Disaster Recovery by Scott Mckenzie

Life in the front lines of enterprise ICT management. Scott Mckenzie’s irreverent diary of fact, opinion and gossip about Australia’s ICT managers. You’ll love it until he writes about you.

It won't happen overnight ...

Posted by Steven Deare @ 11:34 15 comments

The only people who won't eventually move to Windows Vista are the Linux and Mac enthusiasts.

There's been a lot of discussion on ZDNet Australia recently about the benefits of upgrading to Microsoft's new operating system. We've covered plenty of cases where large organisations have chosen not to make an immediate switch to Vista, citing no compelling reason to upgrade.

We've had comments on the site from IT professionals who've assessed the benefits and costs and decided they'll wait.

And of course we've had the Linux users who live for the opportunity to make the same jokes about Windows.

But market realities are if you're in a corporate environment, you will adopt Vista. Maybe not this month, maybe not this year, but you will eventually buy or use a computer with Windows Vista pre-installed. That's the market dominance of Microsoft.

The question is not whether corporates will adopt Vista, it's when.

While some Talkback comments have howled with delight at our stories of organisations who've chosen not to immediately go down the Vista path, is such a move feasible?

If I still have 12 months remaining on my Windows XP licensing, is it really necessary for me to discard that and plunge into Vista, bugs and all?

Microsoft doesn't expect the business world to drop everything and install Vista as soon as they can. The average IT manager is more likely to check out the benefits of the OS and consult his PC refresh cycle to see when there might be the opportunity to deploy. This is why vendors like Dell hawk their wares immediately after a Windows launch.

But what of the alternatives? It seems the worst case scenario for Microsoft would be for a customer to dislike Vista so much that they stay on XP, waiting for the next Windows release. Hardly a likely scenario.

The only thing that can thwart corporates moving to Vista is if Apple can convert its momentum in the consumer market into enterprise sales. Or if Red Hat, Novell etc can make a viable business case for desktop Linux.

And that seems a long way off.

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Talkback 15 comments

    Thrown in the towel already? Anonymous -- 07/02/07

    Now if everyone had an attitude like that, we would still have a choice of one car: a ford, or a ford. Thank god you could choose the colour (yeha!).

    people are still using 98 Anonymous -- 08/02/07

    People are still using 98, 'hardly a likely scenario' is pretty likely. It will take some time for everyone to own a machine which is even capable of running vista, if they all ever do.

    Vista EULA Anonymous -- 08/02/07

    Why has no magazine or journalist given any coverage to the the new EULA in which they user consents for Microsoft to scan their machine on a weekly basis and send back information on anything of interest? . That would seem to me to be an invasion of privacy. Yet no one has given any coverage about this?

    Read the EULA Anonymous -- 08/02/07 (in reply to #320074367)

    They're not allowed to obtain *any* information of interest... it's pretty strictly laid out what information they're allowed to transmit. There are plenty of other points of far more importance.

    Vista = XP with tail fins Anonymous -- 08/02/07

    What exactly is the wow about Vista? OK, the user interface looks a little more like apple, which is good. Still I can't resist thinking, that every new product by the Bill Gates Empire is like an American car: too big, to much energy consumption and unreliable, but great looks.

    The WOW is... Anonymous -- 09/02/07 (in reply to #320074392)

    THe WOWabout Vista is .. WOW it didn't BSOD on me in five whole minutes. I have to turn it on now , so going forward all bets are off...

    Friend just installed the MSDN Ultimate version on a fairly robust machine, running industry standard Hardware. Most of it high to mid-high end from respected Manufacturers. Machine cannot run applications. SOund drivers drop off, and freeze the system. Games such as BF2, BF2142, EQ2, lock up the system. Programs such as those mentions, REQUIRE being run as Administrator. Took two clean installs to actually get a running environment, notice I didn't say working.

    XP has all the tools you need, go to Vista with an existing machine at your (and your data's) risk.

    Oh noes! vealmince -- 09/02/07 (in reply to #320074404)

    Riiight. Windows Vista is **** because the people who make important productivity applications like Everquest 2 are such poor software designers they can't even write an application that runs in user mode.
    Sound criteria for business decision making there, buddy.

    The DUH starts now. Anonymous -- 13/02/07 (in reply to #320074415)

    MSDN version? You do know thats a developer test version right?

    Do you even know how to use your computer? Is that two button mouse giving you a headache? Too many features? Sure, make it more user friendly, but seriously, if you don't know what a file tree is, BACK IN YOUR HOLE!

    nOOBetti Anonymous -- 12/02/07

    The industry will adopt Vista because it exists and has been released is your logic?

