Reports: Microsoft will sell Windows 7 'Family Pack'
Microsoft will offer a multi-license "family pack" for Windows 7, according to a pair of bloggers who cite details in the end-user licensing agreement (EULA) of a recently-leaked build.
The EULA for a post-Release Candidate build of Windows 7 includes a clause that refers to an upcoming family pack, said Kristan Kenney and Ed Bott, the latter a well-known Windows blogger for ZDNet.
Under a section titled "Installation And Use Rights," the EULA states: "If you are a 'Qualified Family Pack User', you may install one copy of the software marked as 'Family Pack' on three computers in your household for use by people who reside there. Those computers are the 'licensed computers' and are subject to these license terms. If you do not know whether you are a Qualifised [sic] Family Pack User, visit go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?Linkid=141399 or contact the Microsoft affiliate serving your country."
The link included in the EULA clause currently redirects to Microsoft's home page.
According to Bott, the Family Pack clause exists only in the EULA for Windows 7 Home Premium, the edition Microsoft's designed as the de facto consumer choice. It's also included in the EULA for Windows 7E Home Premium, the special version Microsoft's created for European customers that omits Internet Explorer 8 (IE8). Three weeks ago, Microsoft announced the Windows 7E -- "E" presumably stands for "Europe" -- as a unilateral move to head off EU antitrust regulators, who are thinking about forcing the company to offer users a "ballot screen" choice of multiple browsers, including those from rivals, when they first fire up Windows.
In the past, Microsoft declined to either confirm or deny that it would offer a multi-license bundle for Windows 7. ""We expect to have other great offers in the future as we lead up to and beyond general availability," a spokeswoman said via instant messaging last week. "[But] we have nothing to announce at this time."
The company sold a two-license Family Pack for Vista Home Premium for $159 for six months in 2007. The caveat then: The customers had to have purchased a full or upgrade edition of Vista Ultimate, the most-expensive SKU in the line.
Not surprisingly, Windows 7's EULA said nothing of any criteria such as Ultimate ownership.
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