Linked by Thom Holwerda on Mon 11th May 2009 17:24 UTC
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Member since:
2005-07-06
Vista - despite not really being that bad of a product (imho), many people have the _perception_ that Vista blows. I know many people who stuck with older computers rather than buy a new computer with Vista (or pay for a downgrade!)
XP - it is still a very good OS, very lean compared to Vista - see netbooks. Microsoft must convince people to leave XP if this whole upgrade your OS (or Office Suite!) cycle every few years is going to continue.
Does that help?
It might be true if Windows 7 wasn't so much of a compelling upgrade. The reality is that Windows 7 not only beats Windows Vista in all areas including performance, it in some cases beats Windows XP on the same machine when it comes to performance, lower memory usage, better security and so forth (even with new features being added when compared to Windows XP). Those IT/IS staff who keep up on the news will know what improvements there have been (it is part of their job to keep abreast of the latest stuff in the IT world btw) will know that Windows 7 is an entirely different beast (in terms of quality etc) when compared to Windows Vista.
There area already companies who are looking at Windows 7 and are getting ready to deploy it - so customers are excited that there is an operating system that can step up and replace Windows XP. What I would like to see is heavy discounts for Windows Vista users and for Microsoft to disable that stupid 'upgrade checker' when you try to install Windows onto a computer that had an old Windows operating system but you want to do a clean install instead. That is the one of the most stupid things they introduced. If Microsoft need to verify that there was an 'old version' then they should simply just request the old serial number just like Macromedia Dreamweaver used to do when upgrading from an old version; it used to ask for the old serial number from the product they're upgrading from then the new serial number from the product they're upgrading to.