Microsoft Windows 7 Home Premium Upgrade |  | From: Microsoft Software
List Price: $119.99 Buy New: $85.00 as of 11/8/2009 05:15 CST details You Save: $34.99 (29%)
New (32) from $85.00
Seller: Jay Wyatt Rating: 143 reviews Sales Rank: 1
Format: DVD-ROM Platform: Windows 7 Media: DVD-ROM Autographed: No Memorabilia: No Batteries Included: No Operating System: windows_7 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1 Dimensions (in): 6 x 8 x 2
MPN: GFC-00020 Model: GFC-00020 UPC: 882224883429 EAN: 0882224883429 ASIN: B002DHLUWK
Release Date: October 22, 2009 (New: Last 30 Days) Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Features:
| • | Windows 7 Home Premium (includes 32-bit & 64-bit versions) makes it easy to create a home network and share all of your favorite photos, videos, and music--you can even watch, pause, rewind, and record TV | | • | 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 | | • | Make your web experience faster, easier and safer than ever with Internet Explorer 8 | | • | Easily create a home network and connect your PCs to a printer with HomeGroup |
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Product Description If you're already running XP or Vista, you probably know some of the many benefits of being a Windows user. Now, with the Upgrade Version of the latest Windows edition, you can get current with all the best new and classic features of the world's most popular operating system, all without paying the full price for the new version.
Amazon.com Product Description Upgrade to Windows 7 Home Premium. Windows 7 Home Premium makes it easy to create a home network and share all of your favorite photos, videos, and music. You can even watch, pause, rewind, and record TV (a broadcast TV tuner may be required). Get the best entertainment experience with Windows 7 Home Premium. Do you use your PC for work, run Windows XP programs, or require enhanced security? Consider Windows 7 Professional. Windows 7 is designed to make your PC simpler--to be more reliable, more responsive and to make the things you do every day on your PC easier. Click to enlarge. | Upgrade to Windows 7 All editions of Windows XP and Windows Vista qualify you to buy an upgrade license. 1. Choose your edition of Windows 7 Explore key features and choose the edition that's best for you. Be sure to check the expanded list of extended features in Windows 7 Home Premium, Windows 7 Professional, and Windows 7 Ultimate. System requirements vary for each edition of Windows 7 because some features might require special hardware. 2. See if your PC has what it takes to run Windows 7 In general, if your PC can run Windows Vista it can run Windows 7. To make sure, download and run the Windows 7 Upgrade Advisor to do a quick check. If you want certain features, such as HomeGroup or Windows Media Center, check to see if your PC has the hardware that's needed. 3. Check which operating system your PC is currently running How you make the move to Windows 7 depends on your current operating system. - Windows Vista
The transition to Windows 7 should be pretty smooth, although you may need to update your system to the latest service pack first.
- Windows XP (or any other operating system)
Windows 7 is best experienced on a new PC with the latest hardware, but if your computer meets the minimum specifications, you can install Windows 7 on a PC running Windows XP. Windows 7 must be "custom" installed (also known as a "clean" installation) over Windows XP. Before beginning the installation, you'll need to copy your files and settings to an external drive. After Windows 7 has been installed you will need to re-install all of your programs using the original installation media and then copy over the files and settings you backed up to your external drive. Because Windows 7 requires a custom installation, we strongly recommend that you get help with this process from your local computer service provider. More work, more play, and more of everything in between. Click to enlarge. | Manage lots of open programs, documents, and browser windows easily with thumbnail and full-screen previews of open windows. Click to enlarge. | With Snap you can arrange two windows side-by-side just by dragging them to opposite sides of your screen. Click to enlarge. | Open files you use regularly in just two clicks with Jump Lists on the improved taskbar and Start menu. | The best entertainment experience on your PC Easiest Windows to use ever - Simplify your PC with new navigation features like Aero Shake, Jump Lists, and Snap.
- Customize Windows to look and feel the way you like by changing themes and taskbar programs.
- Setting up a home network and connecting to printers and devices is easier than ever.
- Windows 7 Home Premium supports the latest hardware and software.
