I can understand the limitation of the Starter Edition of Windows 7.. basically give them a taste of the crack and get them addicted..
Now so long as this is limited to only the starter edition.. then great. But I run Windows 7 Ultimate Edition x64.. with the capability for use of multiple cores and being able to use more than 128 GB RAM DDR3.. this OS is definately designed for massive multi-tasking.
Windows 7 2 limitations are legacy software support that afficts freelanced code in software prior to DirectX 9 and V C++ .NET and the other limitation is currently the hardware available on the market today at the consumer lvl.
Now I see MS using the Starter package as Here, try this out and see how you like it.. but I feel that something like this could backfire for MS..
What they should do is allow Corps to have a full copy of Ultimate Edition (since like Vista, the CD Key is what allow features to work / not work).. and allow a Corp exec to use the software for 30 days free.. after which they would either have to buy a key, or uninstall..
The only way to truly evaluate an OS is by putting the full thing through its paces.. not limiting the capabilities of the whole picture..
Would you buy an OS based on 1/100th of its capabilities, or would you buy it after testing the OS out to its max potential for your particular industry need?
IMHO.. a poor business decision for MS and Apple if they keep going forward.
I use to work for a Data Entry service for AT&T for account transfers and new accounts.. requires a minimum of 6 applications onpen at once.. There is no way for a Limited starter edition to even be tested by the IT department to evaluate the software because the base Starter kit would be incapable of allowing full testing in the Production department environment..= FAIL for MS / Apple.. Testing would have to be done on maybe the Basic edition of the Enterprise Edition to get proper results of the OS with thier software environment.