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Canadians speak out: Why we want to save XP

Canadians speak out: Why we want to save XP

By:  Rafael Ruffolo  On: 13 Mar 2008 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

Three Canadian IT managers give their reasons for signing ComputerWorld Canada’s petition to Save XP. Why IMP Group cannot use Vista for its ERP system.

IT managers have spoken and their cry is loud and clear: Windows XP is still mission-critical.

Like previous software upgrades, Microsoft Corp.’s plan to stop selling retail versions of XP this June will leave many IT folks scrambling to catch-up.

To try and stave off the operating system’s impending demise, IT managers from across the country are signing ComputerWorld Canada’s SaveXP online petition. The recently launched initiative allows readers to protest the mandatory Vista upgrade as well as keep up-to-date with the latest on XP support, tips, tricks and industry commentary in the SaveXP blog.

For Wayne Bonaguro, IT manager at Carpenter Canada, Microsoft’s move away from XP is coming just too soon for his Calgary-based foam manufacturing company.

“All our machines run by programmable logic controllers (PLCs) and some of the PLCs we have in existence cannot even handle XP yet,” Bonaguro said. “In fact, the companies that develop these devices, like Siemens and Allen-Bradley, haven’t even begun working on Vista compatibility. We’ve just recently gotten most of our systems running nicely under XP, so to get that yanked out from underneath us is going to be an issue.”

And many of the same sentiments were shared by Alan Pollard, IT director at the Winnipeg-based Law Society of Manitoba, who said that in-house legacy applications have given him fits during his preliminary testing with Vista. A potential upgrade, he said, would cost too many headaches and “a whole bunch of costs.”

“We’ve got a legacy database written back in the olden days that just doesn’t run, so really that’s the end of the discussion,” Pollard said. “That’s why we’re trying to buy a little bit more time before an upgrade. Oddly enough though, the database runs fine in Linux using Wine, so we may actually have to commute in that direction.”

Pollard said that over the next several years, his firm will be looking at thin client solutions for a potential upgrade – an area in which Microsoft currently falls short.

“When you take a look at all the portable devices around, with the iPhone and so on, people are going to want to be able to access their corporate legacy database off their portable devices,” Pollard said. “That’s not going to happen in the infrastructure we’ve got now. And that’s not going to happen with Vista either.”


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Rafael Ruffolo Rafael Ruffolo was a senior writer for ComputerWorld Canada from 2006 to 2011. He was the winner of a Kenneth R. Wilson award for business journalism in 2009.

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