ZDNet文章。

原文标题:Windows 7(以下简称Win7)将成为微软最大的成功吗?

Windows 7 desktop
Windows 7 desktop

文章大意:调查了约1100个IT专家,尽管46%的商业客户希望在2009年底以前部署Win7,但很多IT admin声称目前只想用已经很成功的XP(老虎:可以理解,因为IT admin都很懒……)。然而,根据Dimensional Research调查,XP的接受度在当年发布的三年后达到38%,又根据预测,3年后百分之八十(80%)的IT专业人士计划在三年内移植到Win7,事实上比XP当年的接受度高一倍。下图中橙色线是当年XP的接受度,而蓝色线是Win7的预测接受度。另外根据投资银行Pacific Crest Securities对80个企业规模超1000人的商业决策者的调查,数据仍是惊人的,如下:

  • 50%计划在Win7发布的时候升级到Win7
  • 46%计划在2009年底前开始升级到Win7
  • 55%计划作系统升级,而不是在采购的新机上安装

另外:

  • 34%喜欢Win7,但是因为经济原因才延迟部署
  • 12%仅仅因为希望一个成熟的版本(比如说补丁包1出来以后)才延迟部署
  • 微软最大的成就将在于有96%的人说他们喜欢Win7,只有4%的人说不喜欢

最主要的证据大概在于,有一半大企业的IT愿意在Win7发布后几个月内就部署它。这对微软来说是个不能再好的征兆了。

原文:

Will Windows 7 be Microsoft's biggest business hit ever?
Posted by Ed Bott @ 5:34 am

Last week, the Internet echo chamber went crazy over the release of a survey conducted by Dimensional Research on behalf of its client KACE. The survey asked more than 1100 IT professionals about their plans to deploy Windows 7, and the headlines, based on a few preliminary reports, were a predictable mish-mash of Microsoft bashing. The most common themes in the hundred or more stories I scanned (most of them second- or third-hand reports, based on the same preliminary press releases) suggested that businesses are wary of Windows 7 and that IT admins prefer XP.

A new survey says 46% of businesses expect to begin their Windows 7 upgrades before the end of 2009

The most negative headline of all was delivered by VentureBeat, which has backed up the hearse for Windows 7 and is ready to cart it away: Study: Windows 7 could follow Vista to an early grave.

They’re wrong. If the data provided by Dimensional Research is accurate, Windows 7 is on track to be Microsoft’s most successful business OS release ever. And a second newly released survey from a technology-focused investment bank suggests that those numbers are indeed a realistic reflection of how businesses plan to approach Windows 7.

I downloaded the full Dimensional Research report (sponsored by KACE and available in PDF format) and read it closely. I compared actual adoption rates of Windows XP against the projected adoption rates predicted by the Dimensional Research study. My reading of the data suggests that the echo chamber got the story backwards.

Here, see for yourself:

Windows 7 v.s. XP adoption rate
Windows 7 v.s. XP adoption rate

The orange line indicates actual adoption rates for Windows XP in businesses, which were at about 10% after one year and had reached 38% by early 2005, more than three years after XP’s release. The blue line is the Windows 7 adoption rate forecast by the Dimensional Research study.

According to Dimensional Research, more than 80% of IT pros plan to move to Windows 7 within 36 months of the survey date (which was in turn about six months earlier than the expected release date of Windows 7 in September of this year). That would be, by historical standards, phenomenal. Breathtaking, in fact.

Now, I have some issues with the Dimensional Research study, which is lacking some key details. For starters, they don’t offer any information about the size of the businesses that the survey respondents represent. And they didn’t ask about the specifics of their migration plans. So it’s hard to draw firm conclusions.

But the overall trend is confirmed by the results of another recent study, this one conducted by Pacific Crest Securities, an investment bank that focuses on technology. They asked 80 IT decision makers at enterprises with more than 1000 employees about their Windows upgrade plans. The results were startling:

  • 50% plan to upgrade to Windows 7 as soon as it is available
  • 46% expect to start the upgrade before the end of 2009, within months of Windows 7’s release
  • 55% of respondents expect to do system-wide upgrades, rather than upgrading as new PCs are purchased.

That’s astonishing.

Digging a little deeper into the survey results, I noted that 34% of respondents said they like what they have seen in Windows 7 but are delaying deployment for economic reasons; another 12% are delaying deployment “for product reasons,” presumably meaning they want to see the final release and maybe even wait for Windows 7 Service Pack 1. Of the total responses to the survey, 96% said they “like Windows 7,” and only 4% said they don’t like it. An earlier survey of the same group in January had a “don’t like” rating of 12%. Presumably, the increase in approval is based on familiarity with the beta release.

The Internet echo chamber, which is conditioned to run at the speed of Twitter, assumes that any tech product is a failure if it doesn’t achieve world domination in 30 days or less. Businesses, especially large enterprises, move at much more deliberate speeds. I’ve written about Windows adoption rates before (and in fact drew the data for XP adoption rates from that earlier post). Businesses need a year or so after a new Windows version is released to test their in-house software for compatibility and to plan a thoughtful migration strategy. When nearly half of IT pros in large businesses say they are willing to begin migrating to Windows 7 within months of its release, that is a profound indicator of its potential for success.

共有 5 条评论

  1. .

    win 7 是啥?为什么我都没听说过呢?

    十六年前 Unknown · Unknown

    回复

  2. 执子之手

    等着用这个东西了,VISTA的确太垃圾了。。又舍不得降级,我花了钱的,还Business版~~

    十六年前 Unknown · Unknown

    回复

  3. S

    嗯 我也是Vista 很烂 打印机都连不上win7是windows 7,是下一代的操作系统哦,你google一下,可以看到绚丽的触摸屏技术

    十六年前 Unknown · Unknown

    回复

  4. YIR

    广东

    当初我也是很喜欢WIN7的,耳目一新的感觉,各方面都比XP满意。

    六年前 Google Chrome 73 · Windows 10

    回复

    • S

      江苏

      @YIR 现在我都在用

      六年前 Wordpress App 12 · iPhone iOS 12.2

      回复

       

发表评论

您的邮箱地址不会被公开。 必填项已用 * 标注