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I dunno, I think he's onto something. My company hasn't upgraded to Vista because it breaks a bunch of our internal apps. It costs time and money to rewrite those and they work just fine right now, thank you very much.
What's the compelling reason to upgrade? It's not like Vista suddenly lowers the cost of ownership or magically reduces support costs. Our helpdesk is so familiar with known XP issues that switching to Vista would set us back for quite awhile. All fine and good if there's something in Vista that will eventually pay off down the road.
There's not, though. End of story. Sticking with XP until MS forces us to upgrade.
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