It's faster - Designed to make your PC sleep and resume quicker.
- Takes full advantage of 64-bit PC hardware and memory.
- Connecting to wireless networks is fast and easy.
Best PC entertainment experience - Watch, pause, rewind, and record TV with Windows Media Center.
- Blu-ray read/write support for data files.
- Includes integrated video and Dolby audio codecs.
Simplifies Everyday Tasks Simple to use Preview Manage lots of open programs, documents, and browser windows easily with thumbnail and full-screen previews of open windows. Pin Open files and get around your PC faster with the improved taskbar. You can easily pin programs you use often to the taskbar and launch them in just one click. Windows 7 lets you peek behind open windows to get a quick look at your desktop. Click to enlarge. | Instantly locate and open virtually any file on your PC right from the Start menu with Windows Search. Click to enlarge. | Turn your PC into a TV with Windows Media Center, and enjoy your favorite videos and music with Windows Media Player. Click to enlarge. | Jump Lists Open files you use regularly in just two clicks with Jump Lists on the improved taskbar and Start menu. Snap Windows 7 has simple new ways to manage open windows. For example, with Snap you can arrange two windows side-by-side just by dragging them to opposite sides of your screen. Peek and Shake Windows 7 lets you peek behind open windows to get a quick look at your desktop. Windows Search Instantly locate and open virtually any file on your PC, from documents to emails to songs, right from the Start menu, with Windows Search. Easy to connect Setting up wireless connections is easier with consistent, one-click connections to available networks. Click to enlarge. | Enjoy the photos, music, and videos on your home PC when you're away from home with remote media streaming. Click to enlarge. | Windows Touch makes PCs with touch screens easier and more intuitive to use. Click to enlarge. | Manage Backup and Restore and other features through Action Center. Click to enlarge. | Search, organize, and edit files across a network in the same way you would a single folder.Click to enlarge. | Wireless setup With Windows 7, setting up wireless connections is easier with consistent, one-click connections to available networks, whether those networks are based on Wi-Fi, mobile broadband, dial-up, or corporate VPN. HomeGroup Connect Windows 7 PCs on a home network in just four clicks and easily get to the photos, music, and files on each one--even share printers--with HomeGroup. Easy to browse the web Internet Explorer 8 Visual search helps you quickly find the information you want by adding visual cues and previews to search results from top search providers including Live Search, Wikipedia, Yahoo, Amazon, and others. Internet Explorer 8 Use Web slices to conveniently keep up with changes on frequently updated websites, like eBay auctions or traffic sites, directly from the IE8 toolbar. Easy to communicate and share Windows Live Photo Gallery Windows Live Photo Gallery makes share your photos to your favorite photo site easy. Windows Live Mail Windows Live Mail makes managing multiple email accounts easy. Windows Live Family Safety Keep your child safe by managing what sites they can visit and who they can send/receive emails and im communications from. Note: Windows Live components need to be downloaded separately. Works The Way You Want Faster and More Reliable Windows 7 will help your PC sleep and resume more quickly. It is designed to respond to commands more quickly and will help your PC to be more reliable. Fewer clicks and less interruptions Makes New Things Possible Media on your terms Windows Media Center Turn your PC into a TV with Windows Media Center. Windows Media Center Watch shows for free when and where you want with Internet TV. DirectX 11 DirectX 11 technology delivers breathtaking game graphics so real, it's unreal. New ways to engage Windows Touch Windows Touch makes PCs with touch screens easier and more intuitive to use. Media on your terms Windows Media Player More and more consumer electronics, from TVs to digital photo frames, can be connected to home networks. With Play To in Windows 7, you'll be able to easily send music, photos, videos from your PC to a networked device throughout your home. You can enjoy the photos, music, and videos on your home PC when you're away from home with remote media streaming. Work anywhere Location Aware Printing Windows 7 will automatically pick the right printer for you when you move from home to work networks. Work anywhere with less effort. - Instantly locate virtually any file, email, or document on your PC just by typing a word or two.
- Get around your PC faster with the improved taskbar.
