A senior executive at HP has said that sales of systems of Windows XP still
make up the majority, despite the operating system being officially withdrawn
from sale in June.
Jane Bradburn, market development manager of commercial notebooks for HP
Australia, told APC Magazine that the company was still selling XP
machines, but issuing a Vista licence for them. This casts serious doubts over
claims from Microsoft that Vista is selling well.
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"From the 30th of June, we have no longer been able to ship a PC with a XP
licence," she said.
"However, what we have been able to do with Microsoft is ship PCs with a
Vista Business licence but with XP pre-loaded. That is still the majority of
business computers we are selling today."
This would mean that in Microsoft’s books the sales would show up as a sale
of Vista.
Rob Kingston, group manager of commercial product marketing for HP said: "
Looking into a crystal ball, I don't think businesses will see much value in
upgrading to Vista until late next year and, even so, Microsoft will probably
have come out with something else by then."
Companies are not the only ones less than enamoured with the operating
system. Developers are
shunning
it too.
The news backs up research by Forrester Research analyst Thomas Mendel, which
estimates that only 8.8 per cent of enterprises have adopted Vista. This led to
an angry response from Microsoft on its Vista
blog,
claiming that it had sold over 180 million copies of Vista.
“Given that there's a mountain of evidence to refute this report – including
multiple reports from Forrester and other top-tier analysts – this appears to be
more focused on making sensationalist statements rather than offering a
thoughtful industry perspective based on conversations with IT operations
professionals or deep knowledge of enterprise deployment cycles,” it said.
“How is this useful guidance to customers? It's disappointing to see such a
respected organisation like Forrester take this approach.”
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