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HP Brings Back Windows 7 'By Popular Demand' As Buyers Shun Windows 8

Hugh Pickens DOT Com writes "Gregg Keizer reports at Computerworld that Hewlett-Packard has stuck their finger in Microsoft's eye by launching a new promotion that discounts several consumer PCs by $150 when equipped with Windows 7, saying the four-year-old OS is 'back by popular demand.' 'The reality is that there are a lot of people who still want Windows 7,' says Bob O'Donnel. 'This is a twist, though, and may appeal to those who said, "I do want a new PC, but I thought I couldn't get Windows 7."' The promotion reminded O'Donnell and others of the dark days of Windows Vista, when customers avoided Windows 7's predecessor and instead clamored for the older Windows XP on their new PCs. Then, customers who had heard mostly negative comments about Vista from friends, family and the media, decided they would rather work with the devil they knew rather than the new one they did not. 'It's not a perfect comparison,' says O'Donnell, of equating Windows 8 with Vista, 'but the perception of Windows 8 is negative. I said early on that Windows 8 could clearly be Vista Version 2, and that seems to have happened.' HP has decided that the popularity of Windows 7 is its best chance of encouraging more people to buy new computers in a declining market and is not the first time that HP has spoken out against Microsoft. 'Look at the business model difference between Intel and ARM. Look at the operating systems. In today's world, other than Microsoft there's no one else who charges for an operating system,' said HP executive Sridhar Solur in December, adding that that the next generation of computers could very well not be dominated by Microsoft." Also at SlashCloud.

19 of 513 comments (clear)

  1. New MS business plan by Sockatume · · Score: 5, Funny

    1) Relabel Windows 7 boxes "Windows 8 Desktop Edition"
    2) Raise prices
    3) Profit

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    No kidding!!! What do you say at this point?
    1. Re:New MS business plan by Ynot_82 · · Score: 5, Funny

      1) Relabel Windows 7 boxes "Windows 9"

      Fixed that for you

    2. Re:New MS business plan by Wycliffe · · Score: 5, Informative

      1) Relabel Windows 7 boxes "Windows 9"

      Fixed that for you

      You joke but that's pretty much how it is:

      Windows 98 -- Worked
      windows ME --Sucked
      Windows XP -- Decent
      Windows Vista -- Sucked
      Windows 7 -- Functional Again
      Windows 8 -- Sucks Again

      It seems to take them one generation to flush the problems out of each new release so windows 8 is basically "windows 9 beta"

    3. Re:New MS business plan by rudy_wayne · · Score: 5, Insightful

      1) Relabel Windows 7 boxes "Windows 9"

      Fixed that for you

      You joke but that's pretty much how it is:

      Windows 98 -- Worked
      windows ME --Sucked
      Windows XP -- Decent
      Windows Vista -- Sucked
      Windows 7 -- Functional Again
      Windows 8 -- Sucks Again

      It seems to take them one generation to flush the problems out of each new release so windows 8 is basically "windows 9 beta"

      Unfortunately, Microsoft has broken the pattern. You can go from XP to Vista to Windows 7 and each one is only a slight change from the previous version. Windows 8 however, is a horrendous piece of shit that changed things that didn't need to be changed, fixed things that didn't need to be fixed and broke anything that wasn't already broken.

      Relabeling Windows 7 as Windows 9 would be the best ting they could do.

    4. Re:New MS business plan by wonkey_monkey · · Score: 5, Funny

      Windows NT - doesn't fit the pattern so people ignore it
      Windows 2000 - doesn't fit the pattern so people ignore it

      --
      systemd is Roko's Basilisk.
    5. Re:New MS business plan by torkus · · Score: 5, Informative

      Win 8 is totally fine once you make it into Win 7 either by uninstalling 8 or installing enough add-ons to hide it.

      Seriously...MS screwed up by making such a drastic change to the UI that's been around for the better part of forever. While the under-the-hood changes did add quite a bit they could have left them under the hood and left the UI mostly intact. Tweak a few things to make them easier but...why start with a clean slate and recreate everything? Some things are so buried or just missing ... it's ridiculous. For home users it's not as drastic but business/enterprise? Do you know how difficult it is get get a secretary to click a different colored icon during an upgrade? Now you want one to learn Metro...I've watched people quit because of changes like that totally disrupting their work environment. Sad but true.

