Friday, March 29, 2024

New Tools Ease Vista Deployment Pains

Datamation content and product recommendations are editorially independent. We may make money when you click on links to our partners. Learn More.

REDMOND, Wash. — Microsoft (Quote) CEO Steve Ballmer tried to temper expectations for enterprise sales of Vista last week, but that doesn’t
mean the company isn’t trying to push its new operating system (OS) all the
same.

The software giant today introduced a set of tools intended to help IT administrators sniff out compatibility problems between the new operating system and applications running in their environments, make hardware upgrade decisions and facilitate the roll-out of Vista to individual desktops.

Michael Burk, a spokesman for the Windows marketing communications group, explained that Microsoft aims to learn from its stumbles in rolling out XP.

Enterprise adoption of XP was in the low single digits in percentage terms during the first year of availability, and Burk said the goal of these tools is to make Vista “the fastest-adopted OS by business of any we’ve ever released.”

Microsoft has also received more feedback from a greater number of beta testers and customers participating in its TAP early adopter program than it did in earlier new product introductions.

As a result, these applications are being made generally available within three months of November’s launch date, compared with the 6 to 12 months it took to introduce the XP version of these applications.

The linchpin of the toolkit is the solution accelerator for business desktop
development application (BDD), which includes single image engineering and
deployment capabilities, user state migration tools and remote deployment
tools.

The applications are intended to help lower the cost of deployment in an
enterprise, which Burk said had been as high as $1,000 per desktop.

“We want to get more towards zero-touch deployment” where IT staff can roll out the
new OS “in a single image blast across the organization,” Burk told internetnews.com.

These kind of tools will save administrators from having to visit individual
users or spend as much time configuring the OS for different user profiles.

Peter McKiernan, senior communications manager for Windows, explained that
the new image format is flexible enough to allow administrators to
reconfigure individual machines with a single XML file without having to
back up data files to a network drive.

“You can apply an image to the disk
without having to erase all the data that’s already on it,” McKiernan
explained.

“When you look at things that held up deployment in the XP timeframe, and
then you look at what’s available with Vista, it’s not an apples to apples
comparison,” he said.

One of the lessons that Microsoft has learned from past experience is that
software implementations often fail for reasons that have nothing to do with
technology and everything to do with poor project planning.

The BDD application thus addresses the human side of implementations by
providing templates and best practice scenarios that help organizations
identify who the key stakeholders are and when they need to become involved.

Microsoft has also rolled out ancillary applications to help administrators
make better decisions about hardware and software readiness and
compatibility.

For instance, the Windows Vista Hardware Assessment tool helps customers determine which PCs in their environment need to be upgraded by taking an inventory of all the equipment on the network and producing a
detailed report with upgrade recommendations for each piece of hardware.

The Application Compatibility Toolkit 5.0 (ACT) includes tools that allow
software developers, independent software vendors (ISVs) and IT
administrators to determine whether existing applications are compatible
with Vista and suggestions on how to resolve conflicts before the OS is even
deployed within an organization.

The toolkit also includes Virtual PC 2007, which lets administrators
virtualize earlier versions of Windows in order to allow certain
applications to continue running that aren’t compatible with Vista.

This article was first published on InternetNews.com. To read the full article, click here.

Subscribe to Data Insider

Learn the latest news and best practices about data science, big data analytics, artificial intelligence, data security, and more.

Similar articles

Get the Free Newsletter!

Subscribe to Data Insider for top news, trends & analysis

Latest Articles