Thursday, May 9, 2013

Microsoft tried XP laggards with $84-upgrade-discount

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Windows 8 Professional $87.99 Windows 8 isn't for everyone. If you're mostly a desktop PC user comfortable with Windows 7, upgrading to Windows 8 is probably not worthwhile. If you're a mobile user who needs easy access to the...

Microsoft kicked off a new promotion aimed at Windows XP customers, who have just one year to ditch the 12-year-old OS before it’s retired from support.

Small- and medium-sized businesses still running Windows XP and Office 2003—the latter also will be retired a year from Monday, on April 8, 2014—can purchase licenses to Windows 8 Pro and Office 2013 Standard at a 15 percent discount, Microsoft said on a promotional website.

Caveats apply: Customers must be running XP Professional, the Windows 8 Pro and Office 2013 Standard licenses must be purchased as a package via Microsoft’s Open License program, and the deal is capped at 100 licenses for each. The discount is good through June 30.

Microsoft pointed customers to a list of partners who will offer the Open License discounts.

On its Open License website, Microsoft quoted $188 for each Windows 8 Pro license, and $373 for each Office 2013 Standard license, for a total of $561. The 15 percent discount would lower each Windows-Office combo by $84 to $477.

Microsoft also again banged the XP retirement drum today in a pair of lengthly blog posts, which included links to documents and tools designed to assist migration. Those blogs also explained the impending end-of-life, and repeated well-rehearsed reasons why customers should make the move.

In those blogs, Microsoft also mentioned Windows 7 as a destination for XP users, tacitly acknowledging the reality that most firms have moved from XP to the proven Windows 7. Few companies, analysts have said, are interested in Windows 8, in part because they have either just wrapped up migrations to Windows 7 or are in the process of doing so.

But because Windows 8 Pro licenses include downgrade rights to earlier versions of the OS, including Windows 7, businesses that purchase the former can instead install the latter, assuming they have installation media or Windows 7 images at hand.

Microsoft faces a tough job as it tries to push customers off Windows XP. According to statistics from analytics company Net Applications, 39 percent of all personal computers, and 42 percent of all Windows PCs, ran XP last month.

The long decline in Windows XP’s usage share has also stalled since the first of the year, slowing to a fifth that of the past 12 months’ average.

Projections using Net Applications’ numbers now suggest that XP will still power a third of all Windows-based systems when the 2014 date ticks by.

After April 8, 2014, Microsoft will not supply Windows XP with security patches, putting PCs still running it at risk from attack. The only exception: Enterprises which have purchased custom support plans. However, Microsoft has boosted prices of those plans. Some corporations have been quoted $1 million for the first year of after-retirement support for 5,000 XP systems, $2 million for the second year and $5 million for the third.


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