Is Vista SP1 Worth the Wait?
As recently reported by senior editor Brandon Dimmel, Microsoft has officially announced information about Windows Vista Service Pack 1 (SP1) and is reportedly scheduled to release it sometime in the first quarter of 2008.
The official Vista white paper from the Windows Vista Blog offers some information about SP1. The white paper notes that "organizations do not need to wait for SP1 to deploy Windows Vista; they are encouraged to begin their Windows Vista evaluation and deployment now." Irregardless of the usual Microsoft epitomical marketing and explanations of the benefits and tradeoffs of SP1, a lot of businesses will wait to deploy Vista until a service pack is released.
Michael Silver, research vice president for Gartner Client Computing says "service packs are a little less important than they were, because Microsoft is more proficient in delivering updates in other ways" such as the Windows Update mechanism. Silver also notes that mainstream adoption of Windows Vista hasn't really started yet.
Despite Microsoft's efforts, enterprises aren't in a hurry to deploy Windows Vista. Simply put, Vista is too much trouble. "Vista is still maturing. It's not as stable as XP--yet," Silver said. David Milman, CEO of computer services company Rescuecom, agrees. "My recommendation to our customers is to wait at least six months following SP1's release before adoption."
Part of the trouble with Vista is the constant change. David Zipken, Windows client senior product manager says "many of the reasons applications broke in the move from XP to Vista were intentional--because of architectural changes." Zipkin further admits that drastic changes such as the UAC (User Account Control) and Windows Presentation Foundation break application compatibility.
Hardware upgrades, compatibility issues, licensing headaches, and too many versions of Windows Vista have plagued its acceptance since it was released.
Due to the constant deployment problems, many organizations are frustrated, Milman said. Recently, he moved a medium-sized business back to XP from Vista because they weren't prepared for the level of frustration encountered from Vista deployment. He also notes that it's not an uncommon occurrence. Deploying Vista requires a considerable amount of fine-tuning. "In two or three years, Vista will be the standard, and it will be a fine-tuned operating system," Milman said. "But it's going to take a bit of time."
A few other things to also note: Windows Vista SP1 really doesn't offer a good reason to switch to Vista from XP, once Vista SP1 is released other new problems will inevitably occur and Windows 7 is rumored to be released in two or three years.
Visit Bill's Links and More for more great tips, just like this one!
Most popular articles
- Which Processor is Better: Intel or AMD? - Explained
- How to Prevent Ransomware in 2018 - 10 Steps
- 5 Best Anti Ransomware Software Free
- How to Fix: Computer / Network Infected with Ransomware (10 Steps)
- How to Fix: Your Computer is Infected, Call This Number (Scam)
- Scammed by Informatico Experts? Here's What to Do
- Scammed by Smart PC Experts? Here's What to Do
- Scammed by Right PC Experts? Here's What to Do
- Scammed by PC / Web Network Experts? Here's What to Do
- How to Fix: Windows Update Won't Update
- Explained: Do I need a VPN? Are VPNs Safe for Online Banking?
- Explained: VPN vs Proxy; What's the Difference?
- Explained: Difference Between VPN Server and VPN (Service)
- Forgot Password? How to: Reset Any Password: Windows Vista, 7, 8, 10
- How to: Use a Firewall to Block Full Screen Ads on Android
- Explained: Absolute Best way to Limit Data on Android
- Explained: Difference Between Dark Web, Deep Net, Darknet and More
- Explained: If I Reset Windows 10 will it Remove Malware?
My name is Dennis Faas and I am a senior systems administrator and IT technical analyst specializing in cyber crimes (sextortion / blackmail / tech support scams) with over 30 years experience; I also run this website! If you need technical assistance , I can help. Click here to email me now; optionally, you can review my resume here. You can also read how I can fix your computer over the Internet (also includes user reviews).
We are BBB Accredited
We are BBB accredited (A+ rating), celebrating 21 years of excellence! Click to view our rating on the BBB.