KACE – the leading systems management appliance company and a fabulous client – just announced the results of a new Dimensional Research Web survey that revealed 84 percent of IT staff polled do not have plans to upgrade existing Windows desktop and laptop systems to Windows 7 in the next year—despite early enthusiasm from beta testers of the new operating system
Other key findings include:
- 84 percent of survey respondents have no plans to upgrade existing Windows desktops and laptops to Windows 7 next year
- 72 percent indicated they are more concerned about upgrading to Windows 7 than staying with an outdated XP operating system
- 50 percent revealed they have considered moving from Windows to an alternative operating system, and 27 percent of those cited Mac OS as the top alternative
- Almost 60 percent of survey respondents do not presently have a tool in place that automates operating system migration
- Economic factors, such as budget freezes and staff reductions, were cited as other reasons to not immediately adopt Windows 7
You can download a full copy of the report, as well as detailed information on the methodology used at http://www.kace.com/resources/Windows-7-Adoption-Survey.
Here’s a few links to some news coverage of the survey:
- Computerworld, Gregg Keizer
- Fortune, Philip Elmer-DeWitt
- The Register, Gavin Clarke