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Imserba Webstore - Microsoft Windows 7 Ultimate

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List Price: $319.99
Our Price: Too low to display
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Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Manufacturer: Microsoft Software
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Average Customer Rating:     

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Batteries Included: 0 Binding: DVD-ROM Brand: Microsoft EAN: 0882224885638 Feature: (Includes 32 & 64-bit versions) Combines remarkable ease-of-use with the entertainment features of Home Premium and the business capabilities of Professional--get it all with with Windows 7 Ultimate Format: DVD-ROM Is Autographed: 0 Is Memorabilia: 0 Label: Microsoft Software Manufacturer: Microsoft Software Model: GLC-00182 Platform: Windows 7 Publisher: Microsoft Software Release Date: 2009-10-22 Studio: Microsoft Software
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Features
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(Includes 32 & 64-bit versions) Combines remarkable ease-of-use with the entertainment features of Home Premium and the business capabilities of Professional--get it all with with Windows 7 Ultimate Make the things you do every day easier with improved desktop navigation; start programs faster and more easily, and quickly find the documents you use most often Run many Windows XP productivity programs in Windows XP Mode; watch, pause, rewind, and record TV on your PC Easily create a home network and connect your PCs to a printer with HomeGroup; connect to company networks easily and more securely with Domain Join Recover your data easily with automatic backup to your home and business network; help protect data on your PC and portable storage devices against loss or theft with BitLocker
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Editorial Reviews:
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With Microsoft Windows 7 Operating System Software Ultimate, you'll be able to run many Windows XP productivity programs in Windows XP mode* and recover your data easily with automatic back-ups to your home or business network. You'll be able to connect to company networks easily and more securely with Domain Join. And with entertainment features like Windows Media Center, it's great for home as well as for business.
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Spotlight customer reviews:
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Customer Rating:      Summary: Windows 7 is another hype and gimmick don't even get it! Comment: Windows 7 another hype! Gimmick! Don't even get it! This OS program from
Microsoft is total junk. Got the Microsoft Windows 7 Ultimate full version. Installed it on a Dell Dimension 4300 desktop computer with 1 gig of memory, 500 hard gig hard drive, Nvidia Geforce 6800 AGP graphic card. After finishing doing a total new installation of Windows 7. The screen boots up with a nice colorful Windows logo. Wow! I'm amazed! Next thing you know. You don't hear anything. I am saying what the hell is going on? There is no sound coming from my creative sound blaster card. This was working fine under Windows XP Media Center. I went and check under the devices and notice that my Creative Lab sound card, eternet card, and PCI card dosen't support Windows 7. Now I am pretty mad. Because I would have to go out through ever freaking websites and find these drivers whether they exist or not. Microsoft should have put these drivers into the OS instead of leaving them
out. Now I've got to wait for another version of this crap Windows 7 OS to come out to fix all the drives that are missing. This program looks nice and cool with all new interfaces. Sad to say a bit hard to navigate. I am currently using Windows XP Media Center which is stable and the best OS that I've got for my money. I wish they would upgrade the XP OS program or work around XP to make a better interface OS than this piece of junk which is not XP compatible. The only one example I can
give you is Scarface The World Is Yours. I installed the program. Would not installed or play. Not workable under Windows 7. Windows 7 is a piece of junk
until another version comes out to fix the drivers issue. By the way. I can not
wait and see to get my hands on Google's Android Operating System for the PC. Hope Google's Android Operating System destory Windows 7. Because I am getting sick and tired of Microsoft gimmick of saying you have to upgrade this or that. Waste time
and money for a product you don't even need to upgrade. Hope this is the last
Windows OS you'll see from these crooks!
Customer Rating:      Summary: 7 is Good, Ultimate is Not Always Necessary Comment: If you're looking at the full version of Windows 7 Ultimate, chances are it's for one of these reasons:
1) You are migrating your settings and/or programs from a Vista Ultimate machine to a new machine and don't want to lose them
2) You want BitLocker hardware-level encryption (and you'll need to have hardware that supports it)
3) You speak multiple languages and need to easily switch from one to the other
4) You have a new machine and are planning on installing the OS from scratch: this is the most common reason to buy the full version.
If you are planning on upgrading an existing machine, you no longer have to purchase the full version of a Windows OS to have the ability to format and install clean: Windows 7 (and Vista, actually) will allow you to use the Upgrade edition to cleanly install the new OS.
Unlike Vista Ultimate, Windows 7 Ultimate doesn't offer DreamScenes or any other eye candy different from its cousins Home and Pro. In fact, if you were a fan of the Windows Vista DreamScenes, you should know that you will be losing them when you step up to Windows 7.
