Cautious business IT administrators are more willing to stay with the devil they know, Windows XP, than risk the devil they don't, even if the latter is the highly touted Windows 7, a research company said Monday.
According to Dimensional Research, which surveyed more than 1,100 IT professionals in March, 72 percent of those polled said that they are more concerned about the cost and overhead of migrating to Windows 7 than they are about continuing to support the 8-year-old Windows XP. Only 28 percent felt the opposite, that they're more worried about holding XP's hand than migrating to Windows 7.
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The results not only illustrate IT's historical distrust of change, but also shows how strongly corporate administrators are wedded to the aged XP, said Diane Hagglund, a senior research analyst with Dimensional and the survey's author. "IT hates nothing more than change," she said, "and in the open-ended comments, there was a clear trend that people wanted to say good things about XP -- things like, 'It's been very good to us.'
"There's definitely a correlation between their satisfaction with XP and their hesitancy to move to Windows 7," she added.
Even though Windows XP officially slips into a limited support phase today -- 7.5 years after it was released, 2.5 years later than for most other Microsoft products -- business users rely on it like no other operating system.
Dimensional's poll found that 97 percent of the IT professionals surveyed said that their companies and organizations are still running XP, by far the highest return for any OS. Vista, for example, was used in just 40 percent of the companies, while Linux was in 32 percent. Mac OS X was in 28 percent of firms.
For those willing to ditch XP, Windows 7, which hasn't even made it to release candidate status, is the clear winner over the proven -- some would say problematic -- Windows Vista.
According to Hagglund, 83 percent of the people polled said that they would skip Vista and move directly to Windows 7. Even more telling, of the IT professionals who said they would upgrade to Windows 7 by March 2010 -- the group most eager to get off XP -- more than half (53 percent) said that they would do so explicitly to avoid Vista.
Only 17 percent of those surveyed said that they'd be upgrading existing Windows systems to Windows 7 in the next year. That caught Hagglund off guard.
"I was really surprised that, even with really positive reviews for Windows 7's beta, adoption would still be really really slow and cautious," she said of the survey results. "They've spoken really loudly, and said even if the product is great, we're going to take it slow."
She put some of the blame on Vista's shoulder. "Negative public perception of Vista seems to have helped build this layer of distrust with Windows 7," Hagglund said.
But the prognosis for Windows 7 now is brighter than Vista's ever has been. Even before Windows 7's release, one out of six IT professionals claim that they'll migrate to the OS in by March 2010, 59 percent by March 2011.
"In June 2008, nearly 18 months after the release of Vista, and several months after SP1, 60 percent said they had no plans to deploy it," said Hagglund. "So Vista was even worse [in IT's eyes], and Windows 7 is not nearly as bad."
Dimensional's survey was conducted for KACE Networks, a systems management appliance maker based in Mountain View, Calif. The report can be viewed at KACE's site (registration required).
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