.
I live in a home with a fleet of cheap computers and
laptops, and all but one of them are perfectly happy booting
up Windows XP. The one Vista-powered machine I have is
strictly an online surfing device, so there's no urgency to
upgrade there.
Nearly every review I've read has been positive on
Microsoft's new operating system, but they all seem to be in
agreement that the upgrade is worth it only for
Vista users. It's apparently a real patience-draining
chore to go from XP to Windows 7.Â
My son the Mac-head recently killed the partition on his
hard drive on which he was running the beta version of
Windows 7, when he realized that
Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL) serves all of his
MacBook needs. As it is with most kids, as long as he can
surf the Web, IM his buddies and girlfriend, and fire up
iTunes, the
operating systemis inconsequential.
So here we are, two days away from the launch of Windows
7, and I'm already talking about a box that will probably
collect dust or find its way into what's going to be a
crowded
eBay (Nasdaq: EBAY) marketplace. There are
already more than 100 copies of Windows 7 Home Premium on the
auction site, 48 hours before the software's release! The $70
spread between the pre-order and retail price is a dinner
bell for cold-footed opportunists who can cash in on some of
the difference in a resale.
Investors may also want to warm up to
Dell (Nasdaq: DELL) and
Hewlett-Packard (NYSE: HPQ) at this point,
since reviewers are advising those running XP or computing on
older machines to just buy a new laptop or PC with Windows 7
pre-installed.
I have called Window 7 "the last great operating system,"
because the feverish push toward cloud computing,
smartphones, and handheld Web-surfing gadgets will make it
hard for any operating-system platform to be dominant. Then
again, since there doesn't seem to be a lot of anticipation
for Microsoft's new program or even Apple's
Snow Leopardoutside media and promotional circles, maybe
I was a generation too late making that call.
Oh, no! What if Vista was the last great operating
system?Â
Will you be upgrading to Windows 7 this week? Chime in
with your opinion in the comment box below.
This article was originally published as
Snow Leopard and the Windows 7 Dwarfson
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