It’ll work in XP (32-bit) and Vista (32 & 64-bit).
Internet access is required as well as creating a Windows Live ID to activate it.
In 2 years it’ll cost $138. This is geared towards households/students.
For a household (if you don’t want onenote 2007 or the windows live stuff) I think it would be cheaper to buy office 2007 student version-$110. Get AVG-free. Get Spybot Search & Destroy-free. In 2 years it’ll still cost $110 and you’ll still be able to get office updates for free.
For college students, check out if there is a MSDN Academic Alliance with your school. You should be able to get software for very cheap or free. I got OneNote 2007 as well as Vista Business for free this way.
However, this is a cheap way to try out Windows OneNote 2007 and Windows Live Messenger/Mail/Photo gallery, which are included in this service.
wrote, on July 9th, 2008
I got rid of Norton, this sounds like a great deal. I’m sure I’ll give it a try.
wrote, on July 12th, 2008
It’ll work in XP (32-bit) and Vista (32 & 64-bit).
Internet access is required as well as creating a Windows Live ID to activate it.
In 2 years it’ll cost $138. This is geared towards households/students.
For a household (if you don’t want onenote 2007 or the windows live stuff) I think it would be cheaper to buy office 2007 student version-$110. Get AVG-free. Get Spybot Search & Destroy-free. In 2 years it’ll still cost $110 and you’ll still be able to get office updates for free.
For college students, check out if there is a MSDN Academic Alliance with your school. You should be able to get software for very cheap or free. I got OneNote 2007 as well as Vista Business for free this way.
However, this is a cheap way to try out Windows OneNote 2007 and Windows Live Messenger/Mail/Photo gallery, which are included in this service.
wrote, on July 13th, 2008
Sounds very good, smart marketing to do. I think it will sell very well.