P
Puppy Breath
Another member brought up the notion of why different types of users
(casual/power/professional) might want to upgrade to Vista. As I play around
with this, I can't help but see it aimed squarely at the home user. I mean,
Photo Gallery, Media Player, Media Center, DVDMaker, parental controls, etc.
aren't exactly the kinds of things you need (or even want) in a "typical"
corporate environment where people are supposed to be working.
So the question is, will the business communitly totally reject it on the
grounds that the (potentially steep) cost of implementing it isn't
justified. What effect will that have in overall adoption? I'll stick my
neck out and make a prediction. I predict this will be a 2007-2010 product
in the sense that the Vista way of doing things won't be "mainstream" until
2010.
Flame me.
(casual/power/professional) might want to upgrade to Vista. As I play around
with this, I can't help but see it aimed squarely at the home user. I mean,
Photo Gallery, Media Player, Media Center, DVDMaker, parental controls, etc.
aren't exactly the kinds of things you need (or even want) in a "typical"
corporate environment where people are supposed to be working.
So the question is, will the business communitly totally reject it on the
grounds that the (potentially steep) cost of implementing it isn't
justified. What effect will that have in overall adoption? I'll stick my
neck out and make a prediction. I predict this will be a 2007-2010 product
in the sense that the Vista way of doing things won't be "mainstream" until
2010.
Flame me.