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I agree with Josh, we have gotten in the habit of criticizing something
before we even get a look at it just because Vista wasn't what most of us
would run (probably because of the media always painting Microsoft as the
bad guy and apple as the heroes of the computer world). I personally dislike
the Metro look but I'm excited for Win 8 overall. I've never run into an
issue with Windows 7 that I wouldn't expect to happen on any other OS.
Computers are by nature going to have issues, weather it is software,
hardware or the user. We need to learn what those common problems are and
remember how to fix it, that is why we are the experts.

With all that said will I be deploying Win 8? No not right away, no business
should (unless extensive testing has been done). But I will be taking a look
at it and see what it has to offer and go from there. I do NOT play on
running Win 7 till the end of its life cycle. I guarantee you I'll be going
to Win 8, or 9 or whatever is out there in the future. Like it was said
earlier, we are the Tech people, we need to be ahead of the curve and the
ones learning the new stuff.

/rant off
Tim Heckaman



-----Original Message-----
From: Wortz, Joshua [mailto:[log in to unmask]] 
Sent: Monday, August 06, 2012 8:45 PM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Re: [MSUNAG] Windows 8 Reaches RTM Milestone

"Weird problems" is a phrase that I hear regularly from users. I agree that
Vista was different from XP, but it was a move in the right direction. I
personally deployed over 1200 dells on windows Vista. It took time to learn
the nuances and understand how it worked in comparison to XP (ie User
Account Control). Because it's not intuitive doesn't mean it's broken.

I agree blind belief isn't good. That's why you should take advantage of the
public RC's that Microsoft does to see what the in work product is going to
be like and, as I said, test it before deploying it.


________________________________________
From: STeve Andre' [[log in to unmask]]
Sent: Monday, August 06, 2012 5:29 PM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Re: [MSUNAG] Windows 8 Reaches RTM Milestone

Um, Vista *was* something to avoid.  I had many friend who abandoned it in
favor of XP after experiencing really weird problems.  Vista reeked for many
people.  One friend was brought to tears when of three Vista crate- mate
Dell's, one was perfect, one slightly broken and the last a disaster.
This was three identical machines using the same set of software. I helped
out on this debacle, and it convinced me that Vista wasn't useful.  MS
agreed with that, too--they repeatedly said that 7 would be better, and it
is.

Blind belief in MS isn't good.  They have had ups and downs with their line
of OS's.  Windows 2000 *was* more stable than XP in machine control
circumstances.  I know a company that uses 8 of them on a private net.
One machine was converted to XP and died, needing a reboot about two weeks
into service.  The 2k machines go for 9 months between reboots, and only
then because of shop retooling which moves them physically.

It is not technophobia--it's experience.  Win 7 does seem to be a better OS,
but it still acts weirdly--I bought three identical machines, put the same
software on them and had to rebuild one of them because it had problems with
EBS and Acrobat (for a few documents, only) with the
other two being fine.   Great.

You might be surprised at how many companies don't jump on the current OS
bandwagon...

--STeve Andre'


