isothermalsection

Author Topic: Microsoft remains mum on Windows 8 upgrades from Vista, XP  (Read 2356 times)

Offline OhauitiWeather

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 1977
  • Country: nz
  • Karma: 284
  • Gender: Male
    • Ohauiti Weather
Microsoft remains mum on Windows 8 upgrades from Vista, XP
« on: April 20, 2012, 12:17:56 AM »
Microsoft today declined to confirm whether users of Windows XP and Vista will be able to upgrade their PCs to Windows 8 when the latter launches later this year.
 
On Monday, Microsoft spelled out the editions it would offer customers working with 32- and 64-bit Intel and AMD processor-powered PCs and tablets.

In that blog post, the company also noted the upgrade paths to Windows 8 for existing machines, saying that people now running Windows 7 Starter, Home Basic or Home Premium could upgrade to the consumer-oriented Windows 8. Systems running Windows 7 Professional or Ultimate will be upgradable to Windows 8 Pro.
 
Although Microsoft did not specify the upgrade path for customers currently running Windows 7 Enterprise, the assumption is that they will be able to upgrade to Windows 8 Enterprise, which, like its predecessor, will be distributed only to companies with Software Assurance upgrade agreements.
 
The omission of the problem-plagued Vista and the nearly 11-year-old XP from Microsoft's explicit upgrade path seemed odd: In February, the company used an FAQ to plainly state that users of those OSes could upgrade to Windows 8's beta, tagged "Consumer Preview."
 "You can upgrade to Windows 8 Consumer Preview from Windows Developer Preview, Windows 7, Windows Vista, or Windows XP," the FAQ stated, "but you might not be able to keep all of your files, programs and settings."
 
Developer Preview was Microsoft's name for the first public sneak peak at Windows 8 as a work-in-progress, and was issued last September.
 
In the FAQ, Microsoft said that Vista users who upgraded would retain user accounts and files, as well as Windows settings. XP-to-Windows 8 upgrades would only preserve user accounts and files. Windows 7-to-Windows 8 upgrades, meanwhile, conserved not only user accounts, data files and Windows settings, but also already-installed applications in the move.
 
Ironically, migrating from Windows 7 is more thorough than from Windows 8's own Developer Preview, which will retain only as much information as an XP-to-Windows 8 transfer.
 
When asked today whether Vista and XP users would be able to upgrade to Windows 8 RTM, or "release to manufacturing" -- the label used to designate the final code -- as they were allowed in the Consumer Preview, a Microsoft spokeswoman declined to comment. "[We have] no information to share outside of what's in the blog," she said in an email.
 
It's possible Microsoft was using a narrow definition of "upgrade" in the Monday blog that confirmed only Windows 7-to-Windows 8 paths, one that included application migration as well as that for files and settings.
 
Previously, that kind of upgrade has been called "in-place," or one that leaves everything undisturbed as it swaps out the old OS for the new.
 
If Vista and XP get the cold shoulder, it wouldn't be the first time.
 
Three years ago, Microsoft offered an in-place upgrade to Windows 7 to users running Vista, but gave XP customers only the option of what it called a "custom" install -- others pegged it as a "clean" install -- that deleted all data on the hard drive before installing the then-new operating system.
 
It may seem foolish to exclude XP users from a possible Windows 8 upgrade since that 2001 edition powered 51 percent of all Windows PCs that went online last month, according to metrics company Net Applications. Vista accounted for another 8 percent of all Windows editions.
 
But the aged hardware running XP may be the hurdle Windows 8 can't jump: Microsoft has repeatedly said that PCs able to run Windows 7 will be able to run the new OS, but the system requirements it outlined for the Consumer Preview -- a 1GHz processor, 1GB of memory and a graphics card able to handle DirectX 9 or later -- may preclude many older machines.
 
Microsoft has not yet revealed the pricing for Windows 8's upgrades, or described how they will be distributed.


Article originally published by resellernews and written By Gregg Keizer, Framingham | Thursday, 19 April 2012
Link to original article:  http://reseller.co.nz/reseller.nsf/inews/microsoft-remains-mum-on-windows-8-upgrades-from-vista-xp?opendocument&utm_source=chbeat&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=chbeat


David Harris
Ohauiti Weather
WH1091 Wireless Weather Station
Ohauiti Weather :: Home  powered by Cumulus MX 3.0.0 b3041
"If it wasn't for the last minute nothing would ever get done"


Share via twitter

xx
Windows Vista infection rates climb, says Microsoft

Started by OhauitiWeather

0 Replies
2338 Views
Last post May 25, 2012, 08:01:40 PM
by OhauitiWeather
xx
Microsoft to retire Windows Live brand ahead of Windows 8 launch

Started by OhauitiWeather

0 Replies
3632 Views
Last post May 04, 2012, 08:42:45 PM
by OhauitiWeather
xx
PC makers mum on Windows 8 upgrades

Started by OhauitiWeather

0 Replies
2761 Views
Last post May 08, 2012, 10:26:21 PM
by OhauitiWeather
xx
Windows 10 Upgrades - Notes from the Field

Started by OhauitiWeather

15 Replies
8210 Views
Last post October 03, 2016, 08:47:44 AM
by ato2
xx
Microsoft retires Vista, Office 2007 from mainstream support this week

Started by OhauitiWeather

0 Replies
2404 Views
Last post April 10, 2012, 06:52:23 PM
by OhauitiWeather