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2:14:00 PM
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Most companies don’t plan to switch to Windows 8 immediately after its release, and some may never make the switch, Reuters reports.
The new operating system from Microsoft, which hits the market on
Oct. 26, has numerous touch-friendly features which should make it
equally as interesting to tablet owners as it is to PC owners. Many
business owners, however, think Windows 8 is a consumer-oriented product
which offers few new features to businesses.
“Windows 8 is, frankly, more of a consumer platform than it is a
business platform, so it’s not something that makes any sense from a
business perspective at this juncture. There is really no additional
business functionality that Windows 8 gives you that I see,” Doug
Johnson, head of risk management policy at the American Bankers
Association, told Reuters.
Gartner analyst Michael Silver assesses the vast majority of
businesses think the same. “We believe 90 percent of large organizations
will not deploy Windows 8 broadly, and at its peak, we expect about 20
percent of PCs in large organizations will run Windows 8,” he said.
This is nothing new, as businesses are traditionally slower than
regular users when it comes to adoption of new software. But the 20
percent figure sounds grim indeed — for comparison, in July 2012, more
than 50 percent of enterprise desktops were running Windows 7.
As Reuters notes, however, Microsoft gets paid regardless of
which version of Windows its business customers use. With that in mind,
the company’s primary goal, even in 2013 an onwards, will be to
motivate companies to migrate from the still dominating Windows XP —
even if it means companies would have to downgrade new PCs to run on
Windows 7 instead of Windows 8.
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