Wed Aug 1, 2007 5:06PM EDT
See Comments (13)
More bad news for Microsoft's Vista platform. While it's merely unpopular with consumers, when it comes to business buyers, it's a total non-starter. A new poll shows that a mere 2 percent of businesses are running the OS, and only 9 percent more say they plan to roll it out in the next three months.
The vast majority of businesses say they'll be sticking with their existing versions of Windows, which are working just fine, thanks.
While you might chalk this up as cautiousness since Vista is still relatively new, but this picture is starkly different than what businesses were saying before Vista arrived. A different vendor polled businesses in December 2006 and found at that time that 43 percent said they were planning to jump to Vista.
What's changed since then? The Computerworld story linked above blames skepticism over Vista's improved security claims, but research has shown that Vista is actually doing fairly well on the security front. It may not be a cast-in-stone-solid OS, but Vista has been far from a bonanza for hackers, at least.
My hunch is that businesses are balking for a few major reasons: Their existing hardware can't run Vista (at least not very well), and they know that users accustomed to XP would require substantial training to re-learn how to do things with Vista because average users find the interface to be so different than before. If you've been watching the economy and the stock market lately, you know what the competitive environment is like out there. Who wants to pull all their staff into lengthy training sessions and listen to the complaints of frustrated users who can't figure out where the C: drive went?
Join in the discussion. Here you'll see the comments in the order they were posted.
When I tried to read the story I got "Uh oh! We're having server trouble. Our team is on it and we should have everything back to normal shortly. Please come back soon. ". Running Linux are you? We've been running Vista since the launch. Very few problems. Some software initailly had to be set to compatibility mode, but eventually patches were issued that made the programs compatible. Get off the MS bashing bandwagon!
I just purchased a new engineering workstation. Both HP and Dell offer the choice of Vista or XP. I stayed with XP and will for the near future since compatibility with expensive software packages is a must. I just changed jobs from a large employer who won't be switching to Vista anytime soon due to the hight number of critical custom software systems. The last improvement of IE caused enough grief (noted no such problems with FireFox though).
I purchase a PC with basic vista, NOTHING WORKED, none of my XP work related stuff worked, I return the PC within 2 days of frustation!! I was told that if I wanted an XP working PC to go to a computer shop and buy a used PC. My employer then purchase a new computer from walmart with vista Preiumn and now it seems to be working great!! who knows how long this will continue???
Wow, to message #5, I aggree 100%. I am 26, in computer networking classes. I have the A+, and Network+ from comptia and have been a windows user snce Windows 3.11. I am totally mixed on the whole Vista debate. I want to upgrade to Vista Ultimate but I dont want to at the same time. My brother and I have been looking at Macs for a long time now. I just built a new PC with an AMD Athlon 64 X2 4600+ with 2.0 GB of DDR2/800 ram. PCI Express X16 video card slot with a ATI Raideon X1950 Pro, with 256MB Of GDDR3 video ram. Should run Vista perfectly, especially with SataII hard disk and DVD burner. But who knows?
I wonder how many of the 60 million Vista PCs did what I did. Got disgusted with the whole compatibility thing where no older software would even load, partitioned the drive and loaded XP. I haven't even looked at Vista in 3 months and may not for another year!
Some years back I just HAD to be the first on the block to buy Windows ME. Remember that one? It destroyed a hard drive and it took me forever to recover. Like me, many users are probably saying "never again." I have a business software supplier for some high-end business programs, and the vendors are telling us to stay away from Vista for now.
we have an Vista, but we bought the comp w/vista already so far its okay I ahvent had any problems with freezin up, but I am confused on how to delete the recovery that I put on the wrong drive...I need some help so if nebody has an idea lpez let me know..This is what I did I put the recovery on drive D now what I need to know is if I go ahead and the delete that file can I then start over and try to put my recovery backup in Drive C?
Please enable your browser's cookies to activate the My Tech column.
| Computers | Home Office | Wi-Fi & Networking | Phones & PDAs | Cameras & Camcorders | TV & Home Theater | Portable Audio |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
6 Posted by commorancy on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:28PM EDT Report Abuse
Businesses aren't on board with Vista because of several reasons. Yes, one of them is retraining staff... definitely an expensive time and money issue. But, as another post pointed out, incompatibility with hardware is also an issue. It's expensive to replace hardware. Some people need to use scanners and printers which won't even have drivers. Then there are the security issues. Sure, it may not make a hacker happy, but it also doesn't make users happy either. Constantly having to click 'Yes' to 'Are you sure you want to allow this?' panels gets in the way of productivity. The less movements and clicking you have to do, the more time you can spend on actually working. Microsoft needs to figure out a way to keep the hackers at bay without hampering the end user experience.