Vista's Anytime Upgrade Is An Every-Time Hassle

Typically, users and small businesses buy a computer with either Vista Home or Vista Business installed by the manufacturer. Microsoft offers these users an opportunity to upgrade to Vista Ultimate via the Anytime Upgrade process. These past few weeks I have been working to help a user who's had a nightmare of a time with her HP computer running Vista. At this point I don't know the complete list of problems and haven't yet seen a full resolution, but one thing has already been made very clear:

Dave Methvin, Contributor

February 18, 2008

2 Min Read

Typically, users and small businesses buy a computer with either Vista Home or Vista Business installed by the manufacturer. Microsoft offers these users an opportunity to upgrade to Vista Ultimate via the Anytime Upgrade process. These past few weeks I have been working to help a user who's had a nightmare of a time with her HP computer running Vista. At this point I don't know the complete list of problems and haven't yet seen a full resolution, but one thing has already been made very clear: Windows Anytime Upgrade is a first-class pain in the butt.Until about a month ago, I wasn't aware of the problems associated with Anytime Upgrades. Like many of the people who beta tested Vista, I tried several of the versions but also received a copy of Vista Ultimate when the product shipped. The notebook I purchased last year came with Vista Home Premium, and I kept it that way because there wasn't anything compelling in Ultimate to justify the cost of the upgrade.

Then I heard from one of our users who had taken advantage of Anytime Upgrade; let's call her Jeani. She had decided to purchase the Anytime Upgrade offered on CD that came with her Hewlett-Packard system, shipped with Vista Home Premium. The initial upgrade process itself went uneventfully, but that's just the beginning of this story.

Jeani was having trouble with Vista, so she decided to reinstall Vista on a clean drive. Because her Vista Ultimate was purchased through Anytime Upgrades, it would not install until she first installed and activated the copy of Vista Home Premium that originally came on the computer. Even after a reinstall, the system seemed to develop problems and Jeani reinstalled several more times at the insistence of HP support. All that reinstalling triggered the Vista activation trip wires, and now Jeani has to call into Microsoft to activate each time she reinstalls.

It turned out that Jeani's hardware had problems. HP replaced the motherboard under warranty, but she still has to go through the Anytime Upgrade rigmarole -- including phone activation -- to reinstall Vista Ultimate. This is cumbersome compared with the process with XP, where the setup process merely requires that you prove that you have the qualifying product via a CD, for example. The XP "upgrade" applies to its pricing, but doesn't prevent you from doing a clean install on a bare system.

The consequence is that it isn't possible to use an Anytime Upgrade license to do a truly clean install -- you must riffle-shuffle the new files and registry settings into an existing activated copy of Windows. I'm a clean-install kind of guy, mainly because in all my experience with Windows, I've rarely encountered an upgrade install that didn't end in sorrow and regret for one reason or another. Windows Anytime Upgrades just reinforce those feelings.

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