Windows 7 Family Pack Returns

As I had previously and exclusively revealed (first on Twitter, on July 6, and then about 9 minutes 40 seconds into the July 10 episode of Windows Weekly podcast), Microsoft is bringing back the Windows 7 Family Pack for this holiday season, starting in October. It will ship in the US on October 3, in Canada on October 5, and all other markets on or after October 22. As with last year, the Family Pack is only available "while supplies last," whatever that means. Just make more, Microsoft. Geesh. :)

Here's the official word:

All summer long we’ve given you some great reasons to purchase a new PC and make the move to Windows 7, an operating system loved by a whopping 94% of folks who use it! Here’s one more: starting October 3 in the U.S., Windows 7 Family Pack will be available for purchase at participating retailers and online at the Microsoft Store. Purchasing the Windows 7 Family Pack gives you three upgrade licenses of Windows 7 Home Premium for the low price of $149.99. To take advantage of Family Pack, you’ll need a PC running a genuine copy of either Windows Vista or Windows XP that is capable of running Windows 7. The Windows 7 Upgrade Advisor can tell you which features and editions of Windows 7 will run on your computer(s).

For those of you who don’t live in the U.S., Family Pack may be coming your way too. It goes on sale in Canada, UK, Germany, France, Australia and many other markets on or after Oct. 22 (Windows 7’s 1 year anniversary!)

According to IDC’s Consumerscape 360 data, there are 2.1 PCs per household in the U.S., but, as we all know, networking isn’t easy. Windows 7 has built in features – like HomeGroup- that make it easy and quick to get all of your home PCs connected and sharing files, music, photos and printers.

So, don’t delay. The Windows 7 Family Pack will be available soon while supplies last.

(This was supposed to go live a bit later in the day, but CNET has once again done their usual end-run around the NDA, so here it is.)

Discuss this Article 5

Waethorn
on Sep 1, 2010
I wish there was an offering like "buy a Windows 7 PC, upgrade 1 (or 2) additional computer(s) to Windows 7 for an extra $40-50 each", instead of having to shell out over $100 for retail upgrade copies for older machines. I bet they would get a lot of extra sales if customers bought a new PC and wanted to upgrade their old one too. I guess the reasoning behind the Family Pack is that very few people buy retail copies anyway, so they're not losing a lot of money on the steep discounts they're offering on the 3-pack. Out of the millions of licenses sold already, I would bet that the Family Pack accounts for only a very small percentage of those sales.
USArcher
on Sep 1, 2010
I know some friends/family who would love to get this affordable 3-pack to upgrade their current Vista systems.
Ocean
on Sep 1, 2010
I'm going to get it for my netbook.
rr0de74@live.com
on Sep 1, 2010
I know "Joe User" would not be technial enough to deal with the key generation and downloading ISO files, but for $199 I picked up TechNet Standard. That is 40 copies of Windows 7 (10 each of starter, hp, pro, ultimate), 20 copies of Office 2010 (10 each of standard and pro plus) and Windows Home Server. You also get copies of Enterprise stuff, Exchange, SQL, etc. http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/subscriptions/bb892756.aspx
Waethorn
on Sep 1, 2010

@rrode:

When it says "for evaluation purposes only" they include a line in the EULA  that statesthat it isn't licensed to house your data for normal usage.  The only users that are allowed to host live data on evaluation software is TAP customers, of which you are not one (TAP customers are businesses that get access to pre-release software to use in tightly-controlled - and highly-redundant - production environments).

Using it as an option to license software for regular usage is as much a license infringement as buying OEM System Builder software to use yourself, and recommending it is doing a disservice to everyone.

So what other illegal tips do you have?

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