      --
      You can get rich if you own a politician, but you have to be rich to buy one in the first place.
  2. Touch-screen desktop PCs are a fad by tick-tock-atona · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Windows 8 is designed around a touch-screen interface; one that is a struggle to operate via a keyboard and mouse.

    For entertainment, a touch-screen interface is fine. But, believe it or not, people *still* do *real work* on desktop PCs. And for that use case, Windows 8 is a massive productivity downgrade.

    1. Re:Touch-screen desktop PCs are a fad by BobMcD · · Score: 5, Interesting

      What I genuinely don't understand is - why break backward compatibility?

      Why not just layer touch on top of the existing UI?

      Then everybody wins.

      For example, there could be two ways to reboot your PC:

      1) Pull the side-window thing over, go to Settings, then Power, then Reboot
      or
      2) Click Start, click the Arrow beside Shutdown, then click Reboot

      One is better for touch (supposedly) and the other is what you're already used to doing.

      Does anyone know why this wasn't the method they went with?

  3. No I won't get used to it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Let's call a spade a spade: the touch-screen interface SUCKS on a traditional desktop or laptop PC. It's not a matter of "trying something new". It's a matter of using the right tool for the job, and the touch-screen interface is the WRONG tool for this job. To be fair, the linux touch-screen interfaces don't belong on a PC any more than windows 8. They belong on phones and tablets.

  4. Upgrade path? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Is HP providing an easy upgrade path from 8 to 7?

  5. It will never go away by jones_supa · · Score: 5, Interesting

    adding that that the next generation of computers could very well not be dominated by Microsoft

    People make now these revolutionary statements, but they will forget fast. Behind the scenes, Microsoft is likely already fixing what sucks about Windows 8, including bringing the Start Menu back. After the release of next Windows, this little (extremely expensive) Win8 mistake can be swept under the rug just like ME and Vista. But something which Microsoft knows best is keeping their foothold of running Windows on every PC. I bet Ballmer and Myerson are just spinning around in their office chairs laughing and saying "no, Mr. HP, you will be running Windows".

  6. Hmmm ... by gstoddart · · Score: 5, Interesting

    1) Why would you buy a PC from HP? The amount of crapware on the laptop we got for my wife several years ago was downright pathetic -- what should have been a fast machine was dog slow because HP has embedded dozens of things little more useful than Clippy ("I see you are near a wireless network, the HP Network assistant is here to help"). The sheer amount of garbage rendered the machine unusable without hours of disabling stuff. (In fairness, the mother in law's Toshiba had the same problems, because vendor builds suck.)

    2) Will Microsoft even allow this? I should think they'd be saying "nope, you can't sell those any more".

    3) Wow, Windows 8 much be a turd if people are going back to a four-year old OS. Someone missed the mark by a long shot.

    4) "adding that that the next generation of computers could very well not be dominated by Microsoft." From the numbers, it would appear that Android is well on its way to dominating the next generation of computers, even if people here don't think tablets are actually computers. Microsoft is no longer competing with Apple and Linux, they're competing with Google.

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    Lost at C:>. Found at C.
  7. Re:HP has the pull to get MS to fix windows by 8.2 by CdBee · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I hope that means a proper menu with expanding options off it - not the 'fuck you' compromise in Windows 8.1 where a 'start button' brings up the supershitty touch interface

    --
    I have been a user for about 10 years. This ends Feb 2014. The site's been ruined. I'm off. Dice, FU
  8. Re:meanwhile.... by gstoddart · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Actually, if the sales numbers are to be believed, people just aren't buying new PCs at all.

    Pretty much exactly this.

    Except for RAM, the vast majority of PC users will never fully max out their machine. They won't even get close to what the CPU can do. Even 10 years ago when someone asked me what kind of PC they should buy, I would tell them to buy the oldest machine they can find with twice as much memory as they think they need -- because in my experience, lots of RAM contributes more to the longevity of a machine than loads of CPU.

    Nowadays, I think gamers and people doing heavy-duty work are the only people who need to be upgrading regularly.

    The latest and greatest is often not all that great, and the differences between the old and the new are incremental.

