Linked by Thom Holwerda on Mon 2nd Feb 2009 21:23 UTC
Windows Windows Vista has never exactly been a favourite subject among company IT people. Migrating from Windows XP to Windows Vista isn't exactly a worry-free process, and machines that run Windows XP comfortably may have trouble powering Windows vista. As such, adoption of Vista has been slow. Two years after Vista's release, the OS is still struggling in the enterprise sector, according to a Forrester report.
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RE[3]: Vista = ME
by kaiwai on Mon 2nd Feb 2009 23:25 UTC in reply to "RE[2]: Vista = ME"
kaiwai
Member since:
2005-07-06

1) You've been here less than 5 minutes and now you're doing a sermon on the mound to those who have a little more credibility than you do? have you ever thought that maybe you should listen before opening your mouth?

2) I didn't moderate your post down - but given the lack of content and substantial contribution to the discourse, I can't blame those who did moderate your post down. What have you actually contributed to the discussion besides trotting out the same dead horse to flog again.

3) The economy has not be trotting along at a comfortable pace for the last several years (contra to the Neil Cavuto and Fox delusions); the lack of movement to Windows Vista does not equate to a refuting or Windows Vista, or alternative operating systems.

Companies will move to what ever system yields them the most gains in productivity - if there are insufficient productivity gains then companies aren't going to move; it's not a shunning of something, just a realisation that at that moment in time there is insufficient improvements to warrant the investment required.

Edited 2009-02-02 23:30 UTC

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