The avalanche has just began.

  • NoiseColor@startrek.website
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    2 years ago

    It’s not going to happen for normal users. This is most likely for users that already use some ms subscription, like office.

    • Endorkend@kbin.social
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      2 years ago

      Exactly, it’s going to be Office 365+Windows in a single package kinda deal.

      Probably with a mostly functioning Windows left if you stop paying, but no access to specific features or Office.

      It’s just a way to get people to pay a few bucks a month extra for the Office 365 package, which in the long term culminates to getting full bank plus then some for Windows, instead of a one time flat fee people will then use for as long as they keep the system.

      Most people I know use the same system/laptop for 3-4 years, some even as long as 6-8 years if the thing doesn’t break down.

      The subscription will likely be setup so that you pay what you’d normally pay for a basic Windows Home (100-130ish) within the first 2 years (say $5 a month) and every year you use the same device longer than that, is just extra gravy for Microsoft.

      But I doubt they’ll drop the simple license. There are to many devices where a subscription wouldn’t work and especially in this day and age, connecting the device to the Internet for any length of time is a big nono for the user/company.

      • MudMan@kbin.social
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        2 years ago

        John Riccitelo sees your “they couldn’t possibly be this self-destructive” and raises you a golden parachute.

        To be clear, all the not-so-bad alternatives in this thread are still dealbreakers for me. I do pay for one Office sub, because I need it for work, but I have Windows installs in maybe half a dozen devices and I am NOT paying subscriptions for all of those.

        The real silver lining is that if they do attempt it, and they might, it wouldn’t be the first time a Windows version bombs so bad in favor of its predecessor that they have to roll things back immediately, so we have a pretty clear picture of what that would look like.

    • Earthwormjim91@lemmy.world
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      2 years ago

      It’s none of the above. Turns out all the references to a subscription in the test builds were to Windows Internet of Things Enterprise subscription edition. Most enterprise things are ran on a subscription type license where you pay for support and rights to use it on an annual basis.