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Windows 7: Will you or won't you?

Windows 7: Will you or won't you?

By:  ComputerWorld Canada staff  On: 20 Oct 2009 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

IT managers talk rollout plans for Microsoft's new OS

 

In theory, had all applications been certified, Crivianu-Gaita said the rollout would be done by individual department within a very timely schedule in order to standardize as much as possible.

 

But will our customers?

 

Software development consultants at ObjectSharp made the jump to Vista, and they’re already migrating to Windows 7. But principal consultant Bruce Johnson said his clients — who develop on the Windows platform — have been more cautious.

 

“The vast majority of our clients did not perform the upgrade (to Vista),” he wrote in an e-mail interview. “The reason for that was almost universally lack of power on the machines or potential issues with driver compatibility. Two years after its release, the driver problems seem to have gone away. So what our clients are left with is the lack of power. There is no compelling reason to upgrade from XP to Vista when doing so would require additional memory or CPU to run.”

 

ObjectSharp’s consultants have started the Windows 7 transition for performance reasons; it takes less CPU power and memory to run than Vista. Since those were the major impediments to customer adoption of Vista, that should bode well for Windows 7.

 

But Johnson said there are other barriers.

 

There’s no direct upgrade path from XP, so an OS upgrade means having to reinstall applications as well. “For some of our clients, this is a significant deal,” he wrote.

 

“Developers, in particular, have to reinstall a large number of applications to get back to their starting point and while the are some benefits to Win7, there aren’t enough to make it worth taking the four to eight hours (or longer) to reinstall. At least not yet.”










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