On 5/23/10, William Robb <war...@gmail.com> wrote:

> Ok, I have the choice of buying Win 7 OEM or Win 7 Retail for half again
> more money.  What's the difference?

I run Linux, consider it hugely superior to Windows for almost everything,
and it is free. However, one place where it seems to be weak is photo
processing.

If I had to use Windows, I would not touch any version later than XP,
because Vista and 7 include "features" designed to protect movie
companies from the computer owner. As I see it, that is wasting
resources and acting contrary to my interests. No thanks!

But anyway, the retail & OEM versions should be effectively the
same. The difference is licensing and support. The OEM versions
are sold to PC makers (Dell, HP, ...) really cheap, but they come
without Microsoft support. Want support? Talk to your vendor.
According to MS's license, they should only be sold with a new
PC, but they do turn up often on the open market.

The difference you may need to watch for is Home vs Pro vs
Server version. Often PCs. especially laptops, come with the
cheaper Home version. Fine for some purposes, but if you
want to use it on a network with network log in, say at the
office, then you find that the Home version does not handle
network authentication; you need to "upgrade" to the
Professional version to do that.

Then if you want to use network logins on your own network,
you need at least one machine running the Server version.
Pro can use network authentication, but only Server can
provide it to other machines.

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