Vista: Why Has It Left a Bad Taste?

Vista seems to have left a very bad taste in many people’s mouths… or at least this is what the media would have you believe. Sure, Microsoft’s licensing model is confusing, and since when did Microsoft’s licensing model every really make sense?
Let me start by saying that I swore I would never, ever, ever post something on Vista.
Why? Well, let me tell you I get so sick of hearing the back and forth on Microsoft and how bad Vista is… I swear it’s like watching the 6 o’clock news, and looking forward to who’s been shot, stabbed, or otherwise abused in life… Not that fun!
That being said, I am responsible for setting tactical and strategic technology policy within my company. We evaluated Vista when it was first released, and there was no compelling reason to upgrade; we would have incurred more cost, both in labor and upgrade costs, as well as not seen any significant impact to business.
As always, times change, and I am a firm believer in watching the bleeding edge very closely. My theory is that once the early adopters have lost a few fingers, it should be safe for me to move in.
So I watched, and I waited, and kept watching… and there was a lot of bad press on Vista, some genius negative TV ad campaign (which were really quite funny), and hte entire debacle over whether Microsoft 2.0 would be able to survive post-Billy and without Yahoo!’s advertising business unit…
Well, Microsoft isn’t the dominant enterprise operating system for a reason. I’m not saying 10 years from now Microsoft won’t go the way of Novell, but folks why is Vista receiving such bad press?
Maybe it’s just me (post service pack 1) along with my dual core processor and 4 GB of RAM, but come on…
I wouldn’t advocate just rushing out and purchasing Vista like you would a new iPhone, but if you are upgrading your hardware, don’t be bashful about the new stuff. Embrace the fact that XP is in its silver years and its days will pass into the west. Don’t resist change… Vista really doesn’t deserve all this bad press.
So there, I put my stake in the ground, and that’s all I have to say about that.
Image courtesy of MouseRunner.com
Ken Stewart’s blog, ChangeForge.com, focuses on the collision between the constantly changing worlds of business and technology. Ken is also the Director of Technology at Kearns Business Solutions.




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