Microsoft has released a White Paper (PDF) that the benefits of Windows Vista for use in the company advertise. What the software vendor’s business customers to convince now switch to the operating system and not on the introduction of Windows 7 in 2009 to maintain. The first argument is called Microsoft’s security features of Vista, according to Mike Nash, vice president for Windows Client product management of Microsoft, also for the protection of confidential information in enterprises. The White Paper indicates that in the first year of Windows Vista 66 vulnerabilities user safety threatened, compared to 118 vulnerabilities in Windows XP. The biggest advantage is the view of Microsoft from cost advantages over Windows XP.
These include the company savings that result from the improved accessibility of mobile devices and improvements in productivity associated with the new search features in Vista. “If we increase productivity through faster search function only by 0.5 percent, we save 31,000 employees in more than 30 million U.S. dollars,” the white paper cited EMC’s Vice President John Hollander. Nash admitted that many problems with Vista on a bad first impression of the operating system based. With the Service Pack 1, Microsoft had known bugs largely resolved, support for hardware and expanded compatibility problems with various applications solved. Microsoft stresses that the changes to the kernel and other components in Vista, for the initial rough transition from XP to Vista were responsible, even in Windows 7 were included. “It is a declared target of Windows 7, costs and expenses for the customers to minimize the use of Vista already,” says Microsoft in the White Paper. “Customers from Windows XP to Windows 7 want change, have similar problems as the switch from XP to Vista.”
Jun 08