Microsoft Software Assurance

Microsoft Software Assurance (SA) is a Microsoft maintenance program aimed at business users who use Microsoft Windows, Microsoft Office, and other server and desktop applications. The core premise behind SA is to give users the ability to spread their payments for the software over multiple years, while offering "free" upgrades to newer versions in that time period.

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Benefits

The full list of benefits, effective March 2006, are as follows:

All benefits are generated by a Benefits Administrator at the customer organization and can be managed on the Microsoft Volume Licensing Service Center at http://licensing.microsoft.com

Criticism

Software Assurance is often criticized for its expense and the lack of "free" software upgrades within the contract period. The development period between Microsoft operating systems often exceeds three years, therefore requiring the purchaser to renew their software assurance for another contract period, in order to get the next upgrade for "free".

History

Software Assurance was part of Licensing 6.0 and initially only provided upgrades, but around the Office 2003 release, more benefits were added. In March 2006, Microsoft added Windows Vista Enterprise Edition and Windows Fundamentals for Legacy PCs. In June 2011 Microsoft added Windows Thin PC, a desktop virtualization application that allows locked down versions of Windows 7 to be run on older hardware.

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