
In a recent article in PC World, Microsoft Vista's biggest competitor isn't Apple or any other company but rather its older brother XP. "The big story isn't that 32% of the companies we surveyed said that they would start Vista deployments by the end of next year," said Benjamin Gray, an analyst at Forrester Research Inc. "It's that companies have been hugely successful in standardizing on Windows XP." According to a survey of nearly 600 U.S. and European companies that have more than 1,000 employees, 84% of all their PCs now run Windows XP, up from 67% the year before. While XP may have peaked, Gray warned not to bet against the 6-year-old operating system. "There are plenty of companies looking forward to XP SP3," he said. That next hot-fix and patch rollup is to ship sometime in the first quarter of 2008, Microsoft has said, and it will reportedly be XP's last service pack. "Vista's biggest competition isn't Apple or Novell or Red Hat; it's Microsoft itself, it's XP," Gray said. So enamored of XP are businesses that Microsoft may feel obligated to extend the operating system's mainstream support past its current April 2009 expiration date. "I wouldn't be surprised," Gray said, although it might require some additional pressure on the company by its largest customers. The debate of XP vs. Vista has reached the Penn State. Many of my friends have Vista, but I still use XP. I use XP because it has been out longer so more of the bugs have been already worked out, and I don't see me changing to Vista anytime soon.
Comments (1)
Windows XP is a much more solid operating system. I think the big problem with Vista is that Microsoft rushed it too much. They had a deadline for its release that they did not meet and as a result they released a "beta" operating system. The new service pack should fix a lot of the issues in Vista, which should be shipping in Q1 2008 also. I can't wait for Vienna, as Microsoft is redesigning it from the ground up.
Posted by Tim Nary | November 17, 2007 12:59 PM
Posted on November 17, 2007 12:59