Windows 7: Corporate Customers Bullish on Adoption Plans
Corporate adoption of Windows 7, Microsoft's new operating system released today, seems to be more a question of when, not if. This is in stark contrast to what happened with Windows Vista, which companies skipped right over; many are, in fact, migrating from Windows XP directly to Windows 7.
Thu, October 22, 2009
Computerworld — Corporate adoption of Windows 7, Microsoft's new operating system released today, seems to be more a question of when, not if. This is in stark contrast to what happened with Windows Vista, which companies skipped right over; many are, in fact, migrating from Windows XP directly to Windows 7.
[ For complete coverage on Microsoft's new Windows 7 operating system -- including hands-on reviews, video tutorials and advice on enterprise rollouts-- see CIO.com's Windows 7 Bible. ]
San Francisco-based Del Monte Corp., for example, plans to fully deploy Windows 7 on its 3,200 PCs within the next 2 ½ to 3 years. "Our goal at Del Monte is to be at the forefront of technology, to be first in class, so we're leading with a lot of Microsoft initiatives. We're an early adopter of Office 2010 and SharePoint 2010," says Jonathan Wynn, manager of advanced technology and collaborative services at Del Monte.
Slideshow: The Top 7 Roadkill Victims on the Journey to Windows 7
Slideshow: 7 Tools to Ease Your Windows 7 Rollout
Slideshow: Windows 7 in Pictures: 10 Cool Desktop Features
Currently the vast majority of Del Monte's PCs are running Windows XP SP3; like many other companies Del Monte skipped Vista, Wynn says, because of compatibility issues. While it's moved some of its users to Windows 7, the larger transition will start in January.
"So far we have 45 business users using Windows 7, and every year we refresh about a third of our laptops and desktops, so we think in about a year we're going to be pushing out about 1,000 Windows 7 machines," Wynn says. "We've got a well-defined, well-thought-out plan as to how we're deploying and managing this."
For one thing, Del Monte users on XP who are clustered with users running Windows 7 can request to be upgraded to Windows 7. Wynn says he will accommodate that request, providing their hardware is up to snuff.
The buzz around Windows 7 from analysts, reviewers and corporate IT staffers is that it's one of the best operating systems from Microsoft they've seen in quite some time. And that's despite concerns in some quarters that migrating from XP to Windows 7 is more difficult than migrating from Vista to the new OS.
Upgrading to Windows 7 a mixed bag
Roger Kay, an analyst at Endpoint Technologies Associates Inc. in Wayland, Mass., says from a technical perspective, it's pretty easy to upgrade from Vista to Windows 7; you just pop the disc in live and you upgrade.


