Canterbury Uni adopts Vista

Canterbury Christ Church University in the UK has moved to Microsoft's Windows Vista operating system in time for the new academic year.

The computing services department migrated 1,330 student desktops from XP over the summer following a user testing acceptance program in May and June. As part of the migration, the university has also moved to Microsoft's Office 2007 package.

Speaking to ZDNet.com.au sister site silicon.com, head of computing services at the university, Dr Ian Ellery, said: "We want to be a university where students get a state-of-the-art experience. Eighteen to 22-year-olds are very up on what's happening and we have to cater for that."

He added: "Also we are already experiencing software and devices, especially laptops, that are really only designed to run Vista. I think on the hardware side it's getting increasingly difficult to buy a laptop that you can back-convert to XP."

The switch will also mean have a security benefit, according to Ellery. "[Vista]'s more locked down, we can control the desktop better," he added. The decision to move to Vista this year was also partly inspired by the opening of a high-tech learning centre in 2009, meaning the tech team would have little time to carry out a desktop migration next summer.

"If we didn't do it now, we wouldn't have done it for another year and that for me was too late," Ellery said.

All of the university's student desktops are now running on Vista with the tech team aiming to migrate all staff computers by April next year following a staged roll-out. Students will also receive training to help them use the features of the new OS.

Ellery added that although there were obvious benefits of moving to Vista, the case for sticking with XP would become increasingly difficult to justify for organisations.

He said: "A lot of universities will migrate probably for start of term '09 and I think a lot of that is to do with the obsolescence of XP. Microsoft wants us to move and eventually we'll be forced into it."

In April, Forrester Research found that by the end of 2007, just 6.3 per cent of enterprise users were on Vista, although a quarter of the 50,000 business users surveyed said they were planning to make the switch this year.

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Talkback 5 comments

    Christchurch Anonymous -- 16/09/08

    is one word not two

    Two words not one Nik A -- 16/09/08 (in reply to #320112031)

    I thought this was a typo as well cos there's a city in NZ called Christchurch and it happens to be in the region called Canterbury but in fact when you go to http://www.canterbury.ac.uk/ they spell it out as two words.

    So what? Anonymous -- 16/09/08

    Right, so Microsoft have forced the institution into Vista by not allowing manufacturers to ship XP. Wonderful!

    This story would be newsworthy if the institution gave Microsoft the flick and converted to Apple OSX or a Linux variant, rather than rolling over.

    wow MS so hard up get converters into the news Troy White -- 16/09/08

    This story smacks of being an advertorial for Microsoft. All the waffle about new hardware issues with XP is a load of rubbish.

    I've successfully "upgraded" plenty of new laptops for colleagues from to XP without issue.

    Now that there is even a sniff of Windows 7 being released in the near future why even bother.

    why? Matt -- 16/09/08 (in reply to #320112047)

    because it would be like migrating from windows 98 to windows XP.

    Everything your using would break.

    Every tech on the ground knows better than to ask that question, especially with a OS like vista that changed so much.

    Oh and Linux and Mac cost so much more to support. The OSs and software is fine, the support is a pain. Personally however I prefer Linux.

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