Windows 8 sales have been ‘slow going,’ Microsoft said to be blaming OEMs

Windows 8 sales have been 'slow going,' Microsoft said to be blaming OEMs

We’ve already heard about Windows RT’s “modest” beginning, and now there’s talk full-blown Windows 8 ain’t flying off the shelves either. According to MS aficionado Paul Thurrott and one of his “most trusted sources,” uptake of the new OS isn’t hitting Redmond‘s targets, with the blame being put on OEMs and their “inability to deliver” more inspiring hardware with better availability. Some corroboration of Windows 8’s tricky birth comes from Merle McIntosh, senior VP of product management of NewEgg, who says the online retailer was “prepared for an explosion” at launch, but that sales have “been slow going” to date. However, he says that early sales figures shouldn’t be compared to Windows 7, since that OS arrived to “solve a Vista problem.” He expects Windows 8 to gain traction in Q2 2013 when “pricing normalizes,” which would certainly help to temper any launch frustrations.

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Windows 8 sales have been ‘slow going,’ Microsoft said to be blaming OEMs originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 19 Nov 2012 10:05:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceWinSuperSite, ReadWrite  | Email this | Comments

HP’s Todd Bradley isn’t impressed by Surface, doesn’t see it as competition

HP's Todd Bradley isn't impressed by Surface, doesn't see it as competition

Microsoft was warned of how its homegrown tablet might impact OEM relationships, and even acknowledged the challenge itself, but HP doesn’t see it the same way. In a recent interview, the head of HP’s PC arm Todd Bradley repeated the company’s unconcerned stance — if a little more bluntly — saying, “I’d hardly call Surface competition.” He pinned it on “very limited distribution,” and that the pricey tablet “tends to be slow and a little kludgey as you use it.” His feelings on the OS were also unfavorable — “I’m not a big [Windows] RT fan either, by the way.” — and he had some choice words for potential customers: “If you want to go to any of the 30 Microsoft Stores in the United States to buy one, I think you should probably do that.” Needless to say, we don’t think Todd’s sold on the Surface, or worried about competitive tussles when HP adds consumer tablets to its line-up next year (did someone say fire sale?). For the whole transcript, which includes a perfectly worded non-comment about HP’s future smartphone plans, see the source below.

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HP’s Todd Bradley isn’t impressed by Surface, doesn’t see it as competition originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 15 Nov 2012 13:59:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceCITEworld  | Email this | Comments

Hate Windows 8 already? The Pro OEM edition will let you downgrade as far back as Vista

Hate Windows 8 already The Pro OEM version will let you downgrade, even to Vista

Relax, Gabe Newell. If you buy a new Windows 8 Pro PC and discover that you really do detest the OS that much, you may be able to switch back to an older version — either Windows 7 or Vista, but not near-death XP — under the same OEM license. Will many folks want to do that? Probably not, and in any case these so-called downgrade rights are actually only helpful in specific circumstances and they don’t come with boxed retail versions of the software. The main practical benefit (albeit still a niche one) is that a manufacturer could technically offer a Windows 7 disc in the box with a new Windows 8 machine and give customers a choice of OS. Alternatively, the manufacturer could install Windows 7 by default (effectively a factory downgrade) and supply Windows 8 Pro installation media so that customers can upgrade for free when they feel good ‘n ready. At some point, of course, staring at a redundant UI-switching button is going to grate.

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Hate Windows 8 already? The Pro OEM edition will let you downgrade as far back as Vista originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 03 Sep 2012 08:45:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink PCWorld  |  sourceKenny Chan (Linked In)  | Email this | Comments

Microsoft confirms Windows 8 has been released to manufacturing, OEM partners now have final code

Microsoft confirms Windows 8 has been released to manufacturing, OEM partners now have final code

RTM. To the everyman, those three letters may not mean much. To those waiting with bated breath for Microsoft’s next operating system, it’s a huge milestone worth celebrating. Microsoft has today confirmed that Windows 8 has been released to manufacturing, enabling its OEM partners to grab the final code and begin implementation on systems that’ll be tempting you mightily starting on (or around) October 26th.

If you’re curious about the specific rollout details, here goes. Starting August 15th, devs will be able to download the final version of Windows 8 via their MSDN subscription, and IT pros testing Windows 8 in organizations will be able to access the final version of Windows 8 through their TechNet subscriptions. On August 16th, customers with existing Microsoft Software Assurance for Windows will be able to download Windows 8 Enterprise edition through the Volume License Service Center (VLSC). Also on that day, Microsoft Partner Network members will have access to Win8. On August 20th, Microsoft Action Pack Providers (MAPS) receive access to the goods, while Volume License customers without Software Assurance will be able to purchase Windows 8 through Microsoft Volume License Resellers on September 1st.

Update: Microsoft has just affirmed that starting today, any qualifying business in a supported market can now submit a Metro style app for Windows 8. Boom.

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Microsoft confirms Windows 8 has been released to manufacturing, OEM partners now have final code originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 01 Aug 2012 12:09:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceThe Windows Blog (1), (2)  | Email this | Comments

Windows Server 2012 pares back to four versions, looks to give small businesses more bang for the buck

Windows Server 2012 pares back to four versions, looks to give small businesses more bang for the buck

Microsoft has been devoting most of its OS update attention this year to Windows 8, not its suit-wearing Windows Server 2012 counterpart. Some of the mystery has been cleared up through word of a greatly simplified server OS lineup. Just four versions of Windows Server will sit in IT backrooms versus the whopping 12 from Server 2008 R2, with an emphasis on making the feature slope a little gentler. The biggest improvement is the near-identical feature set of Windows Server 2012 Standard compared to its Datacenter equivalent: the only advantage of Datacenter is the jump to unlimited virtual machines, giving smaller businesses a way to save some cash. Foundation and Essentials will cover the basics for these outfits if just 15 or 25 very real machines need to hop onboard. The base prices of $425 to $4,809 per copy for all but the OEM-only Foundation still make it doubtful that we’ll be loading Server 2012 on a PC tucked into a closet at home, but it’s evident between this and the streamlined Windows 8 selection that Microsoft wants to avoid the flood of versions that confused buyers during the Windows Vista and 7 days.

Windows Server 2012 pares back to four versions, looks to give small businesses more bang for the buck originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 05 Jul 2012 14:23:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Geekzone, ZDNet  |  sourceMicrosoft  | Email this | Comments