    I disagree.

    Won't happen soon? Already happening, time to wake up Captain Obvious -- 12/02/07

    Corporates are the ones leading the push to Linux desktop rollouts. Kennards Hire was planning the move in 2005, and put the finishing touches by the end of 2006. I predict that the number of corporate Linux desktops will double by the end of 2007, and double again by the end of 2008.

    http://www.computerworld.com.au/index.php/id;1555287553;fp;4;fpid;1968336438

    nOObetti Anonymous -- 13/02/07 (in reply to #320074523)

    Is Rodney trawling ZDNet for a clue?

    Mate...look at ther Pugeot deal with Novell. Anonymous -- 15/02/07 (in reply to #320074523)

    20,000 Linux desktops and 2,500 servers.

    Every well runj machine room in the country has Linux servers stashed away in it somewhere, now it's all coming to the fore.

    The Germans are migrating, the French are, the Chinese and Indians are doing it as we speak.

    Gates and Ballmer are having nightmares.

    This is but the beginning.

    Technology dead end Anonymous -- 17/02/07 (in reply to #320074714)

    ...sounds like a decision driven by ideology rather than business imperatives. I'd suspect this is the last large deal you see Novell do... hurry up and die already.

    Maybe not Anonymous -- 18/02/07

    I just spent 12 hours of my life that I won't get back installing Vista. That's 2 hours of backing up my 100Gb of data to another 100Gb drive, five minutes of installing 2Gb RAM into the laptop and the remaining 9-10 hours repeating the compatibility process and installing the OS.

    I needed to upgrade because XP is a soul-crushing OS. It screams cubicle-ascetics and lowest common denominator computing. I've been using Macs for work for 15 years and can honestly say we're in a golden age with Mac OS X and the yearly cycle of OS upgrades. Productivity-wise I've found Windows to be about five years behind the pace up to XP. I hold great hopes for Vista as I play on the PC and would like to have a bit more fun and few less headaches. Before I'm dismissed as a Mac simpleton, I'd go on record as claiming to be a Mac guru, and a Windows survivor. I've built five PCs in the last three years as either HTPCs or gaming rigs.

    The reason I'm posting is that I think you could be wrong about non-Microsoft OS users staying away from Vista. Admittedly, if you use Mac OS X you're much less likely to take a backwards step, but if you maintain a PC for gaming or as a home PC, then you'll want to jump into a more modern OS as soon as possible having tasted Mac OS X goodness. Admittedly it's the foolhardy that jump in this early on a major Windows OS upgrade, but I dropped $600 today to be rid of XP. Another reason is that for recent Mac purchasers, getting Vista on your Intel hardware is a very low-risk proposition. You can boot up in Vista and have a play. If it's buggy or you're waiting for drivers to be updated, you can alway jump back into the superior Mac OS X. The "consensus" is that "knowledgeable" buyers will wait before moving to Vista in case things go wrong. By that reasoning, the people with nothing to lose are those who don't rely on Windows as their only OS and are curious.

    I'm in a position where I am completely fed up with XP and will risk the Vista consequences; bring on Leopard and real 21st century computing.

    opportunity after XP : LINUX - MARKED AS SPAM BY AKISMET RedeXec -- 05/12/08

    I respect peoples choice wether it is the Gates way or they change to LINUX.I am using XP for years and can feel it's worth now even more after Vista.I think Windows 7 will be a patched Vista with a lot of features and the money hungry driven mind of Gates.Appart from that i realy like the old lady XP.I got used to this OS and like screwing out the maximum of it.But when XP tends to it's last days my decision will be LINUX.My uncle bought a new PC with Vista installed and as i am the only one in the family working in IT it was up to me to install his printer which worked well on XP but the drivers where not compatible with Vista (a common HP printer),same with dvd burning software and many many settings and other stuff.So it took me hours to solve problems which were solved fast on XP.On my work place we are using XP but connecting and working much with LINUX/UNIX systems.Since i saw how reliable and stable they are,i know my next OS will be LINUX based.I understand people who are not realy geeks and want to stay with the famillar windows GUI.So i do not spot on them.I set up a website with some registry tweaks for XP , for those who may need some modification methods see :

    http://redexec.110mb.com

    Ou , sorry , iam just checking the dates of the posts here.Seems not be be quite actual , but the topic still has it's actuality.

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Scott Mckenzie

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