Linked by Thom Holwerda on Thu 2nd Aug 2012 22:36 UTC
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Member since:
2006-01-06
A. Windows 8 is not an enterprise-focused release. There are some features (fast boot, shutdown, lower power consumption, built-in hypervisor, etc) that would be appealing to Enterprise. But ...
B. Enterprises have just deployed to Windows 7. They generally don't upgrade to every OS release but, rather, skip every other. I think that Windows 8 will probably follow that same pattern.
C. I would expect that the Windows8-style-UI will evolve over time as new data is collected. Metro is a bold move on Microsoft's part -- and definitely controversial -- but it's something that the company definitely had to do to compete with the encroachment of the iPad.
Not sure what you mean by "save". Even Vista, which was a mediocre OS, sold a couple hundred million licenses. If that's failure, Microsoft would probably not mind failing.
I don't think you have a firm grasp on the future. More and more devices are moving to touch every day. It's going to be difficult to find devices that don't support it within the next 5 years.