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Microsoft Announces Windows 7 Downgrade Rights to XP

It’s all over now but the shouting. (That’s a phrase my mother used quite often in our house.) With the release of this, Microsoft officially removes any doubt : Microsoft can not do any better than Windows XP – All the rest is smoke and mirrors, for those easily hypnotized by flashy things.

from ZDNet

Microsoft and its PC partners are going to allow Windows 7 users to downgrade not just to Windows Vista, but also to Windows XP, Microsoft officials are confirming.

Some company watchers have been wondering about the downgrade rights that Microsoft will offer when Windows 7 ships. When AppleInsider reported this weekend that HP was going to offer Windows 7 users the ability to downgrade to XP, I asked Microsoft about the story.

Here’s what a spokesperson representing the company’s Windows client division told me via e-mail on April 5:

MJF: Does Microsoft have downgrade rights for Windows XP planned as part of Windows 7?

Microsoft spokesperson: Yes. This is not the first time that Microsoft has offered downgrade rights to a version other than its immediate predecessor and our Software Assurance customers can always downgrade to any previous version of Windows.

(The spokesperson clarified later that downgrade rights allow users to install previous versions of Windows, not just the most recent predecessor. In other words, a Software-Assurance-covered user who wanted to downgrade from Vista could, technically, go back to Windows 2000 or even Windows 95, not just XP. Who knew?)

MJF: Is Microsoft cutting these kinds of rights deals with each OEM individually? Has it made such an arrangement with HP?

Microsoft spokesperson: Downgrade rights policies are the same for all of our main OEM partners and what you are talking about is not a special arrangement. Since the End User right to Windows XP Professional is part of the license terms for these editions, it’s really about making facilitation options easier for our OEM customers and End Users.

(It’s worth noting that the only two versions of Windows Vista for which Microsoft and its PC makers provide downgrade rights are Vista Business and Ultimate — and those must downgrade to XP Professional. I’d think similar limitations would be likely with Windows 7.)

The AppleInsider report claimed that Microsoft and HP had agreed to provide downgrade rights from October (one rumored launch target for Windows 7) and April 30, 2010. Microsoft officials did not comment on whether either date is real. And HP didn’t respond to my request for comment at all. (I am doubtful about the April 30th deadline. Why only provide downgrade rights for a handful of months?)

Update: The Microsoft spokesperson said the April 30 cu-off date in the original story is not set in stone. The exact quote: “No dates have been announced for the end of Windows 7 downgrade right facilitation to Windows XP.”

With Windows 7 looking good (even at this beta stage), why would users want to downgrade to XP, you may wonder. For many businesses, supporting a slew of different Windows releases is a nightmare. They’d prefer to have all their users on one (or possibly two) different versions.

Beyond the fact that many think the interface stinks, inertia would account for much of the want.

If Microsoft ends up finding a way to insure that legacy Windows apps work on Windows 7 — beyond supporting them with a combination of Virtual PC and MED-V, another option available only to users who buy Microsoft’s Software Assurance licensing — downgrading to an older version of Windows from Windows 7 could look a whole lot less appealing.

Meanwhile, in related news, TechARP — the site that brought us the still-unconfirmed-but-likely-true report that Microsoft is planning to offer PC buyers a free upgrade from Vista to Windows 7 if they purchase new systems starting this summer — is now reporting that users who downgrade to XP also will be eligible for free Win 7 upgrades via the Windows 7 Upgrade Option program.

I must be losing it, because that last paragraph makes no sense at all – if you downgrade to XP why would you be interested in free upgrades to Windows 7?
More than that, most who do this don’t refer to the change as a downgrade – it’s a usability upgradethink of it as the user who buys a brand new Hyundai, and then is bequeathed their aunt’s 560SL. What person in their right mind is going to pass that one up?

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3 Comments

If Me$$y$oft offered downgrade rights to Windows 2000 that would be a plus, but XP is a kludgey OS. I have actually had a better experience with the Win7 beta than with any other M$ OS since Win2K. While I do not like such cutesy and cumbersome and unfriendly things as “Home Group” as a whole it’s very well put together and has not caused any real problems on any machine I’ve installed it on. Solid. Slick. Usable. Almost transparent. Pretty much what an OS ought to be (and pretty much what Vista was not). Ought to be supplied as a service pack to Vista, but M$’s revenue stream dictates otherwise, I guess.

David, you are the only one I have ever heard who did not like Windows XP and likes Windows 7.

I find Windows XP the best example of what Microsoft has put out thus far,

and my own experiences with Windows 7 are much less than satisfactory – reminding me of the way that Windows 3.1 worked (Think about it – the ‘program groups’ are situated on the task bar now, but otherwise the design is the essentially the same)

I love Windows XP but Windows 7 has been a better experience even in beta. Vista however, not to pleased but I’d rather run it on my current hardware then pay for a new Mac (which my current hardware is still better than).

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