Dell customers want XP, not Vista

Dell installs Windows XP and not Windows Vista

Dell is bringing XP back.

Amid significant customer demand in the United States, the computer maker said on Thursday that it has returned to offering the older Windows version as an option on some of its consumer PCs.

Starting immediately, Dell said it is adding XP Home and Professional as options on four Inspiron laptop models and two Dimension desktops.

There is no change for Australian customers, however. "We were the first to begin taking orders for systems with Windows Vista back in January but we've continued to offer customers the choice to go with XP since then too," said Dell Australia spokesperson Paul McKeon.

Like most computer makers, Dell switched nearly entirely to Vista-based systems following Microsoft's mainstream launch of the operating system in January. However, the company said its customers have been asking for XP as part of its IdeaStorm project, which asks customers to help the company come up with product ideas.

"We heard you loud and clear on bringing the Windows XP option back to our Dell consumer PC offerings," Dell said on its Ideas in Action page. Users get to vote on various suggestions, and the notion of bringing back XP got 10,000 "points," making it among the most popular requests but well below top picks such as adding Linux or OpenOffice.org to its PCs.

Windows XP systems became scarce, but not impossible to find, after Vista arrived. For example, Hewlett-Packard said it would continue selling XP on some machines aimed at small and midsize businesses, while Lenovo has also continued shipping XP on many of its business systems.

Earlier this month, Dell added XP back as an option for small-business customers, but at the time, it said it would not add it back for home users.

"Dell does not have plans to launch Windows XP for home users as the preference, and demand is for the 'latest and greatest' technology, which includes Windows Vista," Tom West, director of small-business marketing at Dell, said in a blog posting at the time.

Analysts say Dell's move is not a good sign for Windows Vista.

"That there is remaining demand from some segment of (the) consumer market points to the inability of Vista to resonate with consumers," IDC analyst Richard Shim said.

There was an initial bump for Vista sales right after its launch, Shim said, but some of that may have been from consumers who delayed purchasing a PC late last year. Sales in the later part of the first quarter were less strong, he said. The overall response to Vista will become clearer throughout the year, he said.

Current Analysis research director Samir Bhavnani said most of the demand for XP he sees is from small businesses, rather than consumers.

"They know that XP works," Bhavnani said. "It's not that they don't want to upgrade to Vista. They just don't want to upgrade to Vista yet."

In a sense, the issue isn't the relatively small number of PC buyers demanding XP, but it's whether Vista is having any affect on the PC market as a whole.

In announcing PC sales data, Gartner said this week that Vista's launch "had very limited impact on overall worldwide shipment demand on a quarterly basis."

Bhavnani blamed some of the lackluster results on a lack of marketing, noting he sees more ads for Apple than for Vista.

"It's been a very soft launch," Bhavnani said. "I think you will see Vista create additional demand for PCs in the back half of this year."

Microsoft product manager Michael Burk said in a statement: "Dell is responding appropriately to a small minority of customers that had this specific request. But, as they have said before, the vast majority of consumers want the latest and greatest technology, and that includes Windows Vista."

The software maker has said it will stop selling Windows XP to large PC makers by January. Smaller computer sellers, known as system builders, will be able to sell XP machines for an additional year.

In a statement last week, Microsoft said such a move is normal after a new operating system comes out.

"Windows Vista is safer, easier to use, better connected and more entertaining than any operating system we've ever released, and we're encouraged by the positive customer response we've seen to date," the company said. "It's standard practice to allow OEMs, retailers and system builders to continue offering the previous version of Windows for a certain period of time after a new version is released."

Like this article? Click below to send it to your mobile for free!

Talkback 11 comments

  1. Gotta say something.... Anonymous -- 20/04/07

    $MS's time has come and gone! I think the fact is, no one cares they just want something that works, and without a $5000 PC to run it!
    **Down with Bloatware!**

    1. Cheap PC Anonymous -- 23/04/07

      my 800 dollar pc from 3 years ago runs vista with a vista experience rating of 5.2 i think its sensationalists that start assuming things.

      Your post clearly shows the section of the market place that are scared of innovation. The section that waits and complains. Its not that its expensive, or that its good, or that its bad, its just that its change. Change means they have to learn. Change means that they will have to change.

      Just like people were worried between windows 3.1 and win 95. the large change with how it all worked made people reluctant to change complaining that 'pcs were expensive to change' or that 'its unneccessary to change, my stuff works as it is'. Then again between 98, or me compared to XP, a smaller change and less resistance, but still some people were complaining about the same thing you are now.

    2. Missed the point entirely Anonymous -- 26/04/07

      I think you've entirely missed the point. People have the right to choose, and innovation doesn't take 5 years when you drop the most innovative features from the OS (new filesystem, all that jazz) and the only thing you've got left is a buggy, insecure (yes I said that, look at the amount of critical errors lodged for Vista already), with old school eye candy flogged from Mac 2 years ago.

