Microsoft Offers Another Windows Pro 8 Discount, This Time for Students

This is a good deal, but you can save even more money by buying immediately

Microsoft today announced a special offer whereby college and university students can purchase Windows 8 Pro Upgrade for $69.99 starting February 1. Not coincidentally, that date falls right after the expiration of the current deal on Windows 8 Pro, which lets anyone upgrade for just $39.99 online.

“Windows 8 offers the best for work and play and with the new Start screen that makes it super easy to organize, access and find what matters most to you,” a Microsoft blog post notes. “With Windows 8, students can download apps from the Windows Store like Microsoft OneNote or Evernote for taking notes in class or Skype to stay connected with friends and family.”

This offer applies only to eligible students, faculty, and staff, and requires verification of eligibility prior to purchase. Those who are eligible can purchase up to five copies of the Windows 8 Pro upgrade each year.

Even if you do qualify, however, you should rush to save an additional $30 and purchase Windows 8 Pro before the end of day Thursday: That’s when the current $39.99 offer ends. And as I discussed in Windows 8 Tip: Buy the Electronic Upgrade Now, Install It Later, you don’t need to install the upgrade immediately. You just need to buy it.

And in related news … In addition to the special offer for students, Microsoft is soon embarking on a Windows Campus Tour where it will visit over 150 universities around the US during the spring. The tour kicks off at ASU on February 18-22.

Discuss this Article 4

Fleet Command
on Jan 30, 2013

I think Microsoft must realize that lowering the price does not change the value to cost ratio because value is already zero. Windows 8 changes the way thing work without offering a significant benefit in exchange. I think I'll wait for Windows 9, then decide.

pmbAustin
on Jan 31, 2013

That just isn't a true statement. There are several significant benefits, even on non-touch hardware. The faster boots/shutdowns/sleeps/resumes, new task manager, Storage Spaces, File History, better file management (copy/move, Explorer improvements), IE10, and other enhancements are all worth it.

Fleet Command
on Jan 31, 2013

Unfortunately, none of what you mentioned, except faster boot, are valuable. File History actually has negative value and is one of the reasons that I don't upgrade. Performance is one huge plus – and I mean it – only there are enough minuses to negate it.

And seriously, IE? With all due respect Austin, you gotta be kidding me.

Maelstrom
on Jan 31, 2013

On the contrary, I would say that it coincides perfectly! ;-)

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