What you gain in Windows 7 Ultimate over Pro is BitLocker drive encryption and support for multiple languages (beyond the previous functionality of the Language Bar in Vista and XP).
Compared to Windows 7 Home, you also gain DomainJoin (which makes connecting to corporate networks easier), an automated system backup tool, and "Windows XP Mode", which is a step beyond the "XP Compatibility Mode" seen in Vista. These three features are also available in Windows 7 Professional.
You should know before purchasing Windows 7 Ultimate that if you are wanting to use "XP Mode" your hardware will need to support "Virtualization Technology". Similarly, if you are looking at the Ultimate-exclusive "BitLocker" Drive Encryption feature, this will only work if your hardware contains a Trusted Platform Module (TPM)--a specific piece of hardware that is required for BitLocker to be enabled. The Microsoft website explains this in further detail.
PLANNING
If you really want to be thorough about your install of Windows 7 Ultimate, you should stop by the Microsoft site and look for the "Windows 7 Compatibility Center." This web site will let you look up programs and hardware and confirm that they are compatible with Windows 7 Ultimate (or if not, whether there is a workaround). I strongly recommend you take the time to do this. The Compatibility Center also indicates whether it is telling you about 32-bit compatibility versus 64-bit compatibility: keep an eye on the page to be sure you're looking at the right thing. Windows 7 ships with discs for both 32 and 64-bit editions in each package, so choosing which version to install is no longer a difficult buying decision: it's as simple as pulling out the disc you want.
You may also find that some devices are "kind of" not compatible: for example, my Creative Sound Blaster Audigy sound card is "kind of" not compatible: the software to manage the sound card is not compatible because it is no longer needed...and support for the sound card itself is native to Windows 7. What that means is, I didn't need to reinstall any Creative software; the sound card came up automatically when I installed Windows 7 because Windows 7 had its own software to support it. When in doubt, stop by the manufacturer's website to confirm your suspicions.
You may also see devices that are absolutely not compatible with Windows 7. If you need this hardware, make sure (via the manufacturer's website and/or support forums) if it's supported natively by 7 (like my sound card) or if there are any workarounds to get it to work.
INSTALLING
If you are taking programs and settings from an old machine and wish to carry them over to a new machine that you are purchasing the full version of Windows 7 for, there are some very useful tools to help you:
Do you just want to carry over your user accounts and settings? Microsoft makes a program called Windows Easy Transfer that's already in Vista (and XP users can download it from Microsoft) that will export your accounts and settings and let you import them back again on the new machine. It's very easy to use and does a good job of putting your accounts back together again, even when going from XP to 7.
Do you have programs that you want to bring to the new machine, but don't want to reinstall? Laplink has an offer both here at Amazon (as a boxed product or digital download) and through their website. The product is called "Laplink PC Mover Windows 7 Upgrade Assistant", and it will let you use a special version of their program "PC Mover" to migrate one machine one time. Read the documentation in detail. I have used it successfully on the 32-bit platform, but I cannot verify that this will work for anyone migrating from 32-bit to 64-bit.
If you are migrating from 32-bit to 64-bit with the full version of Windows 7, I highly recommend you take the time to manually re-install your programs. You can still use Easy Transfer to carry over user accounts and settings, but 64-bit operating systems make decisions about how to run 32-bit applications, and this is easier done when the application is installed directly on the 64-bit OS instead of migrated from a 32-bit installation. I realize this is the harder path, but it will probably save you compatibility headaches down the road.
ABOUT WINDOWS 7
So what are some of the things Microsoft doesn't tell you in the description above?
Windows 7 isn't just "fixed Vista": it's a full overhaul of Windows based on a ton of feedback collected directly from Beta and RC 1 users (of which I was one--I let them have an earful and I think they actually listened)
Windows 7 does things drastically different from XP in that, like Vista, it does a lot of the eye candy in a smoother way. XP and earlier used to send graphics work through your processor before it would get to your video card...now, it bypasses the processor and goes straight to the video, clearing up what was a pretty substantial bottleneck. This system was imperfect (to say the least!) in Vista, but it's been improved here, particularly in the area of being compatible with older games.
Windows 7 is trying to slowly "trim the fat" we normally have to put up with by making itself more compatible with other devices. Where you typically have to install a new device by running the manufacturer's setup disc, installing a bunch of junk and tray icons, and etc., Microsoft is making native support more common. My sound card is a good example of this: where I used to need about 5 or 6 "helper" programs that would drain my performance and occasionally annoy me, now it's just using the drivers that came with the installation of 7.