- Open programs you use regularly in one click and files you use regularly in just two.
- Manage lots of open programs, documents, and browser windows easily with thumbnail and full-screen previews of open windows.
- Manage multiple email accounts, including Hotmail, Gmail, AOL, and Yahoo! Mail Plus, all in one place with one simple program.
- Get to the files, photos, and music on any PC with Windows 7 in the house from any other.
- Print to any printer in the house from any PC with Windows 7 in the house.
Safeguard your hard work. - Windows Internet Explorer 8 helps keep your PC safer from malware and you safer from fraudulent websites designed to fool you into divulging private information.
Choose the Windows 7 Edition That Is Best For You
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| Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 143
It's a downgrade from Vista November 7, 2009 G Smart 2 out of 5 found this review helpful
I just "upgraded" a brand new notebook, which came with Vista 64-bit Premium installed and a free Windows 7 upgrade from the manufacturer. And compared to Vista, Win7 is a complete disappointment. Win7 was supposed to be a better Vista, but in reality it's rather the opposite.
Taskbar is broken. There is no Quick Launch bar anymore, instead you can "pin" your applications to the task bar. It wastes a lot of space, and you can't launch a new instance from Taskbar because Win7 instead gives focus to the running instance. It's also totally unusable if you have a vertical Taskbar - the favorite configuration among those who have many running applications. Win7 just as Vista does show the thumbnail of the running applications when cursor is hovering over Taskbar button, but adds an additional close(x) button.
Task manager does show a smaller OS footprint, but that's nothing more than curiosity. What is important is the amount of memory an application can comfortably allocate, and as far as my testing goes there is no difference compared to Vista. There is also no perceivable difference in OS boot time, application start time, and the sleep/wake up are just as instanteneous as in Vista. There is no difference in the speed of most applications running in either Vista or Win7. The only factors that would influence application performance is the amount of OS background work, which is negligible and the performance of hundreds of system DLLs, which every application uses. The DLLs seem to be pretty much the same performance and memory-wise and even if they were carefully optimized, performance of most applications only slightly depends on the performance of the system DLLs. Those unfortunate applications that heavily depend on system DLLs some run better in Vista, some better in Win7.
Win7 doesn't include popular applications that come with Vista. For example, Vista has a nice Windows Mail, Win7 offers to download Windows Live Mail, which is a complete joke.
Win7 also installed it's own primitive drivers for my printers, so I had to clean up after OS installation to revert to much better manufacturer's drivers.
The worst part of Win7 - it hangs, sometimes for seconds, sometimes forever, which never happened to Vista. In Vista Task Manager was always responsive, you could kill any stuck application from there, in Win7 even Task Manager and Start button can become unresponsive, so you can't gracefully shut down and restart. I just tried to "pin" Live Mail to the Taskbar, right-clicked on its name and the whole Taskbar and Start button with its menu are hanging. After 10 minutes or so W7 finally shows completely black screen with a message "Failure to display security and shutdown options." The only thing you can do after that is to turn power off. So much for the improved stability.
Absolutely terrible November 7, 2009 150 F3 2 out of 4 found this review helpful
My desktop PC meets and surpasses Windows 7's hardware requirements. I had no complaints about XP performance. The upgrade process was simple, fast, and went perfectly. Windows Update found WHQL drivers for everything.
Some bad points: Folder windows scroll up to the top on their own when I need to work at the bottom. DVD playback is choppy, blurry, pixelized, and gives DRM warnings. Flash video performance is noticeably worse compared to XP. Media Center was useless with the choppiest sound possible. My custom visual effects settings are ignored after rebooting. Windows Live Movie Maker is dumbed down with no timeline or visual representation of audio. UAC is much more intrusive than Vista. Boot, hibernation, sleep, and restart procedures are much slower than XP. Message windows fail to appear in front of active windows. The complex and bloated photo transfer wizard fails to match the simple efficiency of XP's tool and requires taskbar, window navigation, and double click activity to begin downloading photos. Changing theme and visual effects settings in a regular account changes them in the administrator account. The desktop icon font does not automatically change tone to contrast with a solid colored desktop. Icon name drop shadows cannot be turned off. Icon name drop shadows are weak, blurry light gray instead of XP's crisp black. Icon names look terrible and illegible on light backgrounds. Library directories do not auto-refresh after files are changed. Directories scroll to random locations after deleting files from normal folders. The photo viewer fails to launch after repeated double clicks on photo thumbnails. The photo viewer lacks Vista's beautifully animated slide show functions.
