- Jun 30, 2004
- 15,785
- 1,500
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Windows 7 SP1 or Windows 7 with the ISO-download-install of SP1 has been a stellar operating system.
There are pointy-haired "Dilbert" managers in Microsoft now.
They're cutting the Windows Media Center and umbilicals for certain sets of licenses:
systems with only archival and 8-year-old BIOS or driver updates
or
downloaded, paid-OEM licenses
or
branded OEM licenses.
Now you can tell me I don't know S***. I'm just guessing. But if my theory has any of just a partial basis in reality, then I know one thing:
Microsoft . . . . has . . . . Pointy-Haired-Guy managers . . .
Of course, Win 7 has been around since .. '06? '07?
Or . . . maybe they're just telling certain users that they'll have to buy Win 10 if they wait?
I've never seen these problems with Win 7 before. This is something new, and there's statistical evidence (I'd be willing to go back again and tally forum talk) --- that it started around last September -- November.
There are pointy-haired "Dilbert" managers in Microsoft now.
They're cutting the Windows Media Center and umbilicals for certain sets of licenses:
systems with only archival and 8-year-old BIOS or driver updates
or
downloaded, paid-OEM licenses
or
branded OEM licenses.
Now you can tell me I don't know S***. I'm just guessing. But if my theory has any of just a partial basis in reality, then I know one thing:
Microsoft . . . . has . . . . Pointy-Haired-Guy managers . . .
Of course, Win 7 has been around since .. '06? '07?
Or . . . maybe they're just telling certain users that they'll have to buy Win 10 if they wait?
I've never seen these problems with Win 7 before. This is something new, and there's statistical evidence (I'd be willing to go back again and tally forum talk) --- that it started around last September -- November.
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