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Windows plans put on hold

The latest delays to Microsoft's "Longhorn" version of Windows mean many firms may have to tear up their own desktop upgrade strategies

Daniel Robinson, IT Week 21 Sep 2003
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Microsoft has told firms to wait until next month for clarification of its roadmap for Windows desktop editions, after the latest delays to the next release left firms unable to plan for the future.

Earlier this month Microsoft said it could no longer give a target date for Longhorn, the delayed successor to Windows 2000 that was initially due to ship this year. It now seems unlikely to arrive before 2006.

"We're working closely with our software developer and hardware partners now and will have much more to tell you at the Professional Developers Conference in late October," said Greg Sullivan, lead product manager for Windows.

Microsoft continues to recommend that firms deploy Windows 2000 even though mainstream support will end in March 2005, when the product enters the Extended Support phase of Microsoft's product lifecycle. This means that firms will have to buy additional support, which may be charged on an hourly basis, according to Microsoft.

The software giant is sending mixed messages to firms eager to standardise their desktops and to plan upgrades. "Customers deploying Windows 2000 Professional should continue these rollouts," said Sullivan. However, he added that Windows XP Professional was designed to co-exist with Windows 2000 Professional in enterprise environments, so firms relying on Windows 2000 "may want to include Windows XP".

Juliet Andrew of IT consultancy Conchango said, "We are getting our clients to go for XP because it's better to go with something that has a [longer] lifetime when updating infrastructure. We do not feel there is any benefit in going with 2000 now, as it has the same functionality as XP."

Andrew added that some firms that settle on earlier versions of Windows experience driver incompatibilities and other problems when installing their chosen software on newly acquired PCs. "PC makers tend to ship machines with the latest operating system," she said.

Firms that have already standardised on Windows 2000 are unlikely to be pleased at the prospect of having to roll out Windows XP as a stepping stone to Longhorn. Cost considerations aside, Windows XP has many consumer-oriented features, such as Microsoft's DirectX graphics subsystem for 3D games, that are unnecessary in a corporate environment.

Sullivan defended Microsoft's decision to repeatedly delay Longhorn, and to cease providing a due date. "The next version of Windows for the desktop is an ambitious release, and it is too early to confirm a specific ship date," he said. "When there is a more concrete schedule, likely around the release of beta one, we will share it broadly."

See also:

New operating system unlikely to ship before 2007, warns analyst  05 Mar 2004
Daniel RobinsonVast numbers of corporate PCs will be replaced this year, but with what, exactly?  08 Jan 2004
Microsoft's much-delayed operating system seems to have slipped by another year  24 Nov 2003
Firms could look elsewhere rather than hold out for years for mainstream enterprise deployments of Microsoft's new Longhorn operating system  03 Nov 2003
Martin ButlerIt's easy to find fault with Sun at present, but Microsoft is still more worthy of criticism  20 Oct 2003
In the first of a two-part review we dig deep into the early code of the next Windows operating system.  24 Jul 2003

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