According to foreign media reports, Microsoft recently said that if companies bypass Windows Vista, directly from Windows XP to upgrade to Windows 7, you may face security risks and other issues.
Mike Nash, Microsoft Vice president, said in a white paper titled Windows Vista Business Value, that for companies, bypassing Vista could be a security and support problem, and a lack of flexibility in the face of changing business needs. Maik Nash In particular, if the enterprise waits for Windows 7 to be released at the end of 2009 or early 2010, and upgrades directly from Windows XP, it may find that the application you are using is obsolete and not working properly.
If an enterprise upgrades directly from Windows XP to Windows 7, it will not benefit from the new security technology and other enhancements Microsoft has added to Vista, Nash said. "If you don't deploy Vista, it will mean you can't get the benefits of this product," he said. Vista's rise in security, productivity, search, mobility, manageability, and infrastructure optimization has been proven. ”
Nash also said that some companies refused to upgrade to Vista because of concerns about applications being incompatible, a concern that does not actually make sense because compatibility issues also exist in Windows 7. "When Windows 7 is released, users who still use Windows XP will face compatibility problems, just as they do when Windows XP is now upgraded, mainly because Windows 7 uses a lot of the same core technologies as Vista," he said. ”
Microsoft's release of the white Paper may be aimed at reversing the poor vista sales situation. Although Vista has been on the market 1.5 times, it has not been widely used in the enterprise. Enrique Salim Enrique Salem, Symantec's chief operating officer, recently said that only a small proportion of the company's big corporate clients have been upgraded to Vista. Most of Symantec's corporate customers continue to use Windows XP because they are not satisfied with Microsoft's new operating system.