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: Windows 7 = Vista 2
by Sabon on Tue 3rd Feb 2009 16:12 UTC in reply to "Windows 7 = Vista 2"
Sabon
Member since:
2005-07-06

They still rake in billions because pretty much every computer Dell and HP and all the other big computer companies (besides Apple obvious) ship one version of Windows (XP) or another (Vista) which is why Microsoft keeps raking in billions of dollars. Until companies start buying an OS from another company that isn't going to stop.

Note that it doesn't matter which version of Windows people buy as long as it is Windows things won't change.

The organization I work for is skipping vista. We barely support it with VPN on personally owned machines.

One of the big problems is that internal programs made for XP don't run without lots of modification on Vista. And this is an org that brown necks Microsoft. Despite that they don't feel it was worth it to "upgrade" to Vista despite being on the band wagon from the beginning and moving to XP before most orgs and companies did.

Maybe that is the reason they didn't want to move to Vista in the beginning. The pain that moving to XP caused. But even today they are not at all interested in moving to Vista. "Maybe" Windows 7. "We'll have to wait and see" is the most definitive statement that I've heard.

We have moved to Office 2007 and finally are removing Access97 off all computers.

Personally I think if we are going to spend a bunch of money to move to a different OS we should move to Linux or Mac OS X. Neither are perfect but then neither is Windows. But both of them are a lot more secure.

Soon to follow are posts about how Windows is just as secure. What I say to those people is, install all the latest patches for whichever version of Windows you use but NO anti-virus software. Also do this for Linux and Mac OS X and use all three for a month.

What, Windows won't be up for a whole month because of viruses? That's exactly my point. And yes, Linux and Mac OS X will all still be up and running.

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