The other thing is that when you spend the $130 for the Mac upgrade, it's a complete system upgrade. You don't have to already have Mac 10.3 to install Mac 10.4. You can install the new operating system over the old one and keep all your settings, programs and files, or you can format the drive and do a completely clean install. It never checks to see if you have a previous version. Finally, to get a fully functional copy of Windows Vista, you have to shell out $400 (that's retail, and there will probably be some pricing discounts), but that's still a lot of dollars. For $200, you can buy a family license for OSX, and completely upgrade five Macs, with no requirements for previous versions, etc, for $200. That's half the retail price of one fully functional copy of Vista, and there aren't the myriad "Windows rules" in the Eula. Basically, you agree to not reverse engineer the OS or run it on more machines than the license allows. Other than that, if the OS is capable of it, you can do it. There's no "don't run the system in a virtual machine unless you pay for the full version and even if you pay for the full version, don't run DRM content on the virtual machine" caveats.
I don't understand Mac users. I just mention one thing about Apple and you come back with a essay about how much better the Mac license is than Windows. Geez...
Wow are you going to spew lies or what?
For 400 dollars you can get 4 full versons of windows Vista, because you see Vista Basic is only $97 OEM. If I were to buy the upgrade version its only $2 more, but also you can do a clean install of it. For $309 I can get a family pack of Ultimate, along with 2 Premiums.Which both of those have more to offer than OSX, so you cant compare.
ALso every upgrade disc you get is actually a full version of the OS and you dont need to have an OS installed, there is a simple work around that is well known now.
ANd lets not talk about the OSX EULA, there are quite a bit of rules for that OSX has too, so dont come around assuming that MS is the only one that has a big bad EULA. All OS and software in General is not yours, ever, you are only being allowed a license to use it for as long as that company sees fit. For example OSX runs perfectly fine on any PC that has the required hardware, it is however against the EULA of OSX to install it on that machine, yep some freedom there.