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Last week I suggested that the IT world, particularly when it comes to marketing, is crazy, and I cited as evidence Microsoft's recently announced $10 million plan to use comedian Jerry Seinfeld to hawk Vista.
In the process of explaining this craziness I took a swipe at Vista: "To recycle an old joke, trying to repair the market's perception of Vista by being funny is like rearranging the deck chairs on the Titanic … as it sinks." I then suggested that, should you be happy with Vista you must have swallowed Redmond's blue pill (that was a Matrix reference in case you were wondering) and to not bother writing in.
Ha!
Reader Glenn N. Morley was first in with: "People knocking Vista don't know what they are talking about (sorry dude, but you asked for it…). Vista is the best OS from Microsoft to date. I've got the experience and the user base to prove it, and I can back that statement up with hard data. I manage a nationwide network of over 1,600 seats from California to North Carolina. We run it all, from OS X [and] Linux to every MS OS from 2000 on up. I am completely platform agnostic. I want the best solution for the given situation. Across the board, Vista is the superior choice. Period."
Wow. I think he's serious. Glenn continued: "The Apple ads attacking Vista are laughable. I'm not sure how the FTC allows such intentionally misleading information." Oh come on! Microsoft's rabid spin-meistering with the ridiculous "Mojave Experiment" and "Windows is cheaper to run than Linux" campaign weren't intentionally misleading?
Glenn concluded: "If you don't think so, take a peek outside of your cage and I'll show you what it's like to manage a real network, with real users from coast to coast. Viva Vista!"
Glenn, Glenn, Glenn. My cage is covered over. Rather like a parrot's. I am not allowed out.
Reader Matthew Schlawin also wrote in: "I always look forward to reading 'Backspin' and I thoroughly enjoyed your Aug 25 column.
As I was reading I found myself nodding and agreeing with paragraph after paragraph. Your conclusion was dead-on." (I like
this guy.)
Matthew explained he's not so excited by Vista. In fact, he's quite the opposite: "I am the Technology Director of a small
high school (640 students) and we are trying as hard as possible to avoid Vista. Our hardware will not support it, our peripherals
will not work, and we would really rather not put in yet another server just to handle licensing. If Microsoft could have
only given me just ONE feature in Vista that would make upgrading worthwhile. (I really can live without a spinning cube!)."
Comments (3)
Why we've stayed away from VistaBy Alan Clark on September 19, 2008, 9:36 amI am the IT Manager of a company that has about 1250 seats spread out across five states and we have a combination of 2000 and XP on the desktop. We have stayed...
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Whats in there that I would like it?By Anonymous on September 9, 2008, 3:30 pmSorry, what does Vista give me again? I can't think of a single thing that would be worth spending hundreds on a new machine just to have a pretty looking desktop...
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Interesting --- wonder if this company is MicrosoftBy Anonymous on September 2, 2008, 11:33 amIt sure is an interesting read. It also sounds a whole lot like a Microsoft press release. Wonder if this guy works for Microsoft.
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