Businesses will dodge Vista in 2008

Vista uptake is unlikely to increase dramatically during 2008, according to security vendor McAfee, who said that businesses are "leery" of upgrading from current Microsoft operating systems.

One reason businesses have not been keen to upgrade to Vista is the hardware that is needed to handle the resource-hungry operating system, David Marcus, security research manager for McAfee Avert Labs, told ZDNet Australia sister site ZDNet.co.uk.

"In 2007 there has been less than 10 percent market penetration for Vista," said Marcus. "There hasn't been a huge adoption. Most people haven't upgraded because of the hardware upgrade needed."

There is not enough of a security case for upgrading to Vista, Marcus added. While the 64-bit version of Vista has more security features than Windows XP, XP running Service Pack 2 with security products was adequate for most businesses needs, he said.

"XP is still robust, and is sound with SP2. Most businesses are looking at it from the point of view of, 'Why change out for some nice graphics when XP does what we need?'," Marcus said. "People are leery of upgrading."

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There is, however, a security bonus, Marcus said. Vista would be unlikely to become an interesting target for malware writers until it achieved 20 to 30 percent market share -- a figure that is still some way off.

"Once Vista gets the numbers it'll become interesting to the bad guys, who'll find ways to circumvent it like anything," said Marcus.

Vista 64-bit security features, such as Kernel Patch Protection, which blocks attempts to modify the core operating system, would not be effective against certain types of malware, Marcus warned.

"If you look at Trojans and bots, the majority just sit on the machine and do what they do -- they don't have to root the operating system," said Marcus. Social engineering attacks that attempt to dupe the user will also continue to be a problem on Vista, he warned.

Forrester research suggests that most businesses are keen to stay with XP until at least 2010. In a report, How Windows Vista will shake up the state of the enterprise operating system, Forrester analyst Benjamin Gray wrote that while Vista uptake is currently at two percent, XP is at 84 percent.

"There it is. Two percent! The era of Windows Vista within enterprises has officially started, with a whimper," wrote Gray. "Standardisation on the Windows XP platform has continued unabated, going from 67 percent of PCs last year to 84 percent of PCs this year. And this happened across the board."

Gray said that the majority of businesses will move to Vista only when forced to, by Microsoft ceasing to support XP. The current road map for XP Professional states that extended support will end in April 2014.

"For [mainstream adopters], the justification [to move to Vista] is simply that they want to stay current with Microsoft's support lifecycle," wrote Gray. "Many will move to Windows Vista simply because they don't want to go down the path of supporting a system that doesn't receive security patches on a regular basis."

Just over half of enterprises have no current plans to deploy Windows Vista, according to the research.

Microsoft had not responded to a request for comment at the time of writing.

Talkback 6 comments

    Microshaft Anonymous -- 20/11/07

    And by the time business's are ready to change, something better suited to business will be available. Who knows, but I get the feeling that the day of the fat business OS is over...

    software Anonymous -- 20/11/07 (in reply to #320090208)

    well for one microsoft has already commited to releasing a new O/S in the 2009-2011 time frame as well.

    another thing is that if you read that article its 100% microsfot and that is becuase of Mac, Linux & other o/s's. Linux is growing, Mac is experiencing bugs...
    There will be one day a good demand for linux as it matures further down the road as well as it being a good alternative price wise (excluding support costs).

    Why Would I Upgrade? Next move is to Linux -- 20/11/07

    Why would I want to deploy the biggest blotted piece of $hite software in my organisation for the sake of some pretty graphics? The simple fact is that I have hardware that would need to be upgraded and then to top it off I'd need to upgrade all my software due to that not being compatible with Vista. Then I'd have to retrain my entire user community because Microsoft decided to change the user interface. Why? Why? Why? Wake up microsoft. Support XP or loose your OS in the business market place!

    all in good time Anonymous -- 20/11/07

    In the next hardware upgrade cycle for companies, all computers will be vista capable, so hardware will not be as much of an issue. The most basic budget system on todays market will run vista fine with enough RAM. RAM is now dirst cheap, thanks in part to Vista.

    Dont like the interface? Turn on the classic interface. I dont think much (if any) training is needed with the new interface, all the basic graphical elements and commands are the same.

    Vista is not only more secure (far less security vunerabilities than XP when XP was at same stage), it has more security features (bit locker etc).

    The challenges faced by moving to Mac or linux are far far greater than those of moving to Vista. In 12-18 months this wont be a topic, businesses will be rolling out vista at the same rate they did with XP. Those who dont, will be waiting for the next version fo Windows as its not uncommon to skip an upgrade cycle, many companies went from NT4 to XP, skipping Win2k.

    Time is only a reference Anonymous -- 20/11/07 (in reply to #320090241)

    Well I have been working with MS products far too long to agree that VISTA is better positioned security wise than XP. As stated in the article the actual take up is barily a wimper and as such the script kids haven't bothered to hack in yet as it would be noticed.
    Skipping an os cycle will probably be on the cards for most companies as they try and stay in touch with reality.

    So so (yawn) booring Anonymous -- 21/11/07

    Who knows, by the time the next OS after Vista comes out Bill Gates could be wearing tissue boxes for shoes and building a giant wooden aeroplane in his backyard.

    Methinks the OS should finally take a back seat and web services move to the fore (e.g. gmail, collaborative spreadsheets edited on the web, etc)

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