Much of the Vista sales are pre-installs. I am hearing
very few people upgrading to Vista. Microsoft's Vista
ready program is a real headache. There are few PC's
that are Vista Premium ready.
--- Tracy R Reed <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> Andrew Lentvorski wrote:
> > Google doesn't need a US presence.  Neither does
> Yahoo.  Neither does 
> > Amazon.
> 
> What about all of those books Amazon ships?
> 
> > systems when I can roll out a single virtual
> machine image and debug it 
> > once.  Since the school can't do that with Windows
> without paying a nice
> 
> Now THIS is a cool idea. Give the kids vmware or
> qemu or something and 
> an image which contains your compiler/interpreter,
> preferred editing 
> environment, whatever build tools you like,
> documentation, syllabus, 
> course outline, whatever the heck you want them to
> have, and let them 
> run it on any machine they want. Very slick. Sure
> beats the bad old days 
> of having to walk to the computer lab to stare at a
> green screen serial 
> terminal!
> 
> > The wholesale resistance to Vista was laid during
> the XP rollout.  It's 
> > just the nobody could actually *act* at that
> point.
> 
> MS recently said in the first 100 days they sold 40
> million Vista 
> licenses. If they are blowing smoke won't that come
> out in a report to 
> the SEC at some point?
> 
> 
> -- 
> KPLUG-List@kernel-panic.org
>
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