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    Microsoft Counts on App Support for Vista

    Written by

    Peter Galli
    Published December 11, 2006
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      Microsoft has taken pains to demonstrate that Windows Vista will have ample application support, particularly in the fields of anti-virus and security, so as to give businesses more incentive to upgrade to the latest version of Windows.

      The Vista development team made a special effort to get anti-virus vendors involved early in the design program, said Dave Wascha, director of Microsofts Vista partner program, in an interview. “We spent a significant amount of time with those partners making sure that their products are ready to go,” Wascha said. “We know [security] is one of the key mission-critical applications without which enterprises wont move forward with [Vista] deployments.”

      However, application support is only part of the corporate adoption picture. A study of 112,113 business PCs from 472 North American companies conducted by Softchoice, in Toronto, found that about half currently meet the minimum requirements for Vista and that only 6 percent meet the minimum requirements for Vista Premium.

      /zimages/5/28571.gifClick here to read more findings from the study.

      “At the time of release, 71 percent of the PCs met the system requirements for Windows XP, whereas only 50 percent of the PCs included in this study meet the minimum requirements to run Windows Vista. This difference suggests that a jump in system requirements to run Vista presents a significant barrier to adoption,” Softchoice services consultant Dean Williams said in an executive summary of the report.

      For application support, Microsoft, of Redmond, Wash., made sure that Vista developers and designers met with ISVs of every application type early and often to answer questions and get the ISVs views on what should be high-priority goals for Vista features and performance, Wascha said.

      /zimages/5/156809.jpg

      The effort apparently worked, since most of the major security software vendors—including Symantec, CA, Trend Micro and Sophos—greeted the Nov. 30 Vista launch with announcements that they were either getting ready to ship Vista versions of their products or developing and testing these products.

      Symantec announced it will release its Symantec AntiVirus Corporate Edition 10.2 for Vista in December and that its AntiVirus Enterprise Edition 10.2 now includes Symantec Client Security 3.1 to provide anti-virus and anti-spyware protection for Vista clients. The company also said that Symantec Mail Security 8300 Series and Symantec Enterprise Vault will provide messaging management services for customers migrating to Microsoft Exchange Server 2007, which also launched Nov. 30.

      /zimages/5/28571.gifWill your PC run Vista? Click here to find out.

      Autodesk, producer of CAD applications, worked with Microsoft to learn how to build into its products the new XPS (XML Paper Specification) technology that was introduced with Vista. XPS is an XML-based document format that allows many types of documents to be shared and read by users regardless of whether the application that was used to create the document is installed on their computer.

      In all, Microsoft expects that ISVs will ship more than 1,000 Vista applications between now and April 2007, Wascha said.

      As Microsoft partners, “part of the commitment that they make is that they are targeting a Windows Vista-specific version of their products and that they are going to launch generally around the time that we are going to launch Vista,” Wascha said.

      However, customers should take this claim of 1,000 available Vista applications with a grain of salt, said Mike Cherry, an analyst with Directions on Microsoft. Cherry questioned whether even a majority of what Microsoft is claiming as “Vista applications” were developed specifically for Vista, rather than simply being products that currently run on Windows XP and that also are capable of running on Vista.

      A good measure of an applications Vista pedigree, Cherry said, is whether it “can exploit the Windows presentation framework and the communications framework.” Native Vista applications should also take advantage of .Net Framework 3.0, Cherry said.

      Next Page: Hurdles to Vista adoption.

      Page 2

      Hurdles to Vista Adoption

      A study of 112,113 business PCs from 472 North American companies found:

      • Only 50 percent meet the minimum requirements for Vista
      • 94 percent do not meet the system requirements for Vista Premium
      • 41 percent will need RAM upgrades, and 12 percent will need CPU replacements to meet Vista requirements
      • 78 percent will need RAM upgrades, and 16 percent will need new CPUs for Vista Premium
      • 27 percent of businesses plan to wait one to two years before rolling out Vista; 33 percent will wait between six months and one year

      Source: Softchoice

      Check out eWEEK.coms for Microsoft and Windows news, views and analysis.

      Peter Galli
      Peter Galli
      Peter Galli has been a technology reporter for 12 years at leading publications in South Africa, the UK and the US. He has comprehensively covered Microsoft and its Windows and .Net platforms, as well as the many legal challenges it has faced. He has also focused on Sun Microsystems and its Solaris operating environment, Java and Unix offerings. He covers developments in the open source community, particularly around the Linux kernel and the effects it will have on the enterprise. He has written extensively about new products for the Linux and Unix platforms, the development of open standards and critically looked at the potential Linux has to offer an alternative operating system and platform to Windows, .Net and Unix-based solutions like Solaris.

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