On 08/06/12 17:01, Wortz, Joshua wrote:
> I'm really amazed at the amount of technophobes among the Network
Administrators Group. It's still Windows, it still uses sysprep, and newer
computers are going to be coming out with touch screens to work with the new
interface. Why remove key hardware features from your users?
>
> I understand that there is going to be a testing phase to make sure that
necessary software is functioning correctly but that shouldn't take more
than a few weeks to test and verify. Otherwise you could choose to believe
the PC vs Mac adds and think that Vista and Windows 7 where something to
avoid.
>
> Most of us on this list are IT professionals, yet we there are a lot of us
who are complacent with still using XP which is 11 years old now. If you are
on an 11 year cycle then that means the last prior OS was probably Windows
3.0 released in 1990. Unless, somewhere in the last 11 years either your
technical prowess plateaued or you've grown lazy.
>
> Sorry but the rest of the world is still moving and we don't get the
luxury of camping out in this field.
>
> Josh
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Kwiatkowski, Nicholas [mailto:[log in to unmask]]
> Sent: Monday, August 06, 2012 4:30 PM
> To: [log in to unmask]
> Subject: Re: [MSUNAG] Windows 8 Reaches RTM Milestone
>
> Dave,
>
> Microsoft offered a "downgrade" license for Vista to XP for a long time.
They offered a downgrade license for W7 initially too (they may still do
it).
>
> If you ordered a PC from Dell or HP you could order it with Windows XP up
until a little while ago.  I ordered a machine for our office about a year
ago and still had XP pre-installed by Dell.  I think what finally killed the
XP pre-installs was that everything was going 64-bit, and memory
requirements finally exceeded what the OS could handle.
>
> I would imagine that you can order Windows 7 pre-installed on a PC with a
downgrade license for quite a while.  Microsoft alluded that W7 was going to
be another of their 'extended support releases', so this may be happening
for a while.
>
> -Nick
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: David McFarlane [mailto:[log in to unmask]]
> Sent: Monday, August 06, 2012 4:02 PM
> To: [log in to unmask]
> Subject: Re: [MSUNAG] Windows 8 Reaches RTM Milestone
>
> So, are folks really planning to keep ordering machines with Win7 instead
of Win8 as long as possible, and then reformat Win8 machines to install Win7
after they can no longer buy machines with Win7?  That's fine, but, depite
an earlier comment, it does seem to involve a lot of "involuntary" action
:).
>
> -- dkm
>
>
> At 8/6/2012 03:51 PM Monday, Gary Schrock wrote:
>> We were able to order machines with XP for a long time after Vista 
>> came out, can't remember if it was all the way up until 7 came out or
not.
>> Now, you couldn't walk into Best Buy and get a machine without Vista 
>> (for that matter, I think the home stores of the various PC 
>> manufactures didn't give the option, I think it was mainly their 
>> business oriented stores).  There were some laptops that I ran into 
>> that were difficult to get drivers for XP, so that's really what to 
>> me became the biggest issue.  7 ended up decent enough that one 
>> didn't really need to avoid it.
>>
>> I'm guessing MS is going to get the same type of reaction from 
>> businesses for Win8 as they did for Vista, and get forced to keep Win
>> 7 around far longer than they might want to.
>>
>> On Mon, Aug 6, 2012 at 3:47 PM, David McFarlane <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
>>> Indeed, but can we ever voluntarily opt out of eventually
>> deploying each new
>>> version of Windows?  Especially when it becomes impossible to order 
>>> new PCs without it?  Did we succeed in voluntarily avoiding Vista, or 7?
>>>
>>> -- dkm
>>>
>>>
>>> At 8/6/2012 03:37 PM Monday, Jon Galbreath wrote:
>>>> It's a voluntary action to run the installer, so yes.
>>>>
>>>> Jon Galbreath, MCSE
>>>> Systems Administrator
>>>> International Studies and Programs
>>>> Helpdesk: 517-884-2148
>>>> Ph: 517-884-2144
>>>> [log in to unmask]
>>>>
>>>> -----Original Message-----
>>>> From: David McFarlane [mailto:[log in to unmask]]
>>>> Sent: Monday, August 06, 2012 3:24 PM
>>>> To: [log in to unmask]
>>>> Subject: Re: [MSUNAG] Windows 8 Reaches RTM Milestone
>>>>
>>>> But will we have any choice?  Do we ever?
>>>>
>>>> -- dkm
>>>>      (Sorry, late to the party, was gone on vacation)
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> At 8/1/2012 03:10 PM Wednesday, Stehouwer, Matt wrote:
>>>>> I would have to 2nd that.
>>>>>
>>>>> Matt Stehouwer
>>>>> Technology Manager
>>>>> Michigan State University
>>>>> College of Natural Science Deans Office
>>>>> 288 Farm Lane RM 154
>>>>> East Lansing, MI 48824
>>>>> 517 355-9003 | Email: [log in to unmask]
>>>>>
>>>>> -----Original Message-----
>>>>> From: Gary Schrock [mailto:[log in to unmask]]
>>>>> Sent: Wednesday, August 01, 2012 2:41 PM
>>>>> To: [log in to unmask]
>>>>> Subject: Re: [MSUNAG] Windows 8 Reaches RTM Milestone
>>>>>
>>>>> On Wed, Aug 1, 2012 at 2:26 PM, Jon Galbreath <[log in to unmask]>
wrote:
>>>>>> TechNet and MSDN gets it Aug 15!
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Anyone planning to actually deploy this?
>>>>> The words "over my dead body" come to mind :).