PDA

View Full Version : Longhorn To Sell For $1.58



sharedholder
12-01-2003, 07:27 PM
:lol: :lol: :lol:

Although early betas of Longhorn have been showing up on IRC and the Newsgroups for many months, brave marketers in Malaysia are also offering the operating system in public sale.

In a country well known for rampant piracy, such blatant sale of the operating system come as little surprise. If you're not Internet savvy enough to download the Operating System (OS) from IRC or the Newsgroups, that’s no problem. The OS sells for about $1.58, less than a cup of coffee from Star Bucks.

As P2Pnet.net (http://p2pnet.net/ez/index.php/news/content/view/full/281/) points out, Microsoft representatives are quick to state that using the product can present problems for the home user.

"It's not a ready product," Microsoft lawyer Jonathan Selvasegaram told Reuters from Malaysia. "Even if it works for a while, I think it's very risky to install on a home computer."

Other than a curiosity piece, Microsoft Longhorn lacks the ability to be truly usable OS. Many current programs still incompatible (you thought XP was bad) while its stability remains questionable at best.

SOURCE (http://www.slyck.com/forums/viewtopic.php?t=2550)

Marius24
12-01-2003, 07:34 PM
:lol:

&#036;1.58&#33;&#33;&#33;&#33; rip off <_<

hey_suburbia
12-01-2003, 07:43 PM
&#036;1.58&#33;&#33;&#33;&#33; rip off

haha, classic...

john54321
12-01-2003, 09:50 PM
Originally posted by Marius24@1 December 2003 - 19:34
:lol:

&#036;1.58&#33;&#33;&#33;&#33; rip off <_<
I&#39;d rather spend it on coffee :lol: i&#39;ve used longhorn, it&#39;s ok but not worth the money at present.

Johnny_B
12-01-2003, 10:11 PM
&#036;1.58 ?&#33;&#33; :blink:

That&#39;s too much money&#33; :lol:

Who would even want to pay 1 cent for a buggy beta OS like Longhorn?&#33;
Beta testers aka guinea pigs? :huh:

TheFilePirater
12-01-2003, 10:13 PM
fawking 3rd world countries...always trying to beat the US and other contries....

DWk
12-01-2003, 10:17 PM
Originally posted by TheFilePirater@1 December 2003 - 15:13
fawking 3rd world countries...always trying to beat the US and other contries....
what u mean trying to beat? in what aspect?

Kunal
12-01-2003, 10:25 PM
Malasia a 3rd world country? :unsure: :unsure:

anyway TheFilePirater those third world countries have more sense than you yanks :lol: (j/k)

Barbarossa
12-02-2003, 10:40 AM
Originally posted by sharedholder@1 December 2003 - 18:27
"It&#39;s not a ready product," Microsoft lawyer Jonathan Selvasegaram told Reuters from Malaysia. "Even if it works for a while, I think it&#39;s very risky to install on a home computer."

That&#39;s really good of him to say, because this remains true when the official version gets released too&#33; :lol: :lol:

Darth Sushi
12-02-2003, 11:24 AM
You can buy DVD movies for about &#036;1.00 (region 3 :( ) there. 50 cents if you buy more than 20. I would not call it a 3rd world country. They have laws for everything (smoking in public, chewing gum, littering) and they do love inforcing them. (Remember, the American teen who was sentence to be caned? :blink:

Money Fist
12-02-2003, 11:35 AM
ANTI LONG HORN POST......
I LOVE IT


:ph34r: "stealth kill M&#036; Long Shot" :ph34r:

Ma5t3rM1nD
12-02-2003, 12:00 PM
Lol third world country their not even close just shows how narrow minded some amercians are. :ph34r:

balamm
12-02-2003, 12:17 PM
Or how thick and petty some non americans are.



The TWN&#39;s international secretariat is based in Penang, Malaysia. It has offices in Delhi, India; Montevideo, Uruguay (for South America); Geneva; and Accra, Ghana. The Third World Network has affiliated organizations in several Third World countries, including India, the Philippines, Thailand, Brazil, Bangladesh, Malaysia, Peru, Ethiopia, Uruguay, Mexico, Ghana, South Africa and Senegal. It also cooperates with several organizations in the North.





The Asian tigers - South Korea, Taiwan, Malaysia, Indonesia, Thailand, except for their big cities, their maquiladora-type production facilities, a small middle class and a much smaller ruling elite should probably be considered Third World countries as well, since their populations are overwhelmingly rural, agrarian and poor.
http://www.google.ca/search?q=cache:alDRtR...&hl=en&ie=UTF-8 (http://www.google.ca/search?q=cache:alDRtRPdhXIJ:www.thirdworldtraveler.com/General/ThirdWorld_def.html+third+world+countries,+malaysia&hl=en&ie=UTF-8)



The 15 European Union countries, Canada and several third-world countries including Malaysia and Indonesia still favor adopting a new legally binding convention protecting the world&#39;s forests.



I don&#39;t have time for this shit, search it yourself.

ChoeBoi
12-05-2003, 09:57 PM
The Asian tigers - South Korea, Taiwan, Malaysia, Indonesia, Thailand, except for their big cities, their maquiladora-type production facilities, a small middle class and a much smaller ruling elite should probably be considered Third World countries as well, since their populations are overwhelmingly rural, agrarian and poor

I&#39;d just like to point out I&#39;m South Korean and I did go to major countries as well as cities. They do have an agrarian society in far south and in coastal areas, but as a whole, South Korea is no where near Third World. They have running water, food, supermarkets, and such even in the those rural areas. They also have arcades, carnivals, churches, etc.....not anything close to 3rd world to me.