    For many many people, the PC they've had for several years now works just fine and doesn't need to be upgraded. For many more, a tablet will cover 90% of their needs 90% of the time (and, yes, that's a completely contrived statistic).

    Microsoft made crap tons of money over the years by people being on the upgrade treadmill and getting the latest version of Office. And that is no longer a compelling reason for most people -- I know I use more .doc files than I do .docx files, and I'm not sure I could name a single feature in the latest Office which is any different than the previous version.

    And, quite randomly since they mention Vista -- my main PC is a machine I bought in '09 with 8GB of RAM and 4 CPU cores running Vista, and with many TB of disk space. Having thrown a lot of resources at it, I've actually enjoyed Vista. On small machines it was a resource hog, but if you gave it lots of resources, it was actually pretty good in my experience.

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    Lost at C:>. Found at C.
  9. not consumer OS's by Chirs · · Score: 5, Informative

    Win NT and 2K were "business" OS's, not consumer. They were also priced accordingly.

    1. Re:not consumer OS's by torkus · · Score: 5, Informative

      NT 3.51 wasn't really meant to be a desktop OS. It was aligned with NT 3.51 server and skipped all bells and whistles from the desktop side. They also were competing with OS/2 Warp

      NT 4 was a step forward - usable as a stable desktop with drivers to support peripherals but still aimed at administrators and developers who would eschew the bells and whistles for a more stable computer. Remember this was the time when a daily reboot was required for Win 9x

      Win 2000 was the first real attempt at bringing PnP and other consumer-oriented technologies to the business OS. It had it's faults but overall definitely worked.

      XP took that a step further and fully combined personal and consumer OS's.

      Back in the NT and 2k days...I don't think many consumers paid retail prices for their OS. MS basically allowed piracy to get market penetration and made plenty of money from businesses and PC resellers since they had the default (essentially only) OS.

      --
      You can get rich if you own a politician, but you have to be rich to buy one in the first place.
  10. Now is your chance to try Linux... by scorp1us · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Before you label this as another "year of linux on the desktop!" post, hear me out

    I have a retired neighbor that knows nothing of computers, but being retired he needs something to do all day. So with Vista, he uses the internet to connect to his car club and use email with his car club friends. He also uses websites with a fair degree of competency. He is so unsure of himself though, that he asks me hoe for help on a fairly regular basis with questions like "What happened to the little man?" (MSN sys tray icon, discontinued in 2013, replaced with Skype, and yes, that was another question) and "Where'd my icon go?" and plenty of other questions regarding the changing behavior of websites. He's got a very static view of things.A friend of his was also a victim of a virus that stole his banking into, so he was very concerned about that.

    So when he asked me what laptop to get, and being on fixed income, his needs were simple, and I didn't want to have to field questions about Windows 8, which would have been a nightmare. Dual mode? Charms Bar? Yeah right.

    So I set him up with Linux Mint 15 (Cinnamon) on a bargain laptop from Newegg that came with W8 on it. I pre-configured automatic updates for everything except applications (security and stability) and set the theme to the XP theme (He had previously used XP) very literally and let him have it. I got one question from him since. How to install solitaire. Stupid me, I forgot to show him the Software Center. Its installed now. I check in with him from time to time and he got a MyFi for it, and his girlfriend (also not very computer savvy, but better than him) configured the MyFi, and I never heard a peep. He's had it about 4 months now and only that one question. Not a complaint and no little men have disappeared.

    Year of Linux on the desktop? No, but for him it is.

    --
    Slashdot's rate-of-post filter: Preventing you from posting too many great ideas at once.
  11. Re:HP has the pull to get MS to fix windows by 8.2 by Luckyo · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It:
    1. Fits too much crap on your screen at once disorienting you.
    2. Doesn't function as a logical tree-style menu.
    3. Covers the whole screen.

    So you pretty much reworded all the bad things about it to sorta kinda make them appear to not be horrible. Well done. You will have a good career in either advertising or politics.

  12. But still crappy 1366x768 resolution screens by Honclfibr · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This promotion actually made me go over and check HPs website out, only to be disappointed that the two laptops offered both had 1366x768 resolution screens. Come on HP. You outfit this Envy laptop with the latest i7 and 12GB of RAM, and then hobble it with such a lousy screen? I don't care what the operating system is, no sale.