Sunday, December 31st 2006
One month after Vista released to manufacturers, there is no major rush to upgrade
It has been a month since Microsoft released their latest (somewhat) public copy of Windows Vista, and there has been no major upgrade to Windows Vista in most corporations. Since Vista is technologically solid, why is there such a slow adoption of the software? There are several reasons, but the most obvious are pointed out in a quote by Russ Cooper, a senior information security analyst at Cybertrust.
The rest of the article shows that the main reasons not to move to Windows Vista are...
Source:
Itworld
I say Microsoft never intended anybody to run Vista prior to January, What works on Vista, beyond Office 2007? I'm going to Vista ... when my VPN supplier tells me that they have drivers that work, and when my anti-virus vendor tells me that they have non-beta versions that work.
The rest of the article shows that the main reasons not to move to Windows Vista are...
- Driver support is buggy
- Security software is still in beta
- Application compatibility is limited
- All the major Vista-compatible software will be released in January.
75 Comments on One month after Vista released to manufacturers, there is no major rush to upgrade
it costs a bomb and adds little funtionality over XP if you install your own AV/ Firewall software and it's a resource hog so slows things down. It looks new but IMO it doesn't really add anything to make it much better than XP, other than DX10 which could have been built to work on XP if M$ wanted to.
It should also be noted that the man quoted above sleeps in Bill Gates sheets and jacks off to PCworld mags at night.
www.cs.auckland.ac.nz/~pgut001/pubs/vista_cost.txt
There's an interview on page 103 of the Jan 07 issue of CPU with Joe Wilcox. He's a senior analyst for JupiterResearch, who does work for Microsoft. In it, his firm's research says that 20% of businesses with 100 or more employees, don't even have plans to upgrade at all. (I'm assuming they mean until it's absolutely necessary) Another 30% said it will be more than a year before they consider it, and half of those 30% said more than 2 years. He went on to say that the biggest push is going to be from the OEM builders. Come late January, Vista will be the only thing being sold on new machines. Microsoft is basically forcing the upgrade to those that prefer the easier route, or don't know enough to build their own pc.
I foresee some nice tools becoming available to sysadmins built on the server side of Vista, but not much on the user side. Forced compliance is one I have been wanting to get a breakdown on for awhile, and it sucks that they took it out of the release, big time loss of clients there.
Or the shit driver support, as MS wasn't releasing the architecture of the OS untill recently, then they want to throw it to the public?
MS tried to maker Vista safer, other companies sued. Next people will complain about all kinds of bugs in Vista which could have been prevented if companies like Symantec would just learn how to program.
It´s also a CPU sucker for ridiculous reasons!
Damned "premium content" :banghead:
I don't get this 'five years old', 'due for replacement' mentality, although I don't think Vista is a bad idea. The 9x platform lasted six years and is still in use on many older machines to this day in its three guises. MacOS has spent basically its whole lifespan looking and performing much the same, with the major releases giving very minor updates to the code and slight UI changes - even they were sparse, System 7 looks exactly the same to me as MacOS 9.2 does, and performs much the same with much the same drawbacks.
Hell, Microsoft are considerably more proactive in that respect. When they build another OS they usually build something that's almost all new, or at least overhauled enough that it's effectively new (98... it's 95OSR2.5 with all the updates and patches preapplied and smoothed!). Things could be worse. And I will eventually migrate to Vista. Just not yet.