Computerworld
- Microsoft
yesterday added ammunition to its increasingly aggressive battle to get users
off the nearly-11-year-old Windows XP by citing a company-sponsored report that
claims annual support costs for the older OS are more than five times that of
Windows 7.
Microsoft has been banging the Windows XP upgrade drum for
years, but stepped up the campaign in 2012, including starting a "two-year countdown" to the demise of security support.
Last month, Microsoft was blunt, saying "If your organization has not
started the migration to a modern PC, you are late."
Windows
XP exits all support, including monthly security patches, in April 2014.
In a blog post Thursday, Erwin Visser, a senior
director for Windows, used data collected by IDC to make Microsoft's upgrade
case.
"The bottom line...[is
that] businesses that migrate from Windows XP to Windows 7 will see significant
return on investment," said Visser.
Microsoft sponsored the survey conducted by IDC, which in turn interviewed nine enterprises or large
organizations to drill into the
support costs of XP and Windows 7.
According
to IDC, an amazing 42% of the Windows "commercial" installed base, or
anything other than consumers' home machines, was Window XP, making Microsoft's
job of moving everyone off the old OS by its April 2014 retirement nearly
impossible.
In
fact, IDC projected that if current trends continue, 11% of the enterprise and
educational Windows installed base will still be running XP when Microsoft
stops patch delivery in 23 months.
And
those XP machines costs organizations considerably more to support than
comparable PCs running Windows 7.
One
reason for the increased costs for supporting Windows XP is that it's typically
running on older hardware that, independent of the OS, is more expensive to
simply keep running.
The
magic milestone is after the three-year mark, when "costs begin to
accelerate" because of additional IT and help desk time, and increased
user downtime due to more security woes and time spent rebooting, said IDC.
IT
labor costs jump 25% during year four of a PC's lifespan, and another 29% in
year five, IDC noted, while user productivity costs climb 23% in year four and
jump 40% during year five. Total year five costs are a whopping 73% higher than
support costs of a two-year-old client.
However,
the operating system also plays a major role in the cost differences, said IDC,
with XP more expensive to support in every category the research company
surveyed.
Organizations
reported that they spent 82% less time managing patches on Windows 7 systems
than they did on Windows XP, 90% less time mitigating malware, and 84% less
help desk time.
Benefits
were also striking for Windows 7 users' productivity compared to XP. Windows 7
users wasted 94% less time rebooting their computers and lost 90% less time due
to malware attacks.
On
the IT side, the savings of Windows 7 mount dramatically, IDC said.
"IT
activities account for 11.3 hours of time spent per PC per year when using
Windows XP," the research group said. "Shops that have moved to
Windows 7...spend 2.3 hours per PC per year on maintaining those systems."
IDC
did the math, and concluded that for every 230 PCs running Windows 7 rather than
XP, an organization could shift one full-time IT person to other work. Or
conceivably do without him or her entirely.
Src: Computerworld.com
No comments:
Post a Comment