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Posted by Terbinator - Fri 14 Oct 2011 16:43
…good?
Posted by OilSheikh - Fri 14 Oct 2011 17:59
Still not reached the 68% mark
Posted by kingpotnoodle - Fri 14 Oct 2011 20:05
Caveat: Based on machines accessing the internet, in particular those sites that are surveyed.

So it has about that of the consumer market maybe, but the business market is much more obfuscated behind proxy servers, firewalls, internet garbling blocky things etc… so I doubt the accuracy of the results to be honest. I've been interviewing with a lot of technology focused companies lately and seen a depressing amount of XP desktops on my wanders through offices, so I dread to think what the laggards are running.
Posted by cheesemp - Fri 14 Oct 2011 21:11
kingpotnoodle
Caveat: Based on machines accessing the internet, in particular those sites that are surveyed.

So it has about that of the consumer market maybe, but the business market is much more obfuscated behind proxy servers, firewalls, internet garbling blocky things etc… so I doubt the accuracy of the results to be honest. I've been interviewing with a lot of technology focused companies lately and seen a depressing amount of XP desktops on my wanders through offices, so I dread to think what the laggards are running.

Too true. I work for what is basically a software development company and we're all on XP. Even us developers - we never stop moaning about though. 3.2Gb of RAM just isn't enough for dev work now. Its frustrating but all down to IT dept being unable to do a role out. Its looks like we're just going to buy and run our own Win 7 boxes now (in parallel). Hate to think how many small offices stuck on unpatched XP or older!
Posted by 3dcandy - Fri 14 Oct 2011 22:00
far more business pc's on XP than anything else….all the banks I go in, for example which aren't connected to the t'internet
Posted by miniyazz - Sat 15 Oct 2011 00:02
kingpotnoodle
Caveat: Based on machines accessing the internet, in particular those sites that are surveyed.

So it has about that of the consumer market maybe, but the business market is much more obfuscated behind proxy servers, firewalls, internet garbling blocky things etc… so I doubt the accuracy of the results to be honest. I've been interviewing with a lot of technology focused companies lately and seen a depressing amount of XP desktops on my wanders through offices, so I dread to think what the laggards are running.

Windows 2000.

:(:(
Posted by 3dcandy - Sat 15 Oct 2011 10:28
had to install Win98SE for a legacy product last week (before anyone asks it's an Akai Sampler) and wow…so quick, but so basic
Posted by Urbanite - Sat 15 Oct 2011 10:44
Hey XP isn't pretty but it works most of the time. Windows 7 like Windows vista isnt really all that much of an upgrade so I can see why most companies would stick with XP for business use.
Posted by 3dcandy - Sat 15 Oct 2011 10:55
Urbanite
Hey XP isn't pretty but it works most of the time. Windows 7 like Windows vista isnt really all that much of an upgrade so I can see why most companies would stick with XP for business use.

I really don't agree, Win 7 is an excellent OS, far, far better than XP. Problem is, for example, that banks rely on IE 6. however, that's for another thread…
Posted by Urbanite - Sat 15 Oct 2011 11:12
3dcandy
I really don't agree, Win 7 is an excellent OS, far, far better than XP. Problem is, for example, that banks rely on IE 6. however, that's for another thread…

Is windows 7 really that much better if all your doing is word processing and spreadsheets? Whilst I agree windows 7 is a good upgrade for consumers, for the average small to medium sized company there is little to no benefits of upgrading from XP to 7. I think we are starting to see an uptake of windows 7 beacuse it is almost impossible to buy a new prebulit machine without it!
Posted by 3dcandy - Sat 15 Oct 2011 11:33
Much better protection against virus and malware attacks for starters? I'd be happy to roll out Win 7 for that alone…I also believe that once people get used to it, it's a much faster OS to work with, so productivity *should* rise…
Posted by simonpreston - Sat 15 Oct 2011 12:03
Urbanite
Hey XP isn't pretty but it works most of the time. Windows 7 like Windows vista isnt really all that much of an upgrade so I can see why most companies would stick with XP for business use.

Can see where you're coming from but running 2000/XP is really leaving machines open to attacks. Windows 7 is a very much tweaked and refined Vista (even Vista with SP2 isn't that bad tbh, although not perfect). And yes, is far more secure.
Posted by kingpotnoodle - Sat 15 Oct 2011 12:23
Urbanite
Is windows 7 really that much better if all your doing is word processing and spreadsheets? Whilst I agree windows 7 is a good upgrade for consumers, for the average small to medium sized company there is little to no benefits of upgrading from XP to 7. I think we are starting to see an uptake of windows 7 beacuse it is almost impossible to buy a new prebulit machine without it!

Windows 7 offers a lot more than a shiny UI - there is a proper mainstream stable 64 bit version, better security features, usability tweaks (jump lists etc), networking improvements, more control via group policies… it's all stuff that reduces time spent by the IT department and increases productivity.

XP is way past it's best, it's like a dodgy old car, sure it gets you there but it's hardly in comfort or style, needs a lot of time at the garage and you can't overload the boot because it can't get up the hills (bad address space analogy).
Posted by KillaKingDL - Sat 15 Oct 2011 13:09
lol, I work in insurance and we still use NT =P
Posted by [GSV]Trig - Sat 15 Oct 2011 14:42
From where I sit at work we haven't upgraded as we have to wait until our warehouse system is released and supports a new OS.
Then there's also the added cost of ugrading our Adobe stuff… at least Ms give you SA..
Posted by sweey - Sun 16 Oct 2011 12:27
I wish our work would upgrade to Windows 7 - incredibly, we have ONE user on 7 (it was installed by accident via our outsourced IT support) and everyone else on XP with three Mac users in our studio.

So yes, we're all on XP and guess how much RAM most of us have? 4GB when 3GB was a viable option. It isn't as though whatever extra portion of that final GB everyone is using will make much difference in the programs we need (Office, Sage, internet, VERY lightweight Photoshop)
Posted by The Hand - Sun 16 Oct 2011 14:37
Not a bad run for Windows XP though, now 10 years old etc.
Posted by KillaKingDL - Mon 17 Oct 2011 11:12
I agree the Hand. I think we forget just how old it is sometimes
Posted by DeludedGuy - Mon 17 Oct 2011 12:12
We have over 120 PCs at my work, I would estimate about 30 are running Windows 7, 30 are running Vista and the rest are on Windows Xp.
Posted by mercyground - Mon 17 Oct 2011 12:25
Last august i built my last rollup cd for XP. essentially xp pro msdn sp3. all the extra patches to aug 2010. Driverpacks and .net rollup install.
One shot wonder. slap it in and go for a beer.

Still comes in useful for the times friends say… urm. i seem to have a virus or have totally banjax'd their machine.

I like w7 thou. shame sp1 takes so damn long to install. Thus i updated with sp1 cd's for installs now. really should work out how the imaging works for rollups.