      Other point is, why upgrade to vista (or is that downgrade?) when you have no reason to. You don't run out and buy a brand new car everytime your favourite model hits the road, why do it with an OS.

      Innovation is good, bloated crap is bad, and Vista shows little innovation. No OS without any major new features, should, 1. Take 5 years to develop and 2. need 10gb just to run - that's just poor, lazy programming.

      Stop swallowing the MS marketing.

    3. reply to cheap PC Anonymous -- 15/05/07

      If I am happy with xp performance, why should I be forced to change to vista? if I buy a new laptop?
      I like innovation, but vista just looks like a cheap copy of mac software, nothing else.

    4. Vista stop making people upgrade to something they don't what to do -- 22/07/07

      Every new version of windows that comes out you have to update your old software or it does not work. You need bigger harddrives, more memery where does it stop. stop suporting window 98 so you have to update. I still used a windows 98 se computer and it is still the best one.

    5. my $800 pc Joe Bloggs -- 17/08/07

      good for you, I am sooooo happy for your abilities at embracing new technology. You are indeed a light among the dim.
      We all know that vista is an operating system built to allow big brother more inroads into our lives, period.

    6. $5000 PC to run it Anonymous -- 22/07/07

      shop around your getting ripped off.
      Get a generic computer there better and cheaper.
      Gigabit motherboard, Intel CORE 2 DUO E6600, 2G Kit(2x1G) A-DATA 800, Seagate hard drive, Gigabit GF 8600GT video card, LG's Standard 19" LCD Monitor, ANTEC 550watt NEO H.E PSU, and windows is only $2000.00 Vista runs on it at 5.2. XP fly’s on it.

  2. I'm one of them Steve Roper -- 22/04/07

    We needed a new laptop for our office and I placed an order with Dell last week for an Inspiron - with Windows XP, NOT Vista. We chose Dell because they offered this option, among other things.

    Currently, we're running XP on all our office computers, and the initial look I'd had at Vista made me seriously consider Linux as a viable alternative for our company, once XP goes down the tubes. Perhaps that'll change once an SP comes out for Vista, but as anyone in the IT industry knows: "Never buy Version 1.0!"

  3. Vista blocks my view Anonymous -- 18/06/07

    I tried the beta, and tore it out because it wasn't ready. I waited 6 months after the officiial release and installed Vista Business. Then I tore it out again because it's clearly it's not only not ready, it never will be. The lack of driver support is staggering and I could write volumes about the software that won't work, even software that supposedly has been rewritten to support Vista. Even Creative Labs has thrown in the towel and admitted they can't force their software and drivers to work properly - or even install in the case of applications - in Vista.

    1. Vista: not ready Anonymous -- 04/07/07

      Vista IS different to XP (don't know and don't care about Mac) but putting that aside....
      Some BASIC stuff in Explorer does not work properly and/or runs extremely slowly (e.g. copying >100mb size files). When Explorer crashes, everything gets blown away now (unlike XP where it used to recover - not always).
      I like the additional security but the implementation is clunky. I have to click multiple times to run as Admin and it seems like MS have made some Admin functions hard to find (only the very basic admin is readily available).
      I have had numerous crashes and Vista attempts to 'find solutions'. So far it's found zip.
      The Areo UI does not work well with some progs (eg. remoteing). Good thing I can turn it off but it should be 'transparent'.
      I've found drivers to be immature - I've un-installed my finger print scanner, and my O2micro SD driver hangs on 4gb cards and/or running ReadyBoost.
      As usual we are paying MS (and others) for the privilege of beta testing their products; which don't provide commensurate additional functionality but do require more hardware.
      All thing considered, the Linux option keeps looking better and better.

    2. Vista Ultimate really satisfies Desktop General -- 09/07/07

      FInally got all my hardware (printer, scanner, external HDD, etc) to work with my Acer Ferrari 3400 notebook. Now I am happy. All of my software works (ColdFusion 8, Adobe CS3, SQL Server 2005, etc) - and apart from a couple of games that don't work (Diablo and Diablo II) am very happy with it.

Add your opinion


Latest Videos

Sponsored content

Power Centre - Content from our premier sponsors

Blogs

  • Renai LeMay Australian Govt funds IT start-ups
    This week Australia's Federal Government announced it had allocated $3.6 million in funding to 57 local research projects so that they could be commercialised, with many of them being web or IT-related start-ups.
  • Array Google should come clean on datacentres
    It's nice that Google says it has put an effort into making its datacentres more energy efficient, but the search giant's pledges won't mean much until it discloses just how many of the beasties it's actually running.
  • Array US shows what OPEL could have been
    Sprint's WiMAX roll-out in Baltimore will prove the Australian government's decision to worm its way out of the Opel WiMAX contract was a short-sighted, and ultimately damaging, political stunt that has benefited nobody.
  • More blogs »

Tags

Back to top

Featured