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January 2010
Editorial
HP Targets Premium Workstation Market with New Features
By Invitation

»The Analyst Angle

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Microsoft Dangles ROI Bait to Push Exchange 2010 Adoption
Business Intelligence Tracks Flu Cases in Upstate New York
Next-Gen BI Is Here

» Open Source BI Makes a Beginning

» BI: New Models Emerge

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» Marrying Strategic Intelligence with Operational Intelligence

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Tulip Telecom Hopes to Ride High on New Wings of Fiber
Muralikrishna K
On the Record

»Tony Tsao

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No, the Cloud Won’t Evaporate
Case Study

»The Power of a Simple SMS

»Web 2.0 Leads Collaboration Revolution at Mahindra Group

What CEOs Want From CIOs
Coke's RFID-Based Dispensers Redefine Business Intelligence
7 Cloud Computing Myths Busted
How Indian CIOs Stack Up
Is ‘free’ actually free?
In the News
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How to Make Windows 7 a Win-Win For Your Company


Tips and best practices to keep in mind before your company jumps headlong into the much-awaited technology upgrade to Windows 7

 By Maninder Singh, HCL ISD, November 6, 2009, 1130 hrs

Analyst and IT Experts around the world are advising IT departments that the time to move to Windows 7 is now.

 

Why this urgency? The reasons are varied:

  • Microsoft is going to end XP support therefore necessitating a migration.
  • Downgrade rights from Windows 7 to XP won't last forever, so buying XP for new PCs could eventually get expensive.
  • Aplications developed for XP won't be around forever. Eventually, Windows 7 will become the new default Microsoft operating system.

 

No wonder large and small businesses alike are already in the midst of taking decisions about their Windows desktop road map. The result—enterprise optimism on Windows 7 is very high.

 

However, when it comes to implementation, there are lots of factors to keep in mind while migrating from Windows XP or Vista to Windows 7: a typical organization requires 12 to 18 months waiting, testing, and planning before it can start deploying a new client OS. Despite the above, deployment is a complicated task that involves the migration of a huge number of standard and customized business-critical applications, defining imaging strategies with advantages of new toolset, addition of Application Packaging guidelines and optimizing deployment strategies.

 

Here are some enterprise challenges when it comes to migrating to Windows 7:

  • Application compatibility and migration complexity
  • High onsite requirement of resources
  • Business downtime caused during the deployment process
  • Loss of data during migrations
  • Rate of failure
  • Low visibility into the process

 

Best Practices for the Preparation and Deployment Stage >>

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