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This page contains a list of features you can count on being able to use in every edition. Windows 7 Starter and Home Basic. Windows 7 Home Premium. This is the entry-level edition for most consumers.
It has the full Aero interface, Windows Media Center, and a few interesting surprises depending on your hardware. Windows 7 Professional. After a brief name change to Business edition in the Vista era, the preferred upgrade for businesses and enthusiasts returns to its roots, name-wise.
The feature set is long and interesting, with the ability to run a Remote Desktop server, encrypt files, make network folders available offline, and join a Windows domain. Oh, and did I mention a licensed virtual copy of Windows XP for those one or two pesky legacy apps?
Two different names for essentially the same product. Enterprise edition is the same product, packaged separately for volume license customers who buy the Software Assurance program; they also get access for an additional license fee to the Microsoft Desktop Optimization Pack.
Next: Which features are in every edition? The Windows Search components are also shared with all editions. A handful of shell enhancements are found in all editions: Aero Snap move a window to the edge of the screen to resize it automatically , jump lists, and Desktop Gadgets are in every edition. The Aero interface—with its live taskbar previews, glass effects, and Flip3D—are missing from Starter edition.
Home Basic uses the weird Windows Standard interface, which contains some Aero features taskbar previews but lacks the glass effects.
Touch support is available only in the premium editions. Included applications: Internet Explorer 8 is, of course, in every Windows 7 edition. Note to the European Union: it can also be removed from every edition. Surprisingly, the Windows Fax and Scan utility, previously available only in business editions, is now a consistent part of Windows 7, as is the high-end PowerShell scripting engine for administrators. The significantly less annoying update to User Account Control works the same in Starter as it does in Ultimate.
Two huge changes in this category show that Microsoft really was listening to its critics: The Backup program provides full functionality in every edition, allowing you to create a system image and do file backups to an external hard drive or rewritable media in Vista, system image backups were possible only in Business edition. In addition, the Previous Versions feature now works in all editions.
This feature allows you to recover earlier versions of a file from automatic system restore points Apple has a similar feature, slicker but less powerful, in Time Machine.
Oh, and you can make a System Repair Disc any time with any edition. Networking: There are no apparent differences between editions in terms of the number of permitted SMB network connections; in practical terms, up to 10 PCs or devices can connect simultaneously to a Windows 7 client machine. There are also minor differences in how different editions enable the new HomeGroup feature and major differences in domain connectivity.
Next: Has Starter edition gotten a bad rap? User interface: Windows 7 Starter offers the Windows 7 Basic interface only. Starter edition also offers only the barest menu of personalization features.
In the RC builds, for example, there is no user-accessible way to change the desktop background or system sounds. On my test notebook with 3GB of RAM, after I allowed the system to run for a period of time and chug through any scheduled tasks, it used MB of memory at idle.
The noteworthy omission is lack of DVD support. As I noted in the introduction, the biggest change Microsoft has announced since it made the RC publicly available is the removal of the three-application limit for Starter edition. So killing that restriction is a smart decision.
The most striking difference is the lack of personalization options for some UI elements. Windows Vista Home Basic was the entry-level edition in the lineup for customers in the U. Sorry, folks: Windows 7 Home Basic is available only in so-called emerging markets, at prices that make sense in those markets but would be insanely low if converted to US dollars, yen, or euros.
Assuming it follows the Vista Starter edition rules , it will not be available in the U. The user interface takes some explaining. With a name like Windows 7 Home Basic, you would expect it to use the Windows Basic interface, just like Starter edition. It uses the Windows 7 Standard interface, which is not available in any other edition. It is distinctly more feature-rich than Starter edition, offering Windows Mobility Center and some personalization features, like the option to change the desktop background.
It does permit Fast User Switching, but it specifically lacks many of the signature features of Windows 7 Home Premium, such as support for multitouch and Tablet PC hardware. Just be sure to set your expectations accordingly. Next: What's new in Home Premium edition? That feature is unavailable in Starter edition. The N editions of Windows 7 allow you to choose your own media player and software required to manage and play CDs, DVDs, and other digital media files.
You'll need to install a media player or other software to play or create audio CDs, digital media files, and video DVDs; organize content in a media library; create playlists; convert audio CDs to digital media files; view artist and title information of digital media files; view album art of music files; transfer music to personal music players; or record and play back TV broadcasts.
There is no difference in price between the N editions of Windows 7 and other editions. The Windows Media Player 12 download is free. If you want to move up to a different N edition of Windows 7, you should learn more about the Windows 10 upgrade options. If you want to move from an N edition of Windows 7 to a non-N edition of Windows 7, you'll need to buy the non-N edition of Windows 7 you want, and perform a clean installation. Windows 7 More How does the price for the N editions of Windows 7 compare to other editions of Windows 7?
I already have an N edition of Windows 7. How can I upgrade to another N edition? I want to download Windows Media Player
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