gunslinger
Well-Known Member
- Reaction score
- 55
- Location
- Cookeville, Tennessee
Vista was barely out on the shelves before 7 was in beta and development releases. Windows 9 is nothing more than rumors at this point. Don't plan on seeing that for at least 2 years, maybe 3. As for MS starting to crack: we've been hearing news of their demise for at least 15 years now. The only thing that ever changes is which version of linux will take their place. RedHat, Ubuntu, Mint, Suse? I'm sure next week will be something else.
I'm not sure which data centers you've been in. Most of the big dogs have always preferred Unix. Now that's shifting to various custom OS's and Linux run with only bare essentials, typically a manager of some sort for running VMs. The guests can be any manner of operating system from something simple running Apache to windows server running SQL and exchange. Smaller corporate data centers, think 100> servers, run all kinds of systems varying from debian boxes to windows server. Not that data centers have anything to do with windows 8 or 8.1.
I strongly disagree with you that the correct approach is blowing it out and put 7 on it. That may be the easy answer. Customers that need 7 for some kind of compatibility issue is another thing entirely. However, the only time I have run into that is when a business owner thought it would be a good idea to run out to worst purchase and buy a bunch oh HP consumer desktops. Duh. I don't know if 8 is a failure or not. There are many reasons new machine sales are down, and I'm sure 8 is one of those reasons. However, I think it's because of a lack of proper consumer education, and not due to technical issues. I personally don't like 8, but I still use it on my laptop, our register, and one other box. Our techs' field machines are running 8. We have to know what our customers are using if we expect to be able to work on it. Denying its existence or waiting for its demise is just silly. Regardless of how you or I feel about it, it's here for at least another 2 or 3 years before it gets replaced with who knows what. And after that, we will still see machines with 8 on them, we will still see machines with Vista on them as well. So yeah; it's inevitable.
I'm sure you do just fine with pushing linux on your customers. If it's working out, then more power to you. For me; I tried pushing linux a couple of times. Complete waste of time and money. As for knowing linux: I do quite well, thank you. I like a few distros for various reasons, but I'll stick with MS for day to day desktop use. And I'll keep our highly modified Mountain Lion machine for our kiosk machine. Linux, well, we keep him in the closet still. Let him out from time to time if we're in the mood for a little self-flagellation.
15 years ago I didn't see many decent alternatives to Windows. This is no longer true. Linux Mint, Xubuntu, and OS X are all good alternatives to Windows 7 and all are much better options than Win 8. I don't push Linux on people because I don't really know enough about it to be able to support it. I have been known to push Macs though.

You keep saying its "inevitable". I disagree. The market decides whats popular and whats not. Not Microsoft, as much as they would like to push their garbage down everyones throats. Meanwhile in the real world, I see people avoiding Win 8 like the plague. I see people on Windows 7 machines staying with it because it works, is rock solid and is going to be supported for many, many years to come. I see people wanting their new Win 8 machines nuked and Win 7 installed. For the few left who want an older machine upgraded there is Linux and Win 7. For the people wanting to buy a brand new system there is the custom built desktop or Mac.
So you see, there are plenty of great alternatives to being forced into 8.