Microsoft Pulls Plug on Windows 7 Family Pack
Looks like there won't be a focus on family throughout this holiday season.
Family packs of operating system licenses are great products. Apple started the trend with its family pack, which seeks to ensure that five-users around a Mac-using household are all running the latest operating system. Thankfully, Microsoft finally followed suit with Windows 7, offering a family pack that contained three licenses of Home Premium Upgrade.
Family packs are great as most households have more than one computer, and having everyone running the same, latest version of software generally makes things easier.
Sadly, for reasons that still confuse, Microsoft is pulling the plug on the Windows 7 Home Premium Upgrade family pack. Paul Thurrott reports that the family pack has apparently sold out in the U.S. Thurrott was told by Microsoft that the family pack would be a limited-time offer in the U.S., Austria, Canada, France, Germany, Ireland, Japan, Luxembourg, The Netherlands, Sweden, Switzerland, and the UK.
Ed Bott reached out to Microsoft for a comment of his own, and he received the response, "The Windows 7 Family Pack was introduced as a limited time offer while supplies last in select geographies. Response has been very positive and in some cases, the offer has sold out. Customers interested in upgrading their PCs should purchase Home Premium, Professional or Ultimate upgrade products."
Microsoft allowing the Windows 7 family packs to dry up just six weeks following the OS's launch seems like a move made a bit too soon and rash. We'd like to see the family pack stick around indefinitely, as it's a good option for consumers and will speed up adoption of the new OS – something that Microsoft definitely wants. Now we're all just left scratching our heads at what Microsoft could be thinking in its move to end this offer just weeks before Christmas.
As a side note, those of you in Australia will have a bit longer, as Microsoft just launched family pack last week.
Follow us on Twitter for more tech news and exclusive updates here.
- Microsoft and Yahoo! Form Alliance for Search, Ads
- Intel's Larrabee Delayed Indefinitely
- Deals of the Day: Weekend Edition
- Ex-CrunchPad Partner to Demonstrate New Tablet
- The Asus UX30 Notebook is Under 1'' Thick
- Microsoft Bing Goes Down Due to Mistake
- Microsoft Convinces Googlers to Switch to Bing
- Aliens vs. Predator PC DX11 to Surpass Consoles
- Chinese Black Market Selling Win 7 on USB Sticks
- ''Capture the Flag'' Pioneer Closes Doors
- Monday Deals: HDTVs, PCs, Herman Miller Chairs
- Speakers in Glass Houses for $1,000
- AMD to Demonstrate on Blu-ray Stereoscopic 3D
- AMD Responds to Intel's Larrabee Delay
- Seagate Announces Pulsar SSDs for Enterprises
- Physicists Build World's Smallest Snowman
- CrunchPad 'joojoo' is $499, For Sale on Friday
- IBM Working on 10 Petaflop Supercomputer






nice html...
To be honest I have no complaints about this. Microsoft cannot be making very much money selling Operating Systems like this. If Apple do it then that is just fine (hopefully they will go bust and stop making their god awful computers!)
Rubbish, Microsoft makes plenty of money. The 'Family Pack' is a great thing, many households now have more than one computer making it potentially very expensive, especially if you install Windows yourself. I believe it is a good way to curb piracy as well, many people just can't afford to buy a licence for every computer.
If it weren't for the fact I'm a student and got the student offer, I'd have kept running the RC version until it run out, then depending on how much money I had I would've gone down one path or the other to continue to use 7.
Home Premium Family pack = 150.00 for 3 o.s. Or Windows 7 Home
Premium Upgrade. $119.99 x 3 = 359.97, Now why do you think they want to stop it? Micro$oft
I have 3 comps... I know I'm not buying 3 copies of windows 7. Who can actually afford it?