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Microsoft begins Windows 8 upgrade sales

Microsoft has opened its virtual store and begun selling upgrades to Windows 8 Pro for $39.99, making good on a promise made last summer.

The upgrade, which must be downloaded and installed via a utility called “Windows 8 Upgrade Assistant,” can be applied to Windows XP-, Vista-, and Windows 7-powered systems.

Microsoft announced the upgrade in July, a bit more than a month after it issued the last of three public previews, but before it wrapped up its work on the new OS.

The upgrade does the most thorough job when migrating a machine from Windows 7, which is the only edition that conducts a “full” upgrade, the label for an upgrade that brings along everything, including data files, user accounts, Windows settings and installed applications.

Windows XP-to-Windows 8 upgrades are the least comprehensive, allowing customers to move only personal files; Vista transfers both Windows settings and personal files to Windows 8.

Although the $39.99 buys only the upgrade’s 2GB digital download, users can optionally request a DVD for an additional $14.99. The combination is about $15 cheaper than the $69.99 DVD-in-a-box that Microsoft and retailers, including Best Buy, Wal-Mart and Amazon, are now selling.

Microsoft has said that customers who downloaded and installed the free “Windows 8 Release Preview” will be able to upgrade to the paid version of the OS, but that those running the free trial of Windows 8 Enterprise RTM, or “release to manufacturing,” which debuted in August, cannot.

That was just one of the problems reported by customers.

In messages on Microsoft’s support forum, several said they had been blocked from upgrading by a confusing error message. “Windows 8 isn’t available for download,” the message stated. “Sorry, Windows 8 isn’t available for online purchase in the country/region you’re in.”

Computerworld ran into the same message when it tried to purchase the Windows 8 Pro upgrade from a virtual machine (VM) running an evaluation copy of Windows 8 Enterprise. The VM was located in the U.S., where the upgrade is currently available, and the attempt was made after Microsoft turned on the upgrade spigot.

Others, however, said that they had been thwarted from upgrading a Windows 7 PC with a legitimate license. “Quite frustrating seeing as many others are downloading it without a problem,” noted someone identified as “_PhAzE_” on a support thread.
Additional complaints were lodged about the upgrade, ranging from machines that refused to download the file, payment problems, and invalid activation keys provided by Microsoft.

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