New Operating Systems are always a bumpy road: your journey might not be as easy as others. However, compared to previous Windows releases, Windows 7 is a substantial improvement, and I'm pleased to say that I haven't been burned by 7 like I was with Vista (and Windows Me--agh, the horror, the horror). If you just want to get yourself onto the 7 platform and don't need a lot of customization, Windows 7 Home will be enough for you. If you need more for your work environment (or you are building a workplace environment), then 7 Pro is the way to go. If you regularly work in multiple languages and/or want to have BitLocker drive encryption (and your hardware supports it!), then Ultimate is for you. Otherwise, it really isn't 100% necessary to install the full version of Windows Ultimate: you might consider either Professional or Home Premium.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Hardly if at all an improvement on Vista Comment: Hardly if at all an improvement on Vista, November 16, 2009
By Daniel J. Knight "Hate evil, love good, maint... (Albuquerque, NM) - See all my reviews
1) Can't make the taskbar show behind windows
2) Quicklaunch wasn't an option, but found a trick from a non-microsoft website to make it appear, and it looks ugly as there is no dividing line
3) The taskbar is an ugly glassy powder blue, gives me a headache
4) MSPaint has been mangled. Instead of simply putting zoom out on one toolbar, instead, some idiot put a zoom in and out toolbar or tab whatever separate from the main toolbar, and the main toolbar only has zoom in, so then you have to switch back and forth between tabs, what a moron designer. On top of that the color picker is off-center, so that when you pick a color it's picking the one above the pixel you have it over, really annoying if you don't have the time or aren't in the mood to learn to use something like adobe photoshop. But hopefully I can get the vista version of mspaint online (ahem: thank God for btjunkie and pbay).
5) If you use Windows 7 on a net book prepare to be extremely annoyed since the built in dialog boxes and menus (ones that have a lot of options) don't resize to fit the screen, so that you either have to set the taskbar to auto popup mode or move it to the left or right, if you don't you can't click the bottom buttons like yes, no, ok, enter, skip etc. The same is true for firefox dialog boxes beyond the basic "yes" or "no" type.
6) The network manager is WORSE then in Vista and XP, unlike those two the network manager is stuck in the right corner of the screen, and you can't switch on the fly when you're in the process of trying to connect, instead you're forced to wait till it's done or press cancel, and it's sluggish, at least on my netbook.
PROS:
1) Very fast SDHC scanning speed in comparison to vista and xp; big headache relief.
2) Seems to be much more stable than xp and vista, seems that way. I haven't experienced any crashes yet.
3) Seems to be more resistant to browser-hijacking trojans. I got the same ones on vista as I did on windows 7, but it seems the trojans are more aggressive on firefox in vista then in windows 7, but that might be because for Windows 7 msoft gave me soft downloads that scanned for trojans and found some. It might do that on vista (I recall getting anti-trojan downloads for it) but I got the trojans recently and haven't been using vista as much since it's on a slow HP mini netbook that gets sickenly hot to the touch.
Conclusion:
I get the impression that there are programmers at microsoft that deliberately do stupid things thinking that they will be asked to stay on the job longer by getting their managers to keep them in order to make improvements in the next version of Windows. Ff that's the case, and they are not fired, then they and their managers sbould be kicked in the balls extremely hard, in fact all of microsoft should be kicked in the balls extremely hard for incompetence and tried for treason against humanity, for being complicit in trying to drive world insane.
I can't even say this is an improvement on Windows XP or Vista since XP and Vista scale the dialog boxes correctly on netbooks, why is Windows 7 dumber? But then again on XP certain dialog boxes didn't show in the taskbar and you had to minimize and maximize folders to make them show, but that's not as annoying as having to move the task bar to the side to be able to click the buttons on dialog boxes. If you take a lot of photos using SDHC cards and don't mind keeping the taskbar to the side or on autohide when using a netbook, then I'd say get Windows 7. Hopefully, WindowBlinds can get rid of the ugly taskbar coloration. The end.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Better than Vista Comment: Definitely has all the fixes from Vista headaches and not to mention speeds up/shut down faster than Vista.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Best Yet Comment: I upgraded from xp pro 64 bit. I did a clean install (32 bit) on an empty HD. I followed the directions and it installed without a hitch. It was surprisingly fast compared with older versions. No problems finding drivers. The only problem I am having is finding a compatable remote control for Media Center. It appears that some hardware vendors are still gearing up. If I had to do it over I definitly would.
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