Many CIOs opted to skip the last Windows upgrade, with three-fourths skipping Vista and sticking with XP. However, with the Windows 7 OS upgrade coming out this winter and XP Support going away, it’s decision time.
Windows 7 has been released for businesses and holds tantalizing improvements in security, employee productivity, and bandwidth management. Can IT Pros afford to “play it safe” by sticking with the stable and trusted, but eight-year-old XP?
The good news is that Windows 7 is looking like a solid operating system and nine of 10 companies that have tested it rate it as at least satisfactory with more than a third considering it excellent. “The pervasive view out there is that 7 is probably better than Vista, and I’m buying it,” says Jim Green, CIO of Los Angeles County Public Health, which has about 5,000 PCs. “We’re not applying the old, standard ‘wait till SP1’ approach. The strategy is to begin upgrading as soon as we can.”
According to an InformationWeek case study by J. Nicholas Hoover, Green’s in the middle of a PC refresh and has been moving new PCs to Vista. He says that his employees have the most up-to-date technology at home and want it at work. He sees significant usability improvements in Windows 7, to which he’ll upgrade many of the agency’s PCs.
Another example is ETS-Lindgren, which makes energy measurement and management products. The reasoning is concrete cost savings. Global IT architect Jeff Border says 70% of the company’s 600 existing PCs can run Windows 7 without the major hardware upgrades Vista requires. So he expects he can slow new PC purchases while still upgrading older machines to Windows 7. Plus, he cut licensing costs by negotiating to become an early adopter.
CDW’s Doug Miller presented recently at the Smart IT Sessions 2009 Conference. CDW stays on the leading edge of technology so that it can not only take advantage of increased efficiencies but also offer hands-on expertise to its customers. The company recently deployed the Windows 7 operating system and has experienced faster deployments, increased user productivity, and enhanced security as a result. CDW has also experienced reduced costs due to a decrease in help-desk calls and the elimination of some third-party licenses.
While some may be tempted to hold on to Windows XP, there are many more reasons to make the move to Windows 7, and over half of surveyed companies have firm plans for Windows 7 deployment.
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