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#11
This function is included in the Ultimate and Enterprise editions, the latter of which is aimed for corporate use.
Ultimate
Professional
Home Premium
Other
Not buying Windows 7
This function is included in the Ultimate and Enterprise editions, the latter of which is aimed for corporate use.
what i just noticed here while going over again, is that there is no support for OFFLINE files for home versions at all? are you kidding me here? is this ONLY a feature that corporate companies use.... wow.... a little speechless here to say the least.
This doesnt promote networking in the home, as MS seems to want that with the extenders and so on... so why start taking away networking features and the such.
only wacky reference that comes to mind would be trying to get a cat to be litter box trained without having any cat litter in the box.... whats going to make ppl network "wise" or crave the home network experience when MS is taking features away. IMO this is for a starter type edition, for ppl just starting out and have no idea of offline files.
I don't think the Media Center option is in the Enterprise edition, like Vista.
so i suppse an average joe pc user would go for home premium seeing as i dont need any of the features that ultimate has over it...
Windows 7 Stater kind of sounds pointless? a 3 application limit.. lol
why do they even bother with starter and home basic... they're absolutely a waste of time and money.
Thanks for the version info. Sounds like they are continuing the separate editions like Vista. Why not just release one version and call it Windows 7, and leave it at that. Or Windows 7 Enterprise / Professional for business, and then Windows 7 for the rest of us.
When my friends where asking me about Vista when I used the RC1, they said they felt misled because they wanted the eye candy and then purchased the wrong version. Why all the separation? Is there any real reason that I am not think of?
Just my opinion here: If you need new hardware, a large HD, better graphics card to upgrade to the new OS, why not just have one version and tell people in plain english these are the requirments to run it. sounds logical, but that makes to much sense.
When Vista launched officially I read lots of complaints about the different versions offered and many, many people felt like one for regular people, and one for business would be the best way to go. MS should do that with Win7.