is looking to put the kibosh on far more of its internal (and embarassing) e-mail messages all-around its Vista online marketing options heading public. Seattle Post-Intelligencer reporter Todd Bishop blogged on March seven, Microsoft is attractive the choice to flip the “Vista-capable” lawsuit lodged last year into a full-blown class-action case. original suit,
genuine microsoft windows 7 home basic, filed in March 2007, claimed Microsoft “engaged in bait and switch — assuring consumers they were purchasing ‘Vista Capable’ machines when,
buy win 7 generator, in fact, they could obtain only a stripped-down operating system lacking the functionality and features that Microsoft advertised as ‘Vista.’”) Bishop explains, Microsoft also is attempting to halt the release of additional inner documents to the plaintiffs’ lawyers until Microsoft’s appeal is resolved. Microsoft is citing the time — and money — required to produce inner e-mails pertaining to the case as the reasons it is seeking the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals to stop the publication of a lot more Vista-marketing-related mail. surprisingly, Microsoft’s lawyers don’t mention how much public-relations damage these e-mails is doing to Microsoft’s battle-weary Vista team. initial batch of e-mail in this case included messages from Microsoft board member Jon Shirley, Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer, former Vista chief Jim Allchin and current Windows engineering chief Steven Sinofsky lambasting the convoluted “Vista-Ready” vs. “Vista-Capable” distinction Microsoft attempted to make when introducing the product over a year ago. Microsoft’s own troops couldn’t get their existing peripherals to work with Vista,
microsoft office Pro 2007 upgrade key, as they noted in the batch of e-mail already released as part of this case. And then there’s the issue of the hoops Microsoft jumped through to help its Wintel ally Intel sell old hardware that was barely capable of running Vista. Not a pretty picture…. every version of Windows, Microsoft has worked with hardware partners to find new ways to try to convince users they need far more and far more powerful machines to take advantage of far more feature-rich software. If Microsoft and its partners were/are successful, it means even more money in the PC makers’ and Microsoft’s coffers. With Vista,
office Pro 2007 serial key, this pact really back-fired, as the already published e-mails about Vista-capable — and further,
office Professional Plus 64bit, as-yet-unpublicized messages — will make evident.