British agency tells schools to avoid Vista

By Richard Thurston, ZDNet UK
12 January 2007 10:08 AM
Tags: windows, vista, os, microsoft, det, education, agency, school

The British government's schools computer agency has warned that deploying Vista carries too much risk and that its benefits are unclear.

The British Educational Communications and Technology Agency said Thursday that it "strongly recommends" schools do not deploy Microsoft's latest operating system within the next 12 months.

In Australia, the NSW Department of Education and Training has said licensing and implementation costs have stymied mass adoption of the operating system. A majority of chief information officers and systems administrators of Australian companies polled by ZDNet Australia are also in no rush to roll out Vista because the operating system requires too much processing power and doesn't provide a compelling business case to upgrade.

In a further dig at Microsoft, the agency asserts that there are no "must-have" features in Vista and that "technical, financial and organisational challenges associated with early deployment currently make this [Vista] a high-risk strategy."

Tom McMullan, a technical consultant at the agency, told ZDNet UK: "There is not a case for schools to deploy it unless it is mission-critical stable." Speaking at this week's BETT education trade show in London, McMullan added: "There are lots of incremental improvements, but there are no must-haves that justify early deployment."

The agency was similarly dismissive of Office 2007, which is being launched alongside Vista. Although it acknowledged that there are many new features in Office 2007, the agency said most of these were only useful in the private sector.

Microsoft waved aside such caution.

Steve Beswick, Microsoft's director of education for the UK, told ZDNet UK: "Customers should evaluate Vista and test it and decide 'Is this good for learning?' Roll-out shouldn't be stopped if it aids learning."

Earlier this month, the government agency renewed its Memorandum of Understanding with Microsoft for another year. It gives schools discounts of 20 percent to 37 percent on the company's software products.

Richard Thurston of ZDNet UK reported from London.

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