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Cool Your Jets, Man! 84% of IT Pros Not Planning to Move to Windows 7 This Year

Even those who are going to find the move inevitable, are waiting for a while, says a new survey of IT Pros. As with every other Microsoft operating system released, the opera is not over until the fat lady sings – which means that it’s best to leave the early grief to the fanboys.

from ZDNet

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A new survey has revealed that 84 percent of IT professionals do not have plans to upgrade existing Windows desktop and laptop systems to Windows 7 in the next year, despite early enthusiasm from beta testers of the new operating system.

According to a recent survey by systems management appliance company KACE, many respondents cited the shortcomings of Windows 7’s predecessor, Vista, as the leading reason for slow adoption of Windows 7, with software compatibility, cost of implementation and the current economic environment also major concerns.

The vast majority, 83 percent, said they are likely to skip Vista altogether and eventually migrate directly to Windows 7, according to the survey.

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The research, which polled more than 1,100 IT workers, showed that IT departments of all sizes have concerns about moving to Windows 7, and 50 percent are considering moving from Windows altogether to alternative operating systems, such as Mac OS and Linux. That’s up almost 10 percent from a similar survey conducted last July.

The black eye that is Vista may be to blame.

“The research shows that despite the early enthusiasm for Windows 7, organizations are still wary about adoption, demonstrating what could be described as an even overly cautious approach,” said Diane Hagglund, senior research analyst for Dimensional Research and the survey’s author. “Negative public perception of Vista seems to have helped build this layer of distrust with Windows

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A quick take on the findings from the survey:

• 84 percent of survey respondents have no plans to upgrade existing Windows desktops and laptops to Windows 7 next year;
• 72 percent indicated they are more concerned about upgrading to Windows 7 than staying with an outdated XP operating system;
• 50 percent revealed they have considered moving from Windows to an alternative operating system, and 27 percent of those cited Mac OS as the top alternative;
• Almost 60 percent of survey respondents do not presently have a tool in place that automates operating system migration;
• Economic factors, such as budget freezes and staff reductions, were cited as other reasons to not immediately adopt Windows 7.

Finally, KACE says 72 percent of survey respondents view a tool to help migrate operating systems as something that helps save time and effort (naturally, the company offers such an approach).

Of course, that 50% considering a move to another operating system will not all do it, but the numbers have never been so high. All the fanboy speak, and FUD from Microsoft cannot erase the obvious, Windows Vista clearly was and is a dud, because perception is reality.

Microsoft really stepped in it with Vista, and the opinions of many have nothing to do with the current state of that OS. The public opinion has more to do with how long it took to deliver so little.

Take your time, if adoption is slow at first, the eventual pricing will go down, and perhaps it may bring something extra to the Ultimate version again – more than promises.

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I went to the hardware shop. I said, “This riding lawnmower is stupid.”
They said, “Next time, you get on top.”     - Emo Philips

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