

Amid all the hoopla of Windows 7 there are a few things that were left unsaid because they could put you off. It may be the "best version of Windows ever" but that doesn't make it perfect. There is the DRM cost, the hardware cost, and the download cost.

You would think that an Acer laptop with
Windows Home Basic 7 64-bit and
Microsoft Office Home and Student 2007 pre-installed would be ready to run without much updating. Wrong. So far the
download bill is 560MB in updates and service packs.

So what's wrong with half a GB of downloads? Nothing much (R150) if you have a DSL connection, but a lot more if you have a 3G card plugged in. That could have wiped out your entire month's bandwidth, or cost you
R190, R250 or R1120, depending on your contract and how much you have already used. Bandwidth costs in South Africa are non-trivial.

The downloads included
Microsoft Security Essentials, their new antivirus package, and some of
Windows Live Essentials because
Office Home and Student 2007 doesn't include
Outlook.

Then there is the
additional hardware bill. This is because there are plenty of printers and other devices that don't have 64-bit
drivers. In addition to the new laptop, Penny's aunt has to buy a new printer, a printer cable and a mouse. So a R5000 bargain became a R6000 bargain. There are
more drivers available than at the launch of Windows Vista, but don't hold your breath.

If you are going to upgrade with a clean install, or if you plan to retire your old PC, what happens to all the
WMA files with DRM protection? I have 5 audio books from
Simply Audiobooks that are not available in MP3 format, as well as 2 from
Clear Audiobooks. Fortunately I haven't bought any music this way. The total replacement cost is around $150, because the DRM doesn't transfer from one machine to another, or back to the same machine if you do a clean install. I'm glad I used
Total Recorder to convert these files to MP3. It costs $17.95 which is a bargain considering how much more the DRM replacement cost is.

Isn't it wonderful how one Microsoft technology is used to destroy another? The sooner we get rid of WMA DRM the better.
Update: It seems that my audio books from
Audible.com and
Borders are unaffected, because their DRM is different. But I have 4 Borders books in WMA format so who knows? Time will tell.
Update 22 December: I just purchased
AllMusicConverter Platinum for $20, to convert the .WMA audiobooks that I have bought. It is pretty nifty, and quite quick, given the length of the books to be converted. It claims to work on .aa files, but doesn't. And my emails to their support address have bounced. The WMA conversion works perfectly, although it insists on converting mono files to stereo.
Labels: DRM, Microsoft, Windows, Windows 7