Windows 7
The need to migrate from Microsoft Windows XP and Windows 2000 to Windows 7 in a tight time frame will create an budgetary and resource burdens according to Gartner, Inc.
Here are five of the biggest challenges one company has grappled with when upgrading users to Windows 7.
Next Tuesday marks a critical deadline for many organizations as Microsoft ends support for Windows 2000 and Windows XP SP2.
After a slow start, a larger number of PCs are using the 64-bit version of Windows 7, and the OS will soon become the norm.
Businesses transitioning to Microsoft Windows 7 have a wealth of security features to take advantage of.
Migrating to Microsoft® Windows® 7 can be intimidating. You want to take advantage of new Windows 7 productivity, security, and control enhancements—but at this scale, how can you keep your migration efficient, cost-effective, and sustainable, while protecting end-user productivity?
Businesses should test Microsoft Windows 7 this year, in order to orchestrate a move away from Windows XP by 2012.
Small and medium-sized businesses (SMBs) in Asia-Pacific are markedly optimistic towards Windows 7, finds Springboard Research.
Scammers are infecting computers with a Trojan horse program disguised as software that determines whether PCs are compatible with Windows 7.
Windows 7 fixed many of Vista's ills, but it also introduced a few of its own.






