Microsoft's latest
efforts to persuade customers to upgrade to its much-maligned Vista operating
system have met with a cool response from users.
Historically, Microsoft's first service pack for one of its marquee products
– such as Windows – provides the impetus for users to upgrade. As Gartner
analyst, Stephen Kleynhans recently noted, customers see SP1 as the sign that
the OS has reached maturity and is ready for enteprise deployment.
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But even the offer of free support for using installing Vista Service Pack 1
(SP1) and tools to lower implementation cost, the user response has been one of
stony indifference.
Vista SP1 includes a number of fixes for bugs that have plagued the operating
system, as well as improved support for drivers. It initially became available
to download from Microsoft's website and will be included as part of the
Window's Update feature from mid-April.
But with some users reporting initial problems with installing Vista SP1 –
from problems installing the software from Microsoft's website to unexpected
spikes in memory usage once SP1 was installed – the company was quick to offer
customers help manage the upgrade.
Business users can download the "Microsoft Deployment Toolkit 2008", a
unified set of tools and processes which Microsoft claims can cut the cost of
upgrading from $300 per PC implementation to just $35.
Despite these efforts many users remain reluctant to upgrade to Vista.
According to a recent survey by open source enterprise content manager provider
Alfresco Software based on its 35,000 customers, only two per cent had upgraded
to Vista, compared to 63 per cent using XP and 28 per cent remaining on Windows
2003.
And while SP1 may have alleviated some of the driver support headaches, many
business users would not be persuaded by SP1.
"The cost is not the major factor holding larger organisations back. It is
more the complexity of implementing Vista on a large scale," said Jes Seymour, a
consultant at service company IT Insight.
Meanwhile a spokeswoman for blue chip user group The Corporate IT forum
suggested that many businesses will already have finalised plans for upgrading
to Vista – if SP1 was now to have any impact, it would only be to delay upgrades
yet further. "In the corporate world lifecyles are set and planned far in
advance," she said. But they may "wait and hear about the impact of SP1 before
they upgrade to Vista."
"Even SP1 would not convince us to upgrade," said Alexis Wood, IT production
manager for dating company Allegran Ltd. "Upgrading to Vista would effect our
productivity levels."
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