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Windows users unite! SaveXP comes to Canada

Windows users unite! SaveXP comes to Canada

By:  Greg Meckbach  On: 11 Feb 2008 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

ComputerWorld Canada launches a campaign to rally enterprise users who aren't ready to set their operating system upgrade plans according to Microsoft's schedule. Make your voice heard

Analysts agree some IT managers will be reluctant to upgrade to Vista.

“People generally don’t like to be told they have to change and by Microsoft releasing the new operating system there’s a lot of speculation that users have to change towards the new product,” said Michelle Warren, senior research analyst with Info-Tech Research Group of London, Ont.

“I think that’s the root cause of a lot of the petitions, that they are out asking Microsoft to hold off.”

Warren added Info-Tech is advising users to consider upgrading to Vista once the first package of bug fixes, dubbed Service Pack 1 (SP1), is available.

Service Pack 1 to Vista was released to manufacturing last week, and Microsoft says it will be available for download in mid-March.

Service Pack 1 was designed to solve problems with the installation of some device drivers and to let users move and copy files more quickly. Users who continue to use XP run the risk of having an archaic operating system, warns Rob Enderle, principal analyst at the San Jose, Calif.-based Enderle Group.

“The reality is, Windows XP has run out of steam,” he said. “The code base is simply too old and the level of change that’s occurred in terms of threats and hardware is just too great, and the product just doesn’t have the breadth to continue on. That’s why Microsoft is pulling the plug and to be clear, the (original equipment manufacturers) do not want Windows XP to be continued” so they can get users to buy new hardware.

One Canadian organization is waiting until next year to upgrade. The Canadian Cancer society’s Ontario division, which has 40 branch offices, is planning to do a small test pilot this year of Vista.

The Ontario division’s IT director, Gerry Holmes, said he plans to test the new operating systems and prepare his staff for a full-scale rollout next year. The halt to sales of XP this year will not force him to upgrade any faster.

“The only thing that would drive us to do a forced upgrade is when the applications, the stuff that you’re buying off the shelf, no longer runs or has decreased functionality,” Holmes said. “We would tend to be driven by the other applications rather than driven by Microsoft itself.”

Some IT managers may prefer other operating systems, such as Linux, Warren said.

“Vista has a totally different look and feel to XP,” she said. “Because it’s such a different operating system there’s an impetus right there to look at other options.”

Despite its touted security advantages, Info-Tech is advising Vista users not to rely solely on Windows Firewall for their security.

“Vista has some really advanced security features over XP, definitely,” Warren said. “One of the main selling features is it offers IT departments more control, removes it from the users and puts more control into the hands of the IT managers, so that enables more secure environment for inbound and outbound traffic.”










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Greg Meckbach Greg Meckbach Greg Meckbach is editor of Network World Canada and has worked for ComputerWorld Canada, Communications & Networking and Computing Canada.

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