Dawinderpal Sahota, Computing, Friday 27 August 2010 at 16:47:00
As the deadline for moving to Windows 7 approaches, businesses will have to
dig deep to keep their operating systems up-to-date
Demand for qualified Windows 7 migration IT staff is expected to far exceed This excess in demand will lead to personnel charging higher service rates, Microsoft will stop supporting the XP and 2000 operating systems (OS) in According to Steve Kleynhans, research vice president at Gartner, businesses ?The vast majority of companies have always wanted to do OS migrations as ?The problem with the attrition model for Windows 7 is that businesses don?t He added that this is a problem that is worldwide because very few businesses There are three ways that business can migrate to Windows 7. The first is by replacing all PCs in the business with new PCs with the new The second option is to migrate each PC to Windows 7, which will cost between However, this third option is only viable if the business has already planned Moving to an open source operating system or shifting to using Apple Macs
supply in 2011 and 2012, as companies move from Windows XP and Windows 2000 to
Windows 7.
according to analyst firm Gartner.
2013. Other vendors will stop supporting them even earlier. This means
businesses will have no choice but to plan their migration to Windows 7 over
the next two years.
tend to migrate to new operating systems by using what is known as attrition.
That is, replacing PCs over the course of their normal life cycles and bringing
new machines in fully equipped with the new OS.
slowly as possible. OS migrations are disruptive, costly and they don?t always
matter that much to the user,? he explained.
have enough time. CIOs have to plan it so that they?ve finished migrating
systems by sometime in 2013.?
have migrated to Windows Vista, and the fact that they will all need to migrate
to Windows 7 quickly will put a huge burden on qualified migration workers.
OS which, according to Gartner estimates, will cost between $1,205 (�779) and
$1,999 (�1,292) per PC, depending on how well-managed the environment is, for a
10,000 PC environment.
$1,274 and $2,069 per PC. The third option is to migrate to a hosted virtual
desktop environment (HVD) instead of PC migration.
to move to a hosted environment. This is because there are incremental costs
involved in the additional datacentre and network infrastructure needed to run a
HVD. HVD also carries an additional IT support staff overhead.
will not be cheaper than migrating to Windows 7, according to Kleynhans, but he
said that there are tools available to help businesses automate the migration,
which could help bring down costs.
Full story at http://www.computing.co.uk/computing/news/2268880/windows-migration-won-come
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