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Windows 7 for XP Professionals
Updating Support Skills from XP to Windows 7
by Bink.nu's Raymond Comvalius

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Posted by Sumeeth Evans June 26, 2009 9:45 PM with 2 comment(s)
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Microsoft is considering offering Windows 7 on a thumb drive to allow Netbook owners to more easily upgrade their machines, a source tells CNET News. The move, which is still under consideration, is one of several things Microsoft has looked at to try to make it convenient to upgrade machines that don't come with a CD or DVD drives.

Microsoft executives have said that they recognize that upgrading Netbooks poses a challenge and are exploring ways that the company can make it easier. In an interview on Thursday, Senior Vice President Bill Veghte said that Microsoft had nothing to announce on that front.

The challenge of getting Windows 7 on to older Netbooks threatens to cast a shadow over the technical work Microsoft did to get Windows 7 running on Netbooks. Its predecessor, Windows Vista, proved ill-suited to Netbooks forcing Microsoft to continue selling Windows XP as its answer to the low-cost notebook phenomenon.

Although a USB flash drive could offer the simplest way to move a Netbook to Windows 7, there are other options. Buyers with an external drive could hook up that to their Netbook, while another option would be an upgrade through a service such as Best Buy's Geek Squad. Microsoft also sells a downloadable version of Windows today, so, in theory it could do the same with Windows 7, allowing buyers to put the OS on their own thumb drive.

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Source: news.cnet.com

Comments

 

APM-Tech said:

That would be absolutely awesome, and for me it's even

good for normal notebooks, not only netbooks.

A great idea, indeed!

June 27, 2009 2:01 AM
 

gisabun said:

I don't think it's too critical. After all, a good chunk of netbook users probably already have bought a portable DVD drive.

Alternatively you could dump the DVD from a network drive locally and install.

I'm sure this thought of MS will add another $15 to the cost to cover the USB key.

July 5, 2009 8:38 PM
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