Purchasing additional Windows Vista licenses

For customers who acquired a full or upgrade version of Windows Vista from retail or pre-installed, we've got a pretty sweet deal.  We're announcing the Windows Vista Additional License program, which provides the ability to install the same edition of Windows Vista on any other additional computers you may own.  The program allows customers to purchase up to 5 additional licenses for PCs they own at 10% off the suggested retail price.

Windows Vista requires 1 license per device.  When attempting to install and activate the same licensed copy of Windows Vista on another PC, activation won't work.  When the activation fails, the user is directed to purchase additional licenses online or by phone.  Remember, not properly activating Windows Vista will lead to it running in reduced functionality mode, so this new program is a handy way to avoid that situation.  With it, customers can use their original Windows Vista media for installation and activate each installation using the newly purchased licenses.  This means there's no need to wait for new media to arrive in the mail -- although that option is available in case the original media is lost or otherwise unavailable.

For North America, Windows Vista Additional License online orders opened 19 March (yesterday) and phone orders were available as of 28 February.  For our EMEA friends, online orders will be available on 26 March, with phone orders currently planned for a future date.

For more information on the Windows Vista Additional License program, visit this website.

The program is designed to run through the entire product lifecycle of Windows Vista; thus, no end date has yet been established.

Note that other types of licenses such as Volume Licensing, MSDN, TechNet and evaluation copies do not qualify for the Additional License Program.


Comments

  1. Posted on: March 26, 2007 at 12:08PM  

    Oh, and did I say, it's free?

  2. Posted on: March 27, 2007 at 5:46AM  

    Very much a case of too little too late, in the overal pricing model for the UK purchaser.

    (Especially as UK businesses trading in US can buy directly from US and use in the UK the software - it hurts the little guys the pricing approach).

    Prehaps listening to the 10,000 or so people protesting about the $1=£1 ratio addressing the base RRP would be a better start.

    Petition to the Prime Minister on Vista Overcharging:

    http://petitions.pm.gov.uk/VistaOvercharge/

  3. Posted on: March 28, 2007 at 11:10PM  

    Well, I'm writing this from a fresh install of Windows XP. After testing Vista for almost three weeks, I have no idea why anyone would choose it over XP, other than the fact it came pre-installed on a new machine. I could not function in any kind of efficient manner with Vista. I formatted the drive and re-installed my trusty old XP. I don't care how many price breaks you offer, why should I pay for a DOWNGRADE in operating systems? My other computers in the house will now be running Ubuntu linux. Vista is a dog, in my opinion. Wait for service pack 1 and keep your fingers crossed!

  4. Posted on: March 29, 2007 at 5:59AM  

    I've been running some form of Windows Vista and Ubuntu for almost a year now; I can understand the Mac people having issue with the OS, but why is everyone such a die hard for XP?  I've only run into a handful of apps that don't work, and the only times I've had a dreadful experience were the times I tried to upgrade instead of a clean install, much better in the RTM but I still haven't had a good time with that method of installing Windows Vista.  Overall my experience has been smoother in the first few months with Windows Vista than it was back in 2001 with my first few months of XP.

    Anyway now that I've got that out, what kind of issues did you have? Did you try a fresh install of Windows Vista?  Is your system within or exceeding the recommended hardware requirements? Is this system homebuilt or did it come from a large manufacturer, ...?  I'm not picking at you but offering a bit of support.

    I can't wait to see what improves with SP1 but I'm not sitting around waiting on it.

  5. Posted on: March 29, 2007 at 4:21PM  

    Hey MadMax:  if you were to contact me directly via email, I'd be happy to help you address the issue(s) you're encountering and ultimately improve your experience with Windows Vista.  I know there's a solution, and it may possibly change your mind about the new OS.

  6. Posted on: March 30, 2007 at 10:21AM  

    Well, I actually liked Vista from the Beta tests I done and hoped to have it when it was finally released.

    Unfortunately, things never go as planned. I found my XP to be a fake (last time I buy pre-built, normally build my own).

    I put this right by purchasing a genuine copy of XP through the genuine advantage program as I needed to stay 'up and running' and it is 'the right thing to do' and could not wait in case Vista was delayed for any reason.

    However, having paid out for XP in late September 2006, and then becoming unemployed mid January 2007, I can not afford or justify another outlay to get Vista.

    Is there anyway I can qualify for an upgrade?

    I know people who purchased XP through the genuine advantage offer between October 2006 and March 2007 can, so I have only just missed this, ironically by being maybe to honest and quick when it came to realising my original XP was a fake.

  7. Posted on: April 20, 2007 at 4:25PM  

    The real shame for Microsoft is that I have never considered anything for the the desktop in my workplace other than Microsoft. However, after Vista came out and in particular following the way UK home customers have been treated in comparison to the US market, I have had my eyes opened to all the possibilities availible on the three other 3 pcs around my home. Today I spent 4 hours going round a sample of 500 users in my organisation to see exactly what they use their PCs for. The scary thing is that in 95% of all cases ther is no need for a Microsoft solution where the various freeware OS and office apps perform perfectly adequately. In fact the saving on upgrading from XP to Vista is so substantial that I'm sorry I'd never considered it before, particularly since my annual bonus is linked to how much I can save off the IT budget each year! So decision time - 70 days and counting! Kerching!  

  8. Posted on: May 03, 2007 at 4:43AM  

    cheaper is not possible:

    http://www.multiseatcomputer.be/eng/

    no license/family

    no license/company

    no license/school

    impossible with windows

    eat this.

  9. Posted on: May 30, 2007 at 3:40AM  

    I wonder if there are any possibilities to upgrade the old Win XP licence on a cheaper budget?

  10. Posted on: July 21, 2007 at 1:26AM  

    Well, anytime upgrade is still not available over here in Germany.

    ----------

    http://www.dl4all.com

Trackbacks

  1. Posted by: links for 2007-03-21 | ITsVISTA on March 21, 2007 at 2:33AM
  2. Posted by: Teamzille.de on March 23, 2007 at 7:51AM

    Im Windows Vista Team Blog wird über ein Programm berichtet, mit dem sich zusätzliche Lizenzen von Windows Vista zu vergünstigten Preisen erwerben lassen, z. B. um einen weiteren Computer mit dem neuen Betriebssystem auszustatten. Um i