The new Windows 8 makes IT consultants be able to think on their feet and adjust to the new operating system in order to keep their company on the newest and most effective IT plan. CIO.com talks about the new Windows 8 and what Microsoft says about their new product. Will IT service teams be able to adapt to the new system? Check out the details below.
This week, Microsoft (MSFT) presented the Windows 8 user interface and displayed various devices on which the next version of Windows will run.
The tile-based Start screen of Windows 8, which is strikingly similar to the Metro UI used in Windows Phones, is a complete revamp of the traditional Windows desktop design. It is arguably Microsoft’s biggest Windows risk to date as it prepares for the shift to the post-PC era.
Many questions about Windows 8 remain to be answered, but the main message Microsoft is pushing with Windows 8 is flexibility: across different microprocessors and devices like laptops, slates and tablets.
But for enterprise IT and business users the transition to Windows 8 isn’t likely to be a smooth one. Windows 8 will mostly become yet another version of Windows along with Windows 7 and resilient old Windows XP that companies will have to juggle to maintain and support.
“Windows 8 complicates the enterprise story because it will be out next year and only 25 percent or so of organizations will be done with their Windows 7 migrations,” says Aaron Suzuki, CEO of Prowess, an IT consulting and managed services company that provides enterprises with OS deployment and virtualization technologies.
The biggest Windows 8 complications for enterprises, says Suzuki, will be hardware and application compatibility, along with companies simply not being ready for another OS after just investing time and money in Windows 7.
On the hardware side, Microsoft has stated that Windows 8 will not require new hardware. But it’s not clear how the fast and fluid touch-screen capabilities of Windows 8 will work on hardware designed for Windows 7 or, worse yet, Windows XP.
Applications, says Suzuki, are an even thornier issue.
“Application compatibility was one of the big barriers to Windows 7 enterprise upgrades and with Windows 8 it will have to be revisited again.”
Hypothetically, the corporate landscape in a year and half will consist of Windows XP and Windows 7 running on PCs, and newly available tablets running Windows 8 competing with iPads and Android-based tablets.
“From an IT perspective, users will start clamoring for a Windows 8 tablets because they are cooler than the stock corporate Lenovo Thinkpad laptops,” says Suzuki. “But that’s just more devices for IT to manage and migrate to and there will be application compatibility problems.”
The solution to the application compatibility pickle, he says, involves virtualization and cloud services.
“You could do complete OS virtualization by running the whole Windows 7 OS on a Windows 8 tablet in a virtual machine or run Windows 7 VMs on a server and access them remotely,” says Suzuki.
Do your computers need to be upgraded to Windows 8 and if they do, can your IT team handle it?