Some good points: Device names are listed in the USB device removal menu. This is easier than trying to remember a specific drive letter when multiple devices are installed. The volume control has an elegantly integrated real time level meter to show what the audio is doing. Memory usage is very good. ReadyBoost is excellent. The system image tool worked and quickly made a 5.5 gigabyte folder on an external drive. The taskbar is cleaner and more efficient than XP's. Dragging the bottom edges of windows to the bottom of the screen makes windows as tall as the screen. The icons are very pretty. System sounds are pleasant. The built in monitor calibration tool is useful. The ClearType font tuning tool is more involved than XP's. Fonts have never looked better. The splash screen uses the desktop's and monitor's native resolution instead of 1024x768. The synthesized speech of Microsoft Anna sounds far better than Microsoft Sam.
I'm disappointed and very unhappy with this product. It looks great but does less than XP and doesn't come close to my high expectations. It is worse than Vista, which I could productively use and enjoy on a notebook for hours without being forced to ride an emotional rollercoaster of limits and frustrations.
The platform feels slippery and far less powerful after the upgrade. Windows 7 gets in my way, ignores my commands, and fails to clearly inform me of important messages that need attention. It has a bizarre mind of its own that conflicts with basic user activities. It is a very weak, buggy, and unstable product. It was a waste of money even with the pre-order discount and free shipping. Maybe Microsoft will eventually fix the weird bugs and flaws I found in one week of use. I can't recommend this operating system for customers used to working efficiently and having an empowering sense of control.
BIG MISTAKE November 7, 2009 William Nadolny 3 out of 5 found this review helpful
I never thought I'd say this but upgrading from Vista to 7 was a BIG MISTAKE. Since upgrading my HP Pavillion dv7, internet access has become a nightmare. The 64-bit version of Internet Explorer is useless on any site that uses Flash (not supported) and the 32-bit version freezes every couple of minutes or so. Most times a hard re-boot is required.
The nightmare continues. November 7, 2009 Eric Washburn 2 out of 5 found this review helpful
Well, $50 for pre-ordering the upgrade seemed like a good idea at the time, but after twelve fruitless hours, with many trips to various forums, many permutations of online and offline, uninstalling programs and trying to determine whether drivers could be updated or their associated hardware consigned to history, I'm still getting the same error code about an hour into the "upgrading" process, with the only next step being to start all over, though without any substantial guidance regarding how to fix whatever is causing the problem. So I guess I'm lucky that Vista is still working fairly well, and I'll stick with that until the time comes to get a new machine, which may well be, not fruitless this time, but a well-known fruit.
Gotta love it November 7, 2009 M.D (Los Angeles, CA USA) 2 out of 3 found this review helpful
I updated my Compaq notebook (dual core 2GB RAM)from Vista to Win 7. My notebook runs so much faster. It seems like I upgraded my CPU and memory. Vista was a resource pig. Win 7 lives up to all of the hype. The upgrade from Vista Home Premium to Win 7 Home Premium took about 2.5 hours (I have alot of applications on my notebook) and it was painless. The only compatibility issues that have shown up is Qpservice.exe (HP application). This was fixed by downloading a newer version from the HP web site.
During the first week of use I encountered another compatibility issue with a Netgear application which manages my network storage device (SC101). No updated drivers are available as of this entry.
My boot up time is dramatically shorter (50 secs from power on to login screen + 45 seconds to login and bring up the browser) then with Vista. In addition I have noticed that my CPU utilization during watching streaming video is half what it used to be (40% vs 80%). The idle memory utilization is down from 900MB to 700MB. With less demands on resources I find that my notebook runs cooler.
Showing reviews 1-5 of 143
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