A New World on the Business Desktop?
In a just-released poll of more than 250 of its clients, PatchLink noted that only 2% said they are already running Vista, while another 9% said they planned to roll out Vista in the next three months. A landslide majority, 87%, said they would stay with their existing version(s) of Windows.That's a big difference from what I've seen in past cycles. Old versions of Windows would stick around for years - far longer than most people generally thought. I can remember that when Windows 95 came out, at least a third of companies were still running some amount of Windows 3.1 several years after the new platform's introduction. Businesses prefer the devil they know.
Those numbers contrasted with a similar survey the Scottsdale, Ariz.-based vendor published in December 2006. At the time, 43% said they had plans to move to Vista, while just 53% planned to keep what Windows they had.
But if this study is actually representative, then the results have to be stoking the fear furnaces in Redmond. The company simply cannot survive financially without heavy adoption of new versions of Windows, and business buyers have generally been more pervasive adopters. New machines will likely run with some version of Windows, but Microsoft also needs older machines to upgrade. Here's another clip from the article:
Although Microsoft recently announced it had shipped 60 million copies of Vista so far, it has declined to specify how many buyers are businesses, or even what percentage of the estimated 42 million PCs covered by corporate license agreements have actually upgraded to Vista.What is the problem? The article speculates that it may be because of changed perceptions of what Vista would add from the security front. My guess is that the reluctance has much more to do with the many problems that people have reported with Vista - often slow operation, even on machines designed for it, and the difficulty in installing the operating system on existing machines. Comapnies like hardware to last at least 3 to 5 years. If you want to upgrade to Vista, you pretty much have to go for new or very recent hardware, as I understand it. That means the software has an effective added cost of at least hundreds of dollars, which is really expensive, particularly if you have to replace a whole lot of machines.
Attempts to supplant Microsoft's dominance in the office software world by an open standard not owned by any one party seem to have gone nowhere. LinuxWorld basically threw in the towel on the OpenDocument standard. So Microsoft is probably safe on that front - for now. But if the OS landscape starts to change, then its grip on other aspects of software life might also loosen.
And now we add the third thread. CareGroup CIO John Halamka, an influential chief information officer, has been publicly testing various desktop operating systems, reporting on progress in CIO Magazine, and sees a shift in strategies that is starting to make sense:
"A balanced approach of Windows for the niche business application user, Macs for the graphic artists/researchers, SUSE for enterprise kiosks/thin clients, and Ubuntu for power users seems like the sweet spot for 2008," says Halamka. "I’ll continue to watch the marketplace evolve and report on my progress. For now, the only devices I’ll be carrying are a Dell D420 with Ubuntu Feisty Fawn and a BlackBerry 8707H e-mail device."If a few other influenctial CIOs also start moving down this route, business as a whole could see the biggest single computing realignment since the shift from the mainframe to the PC.
Labels: CareGroup, Halamka, Microsoft, operating system, Vista, Windows

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