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February 28, 2006 12:00 AM

Finally, Microsoft Confirms Windows Vista Lineup

Windows IT Pro
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Taking a cue from its tag line for Windows Vista, Microsoft has finally introduced some clarity about its product lineup for the next major Vista release, which will include eight product editions (or rather seventeen, if you count 32-bit and 64-bit versions separately). The list and product edition feature set corresponds almost exactly with the Windows Vista product edition lineup I revealed last September. It's unclear why the company waited so long to finalize this information, although it has clearly struggled with which versions it should ship.

"We live in a digital world that is filled with more information, more things to do and more ways to communicate with others than ever," says Mike Sievert, the corporate vice president of Windows Product Management and Marketing at Microsoft. "The PC needs to give people the clarity and confidence to handle this 'world of more' so they can focus on what's most important to them. With our Windows Vista product line, we've streamlined and tailored our product lineup to provide what our customers want for today's computing needs."

And apparently what customers want, is indeed "more." More product editions than ever before. More confusion about which features are included in each product edition and about how they might upgrade from one version to the next. This isn't clarity; it's insanity. By comparison, there is only one Mac OS X product edition. When you get Mac OS X, you get all of the features that Apple offers for that system. That seems a bit clearer to me.

Some good news is that one of the product editions Microsoft was originally planning to foist on its unsuspecting customer base, Vista Small Business, has been dropped. This change leaves a wide range of product editions in place. On the low end of the spectrum is Windows Vista Starter (previously Windows Starter 2007), which will be offered only in emerging markets. For home users, Microsoft will offer Windows Vista Home Basic (and Home Basic N for the European Union--EU) and Windows Vista Home Premium. Business users can look forward to Windows Vista Business (and Business N for the EU) and Windows Vista Enterprise, the latter of which will be made available only through volume licensing.

At the high end of the chain is Windows Vista Ultimate, "the edition of Windows Vista that has it all." Windows Vista Ultimate combines all of the features and functions of Vista Home Premium with Vista Business. Vista Home Basic, Vista Home Premium, Vista Ultimate, and Vista Business will be available as a fully packaged product at retail and on new PCs, Microsoft says.

All of the Vista product editions, except for Vista Starter, will be available for both 32-bit and 64-bit versions, although it's still unclear how Microsoft will package those versions (Vista Starter is 32-bit only). All of the Vista editions, except for Vista Starter and Vista Home Basic, will include the new Windows Aero UI.

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Comments
  • Lotsa
    6 years ago
    Mar 02, 2006

    Now, now, girls. Stop fighting. You're both pretty.

    Let's just put it this way--when VISTA is introduced, this will be the situation:

    Apple SELLS one version of Mac OS X.
    Microsoft SELLS up to 17 versions of Windows.

    Is everyone clear now?

  • Derek
    6 years ago
    Mar 01, 2006

    I have to agree Benn, many people here are getting confused. That's partly because Apple only sells the most up-to-date version of OS X at a time. Which is why I said in that sense, new buyers only have to really choose from one version of OS X. Where people lose it is where they think that just because only Tiger is sold on the market today, that means the other four versions don't exist anymore. Which is completely untrue, in fact, a huge chunk of OS X users still use older versions. Especially schools and businesses who usually don't ugrade for features they really don't need.

    Many people here are also getting confused on how there is a difference between an operating system, and a version of an operating system. There wouldn't be a 10.anything if there weren't different versions of that OS. It would all just be simply OS X if there was only one version of that operating system. Actually, it's not that hard to comprehend.

  • Ben
    6 years ago
    Mar 01, 2006

    I think the problem here is the word version. Which I'm not about to mention again.

    "Windows 95, 98, 2000, XP... is comparable to Mac OS 8, OS 9, OS X... " is true.

    And then XP SP1, SP2 is comparable to OS X 10.1, 10.2 (if there were more service packs for XP I'd be able to continue).

    There is no Mac comparison to the *product editions" idea of Home, Professional, Business Edition, Ultimate, s**t-Version-Without-Media-Player-thanks-to-idiots-in-the-EU. In that respect there is only OS X 10.blah Ultimate.

  • Derek
    6 years ago
    Mar 01, 2006

    Bonch:

    "counting every version that has existed in the past six years is just stupid."

    What's stupid is that you just said there is more than one version, then turned right back around and said there's only one version.

    "There is always only one version."

    Do you not realize that I agree with you, that only one version is currently on the market? I said it myself, if you actually read my comments before attacking me. Allow me to quote myself for the second time now:

    "Therefore, it is true in a sense, that new buyers per say only have to deal with one version of OS X."

  • Derek
    6 years ago
    Mar 01, 2006

    bonch:

    How am I a MS spinboy, I'm a mac user... I switched from MS to OS X last May.

    Windows 95, 98, 2000, XP... is comparable to Mac OS 8, OS 9, OS X... Not different versions of OS X.

    Also, I have two macs. One is a G3 iMac that is running OS X 10.3.9 Panther. The other is a PowerMac G4 running OS X 10.4.5. You're an idiot. How can there only be one version of OS X if I have two and am sitting here looking at them both right now?

    Two versions of OS X sold on the current market today, OS X 10.4 Tiger and OS X 10.4 Server. But you're a relatively new mac user like myself (I've more so come back to macs than new to them). You obviously don't comprehend how many users are not on Tiger yet, for example, my cousin who still has a G3 PowerBook runing 10.2 Jaguar. If you didn't purchase a new mac, many still have not upgraded. THEY HAVE DIFFERENT VERSIONS. What is so hard to understand about that?

    It's not logic, it's not oppinion, it's just the way it is. There are different versions of Mac OS X. Just because only versions of Tiger are sold on the market today doesn't mean the others don't exist. Damnit, people are freaking idiots. If there are users using other versions, THEN OBVIOUSLY THERE IS MORE THAN ONE VERSION. I'm done with this argument, it's a no brainer.

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