Posted By: Adam Bomb | Jul 30th @ 12:04 AM | 47,989 Views | 9 Comments
In this final video in the application and deployment series for Windows 7, I sit down with Joey, who explains to me some of the deployment options available to IT Pros who want to automate the process of deploying Windows 7.

Watch all 5 videos in the XP to Windows 7 Migration series:
1. Overview
2. Collect, Analyze, and Test
3. Remediate Applications - Fix
4. Remediate Applications - Virtualize
5. Deploy Operating System

View the XP to Windows 7 migration process diagram which will walk you through the tools and resources available from Microsoft to help you each step along the way.
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SergeSF
SergeSF
SergeSF

Its a pity that Microsoft does NOT think abour REAL needs of its customers.

 

The absence of direct in-place upgrade from Windows XP to Windows 7 is a NONCENCE. My company will NOT upgrade existing workplaces to Win7 due to this only reason. This is reason 1.

 

Also Windows Mail in Vista and Windows Live Mail in Windows 7 are stupid applications. The colors are dull, not customisable. Fonts are like in an application for children under 5 years old, not customisable too. No icons on buttons? Is it a joke?? We might be quite happy with Outlook Express with true folder storage (like in Windows Mail), we don't want to move to any other mail application, being it from MS or third-party. This is reason 2.

 

And the reason 3 - I did not saw the movie above due to Silverlight installation requirement - I don't want to install it and I can't find what Silverlight is - anywhere on MS web site. Since I don't see what it is BEFORE installation - it goes to dust.

 

I wish Microsoft a great luck in it's business!

You really need it.

 

Have you been living in the past, What is silverlight? time to get with the times mate.

SergeSF
SergeSF
SergeSF

I have tried to find out what Silverlight is since the first time I've seen it on the Microsoft web page. Nothing but all that marketing stuff like "rich media experience etc." No screenshots, no arguments, no differencies between SL and whatever else, nothing. Just constant attempt to install it whatever page I visit on MS web site. Good job, MS marketing!

@SergeSF

Have you at least try to Google the word :  Silverlight?

It took me 3 second to find it on the MS site...I seriously think that you are on crack.

 

Has for your comment on "The absence of direct in-place upgrade from Windows XP to Windows 7"

Do you really want to upgrade a 5-6 year old PC to Windows 7?  NO

A new DELL PC cost 700$

 

And if you are not happy, stick with Xp for the erst of your life..

 

Good luck

 

 

With all due respect...

 

1)  There's a lot of good reasons to question Microsoft's methods, but we all know their intentions, that is to promote themselves.  Actually, they just want to rule the world - to be the only product available on the shelves.

 

While I'm not too happy about the heavy handed ways they do it, I feel they are having to adjust somewhat to industry demands, albeit faintly and slowly.  See #2 next.

 

I do however love the way they attempt to block all previous versions of their software from integrating with their new ones, how they at the request of their "partners" who get in bed with them, depreciate or even block earlier verions of 3rd party applications by simply stopping support for them within a very short timeframe.  Their motivation?  Why to force you to upgrade everything else once you've found out that a product you already own and rely on won't run correctly, can't integrate or in some cases won't even install.

 

Each and every time they come up with what they call a better experience, or better tools, it's plugged into you having to purchase the whole farm.  Unlike Linux or BSD (for example), you gotta buy the whole thing.  And with that, they hold the ace, and you do not.

 

Microsoft needs this in order to drive revenue.  Without it, they must downsize and let some of their programmer wealth go.  And that would ultimately lead to something less than world dominance - which of course, is totally unacceptible.

 

2)  There are nearly all other formats of these tutorials/videos/marketing blurbs on the screen in front of you.  You do not have to use Silverlight (thank God) - look at the Formats: drop down right under the video.  I chose WMV (High), and boy was that crystal clear and event-less.

 

3)  As for content, these really are marketing blurbs, and not all that well done.  One person interviewed says..."that it [Windows 7] will be more expensive to deploy early rather than late is a misnomer".  This show us who we're working with.  Perhaps he meant misconception.

 

4)  Overall, I kinda like some of the new features, like Windows Backup, iSCSI, Previous Versions (now handled by some very innovative block oriented file management) and the fact they've realized a lot of mid and small sized businesses are well served by right-sized versions of system management tools.

 

But these tools also eat into (or at least they think they do) sales revenues of their upscale tools.  So they're very, very scared of providing too much for free.

 

5)  Worst of all, MS is not able to really fix anything because it is always replaced in each iteration.  With each new version, they abandon tools that user's and IT staff have spent years learning and using for "new and improved" ones, instead of fixing the ones they already have.  You can support earlier programs.  It is possible.  ?nix does this all the time.

 

And now, probably 40% of all legitimate Internet traffic is nothing but MS updates and patches.  Heaven forbid they'd develop something good, and stick with it.

 

Did you ever notice a toilet is still just a toilet?  My God what would MS ever do if they were American Standard?

 

?nix is developed in an elemental fashion by end users and academia.  And while neither are as good as 100 wizbang overpaid programmers who really excel at what they do, at least the outcome represents what the end users truly need, as opposed to what we're told are "at the request of end users" as MS claims.

 

Trust me, no end user every requested DRM.  But you're gonna get plenty more of it real soon.  What a crock.

 

What end users really want is an OS that works, is light, easy, discoverable, stable, secure, has the tools they really need and isn't relying on a five megabit-per-second Internet feed in order to keep it from crashing or becomming infected by tricksters who've discovered some of the millions of back doors left open by sloppy programming practices spawned by the goals of such a poor overall methodology.

 

After all though, it's only about the money, and nothing more.

 

How sad it is this world is led by the lust for gold.

 

I may sound like an old fart - and actually, I am.

 

But I know what I want and need, and I sure as heck know what I don't.

SergeSF
SergeSF
SergeSF

Have you at least try to Google the word :  Silverlight?

 

No. Why bother? I don't want if someone pushed me to.

 

Do you really want to upgrade a 5-6 year old PC to Windows 7?  NO

 

No. I want to upgrade 3-years-old PC (4Gb RAM, PCI-Express video, 2-core CPU). So what?

 

And if you are not happy, stick with Xp for the erst of your life..

 

That's my point exactly! MS just pushed me to do that. As far as I see, they want me to stick with XP. I wonder why...

SergeSF
SergeSF
SergeSF

5)  Worst of all, MS is not able to really fix anything because it is always replaced in each iteration.

 

Hearthly agreed!

Hey! Daved 1948 if that's your real name and year you were born. Change is good nk, if Microsoft didn't change they would die you should know that by now. Lots of good ideas and products have come and gone but when you really get down to it they were no longer needed, we humans just have a hard time accepting change.

 

Very true, if a company is not evolving, they are dieing - simple as that

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