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        Windows 10 Migrations on Tap for Businesses This Year
        
        
        
			- By Kurt Mackie
 - May 08, 2017
 
		
        Recent studies indicate that many organizations will begin their Windows 10 migrations this year, despite the challenges of determining application portability and navigating the new "Windows-as-a-Service" update process.
One measure of opinion is a study published in March by research  and   consulting firm Gartner Inc., which sees the Windows 10 planning happening   this  year.
By the end of 2017, about 85 percent of organizations will  have   started Windows 10 deployments, according to Gartner's estimate. The   estimate  is based on a survey of 1,014 respondents involved with   Windows 10 across six  countries. The survey was conducted between   September and December of last year. 
Gartner surveyed organizations of all sizes, but results were  skewed slightly toward larger enterprises, explained Meike Escherich,  a Gartner principal research analyst. She co-authored the study "User  Survey Analysis: Windows 10 Migration Looks Healthy" with Ranjit  Atwal, a research director at Gartner. 
Windows migrations are multistep operations consisting of  evaluation   and testing phases, plus the actual move. For Windows 10, it can  take   about 21 months or more for an organization to complete all of the   steps, which  is faster than past Windows migration estimates, according   to Gartner.
"On the whole, we're saying for Windows 10: seven  months evaluation;   14 months deployment, which makes it a lot faster than the    two-and-a-half years we would normally expect for a migration like   that,"  Escherich said, in a phone call on Friday.
Organizations are motivated to make the move to Windows 10  due to   the operating system's security improvements (49 percent), as well as    its integration with cloud services (38 percent), on top of Windows 7's   coming  loss of product support in 2020. 
IT budget approvals for Windows 10 migrations were assessed  as "not   straightforward" by Gartner. Windows 10 may also require hardware    upgrades in some cases.
"In certain countries and in certain verticals, they  find that the   hardware they have can't keep up with it [upgrades to Windows 10],"    Escherich explained. "So, in the wake of this, we're actually also   seeing  a slight uptake in hardware purchases."
She added that improved battery lifespans with Windows 10  machines   was somewhat of a motivating factor for purchasing new hardware.
"Because of the better [Windows 10] battery experience,  we're   actually expecting an uptake in purchases for things like hybrids, the    ultralight notebooks, [and] tablets maybe for some verticals," she said.
Microsoft's Windows-as-a-Service approach, with its faster  update   and upgrade implications, wasn't seen as a negative factor for Windows    10 migrations per the survey results, according to Escherich. Some    organizations viewed it positively.
"If you look at, for example with midsize businesses  and small   businesses -- the ones that really either don't take tech security  very   seriously or they don't have the staff to implement large security   patches  -- they're really keen on this kind of thing, the inbuilt   security [in Windows  10] that doesn't require any more action other   than downloading the newest  OS."
Ivanti Study
  Another recent study was carried out by Dimensional Research  on behalf   of Ivanti, a deployment solutions company formed from the recent merger  of LANDesk and Heat Software. According to its survey data, more than a  third of Windows 10 migrations will happen next year. 
The Ivanti survey found that "37% of IT organizations  plan to fully   migrate to Windows 10 within the next year, 35% within the next  two   years, and 14% have not established a migration timeline," according  to   a summary (PDF).
"The big push is coming," said Nannette Vilushis, manager  of product   marketing at Ivanti, in a phone interview. "And based on the  anecdotal   evidence we've got from talking with folks in the field, I think that    there's going to be more planning done this year, but more of the actual    migration will be in 2018/2019."
The Ivanti study was global survey of 1,876 respondents with    day-to-day responsibilities for the management of desktops in some way.   The  survey also included virtualization architects and help-desk   personnel, she  explained. 
On an anecdotal level, Windows 10 migrations are being  conceived as   broad projects for organizations because of its  Windows-as-a-Service   model, according to Jon Rolls, vice president of product  management at   Ivanti.
"The project is not just to get my applications, get my  users and   get my hardware to Windows 10 -- it's actually to put something in    place that can accommodate the continual release-and-upgrade cycle [of   Windows  10] as well," Rolls said.
Rolls added that Windows 10 delivered as a service didn't  appear to   be a deterrent for OS migrations. Instead, the survey results showed    that concerns over application compatibility topped the list. 
Microsoft has claimed seeing customers achieve "99.9  percent"   application compatibility with Windows 10 upgrades, according to Nathan    Mercer, a senior marketing manager for Windows Commercial at Microsoft,   in a  recent online presentation. However, such high notes of optimism didn't  seem to be reflected in Gartner's survey results, nor in Ivanti's study.
IT pros may be looking at Windows 10 upgrades as an "opportunity  to   get other things done," according to Vilushis. Security improvements,    in particular, are a motivating factor. A Windows 10 migration might be   the  occasion for a number of actions, such as:
  - Removing admin rights
 
  - Preventing user-initiated apps from running or  being installed
 
  - Adding the ability to track user log-on times and  application-use times
 
  - Tracking the use of administrator privileges
 
  - Tailoring the Windows Start menus for each user
 
  - Customizing desktops 
 
"They're also starting to look at OneDrive for Business  -- how to adopt it and how to control it," she added.
As for how organizations planned to execute their OS  migrations, the   survey found that reimaging was the plan of 52 percent of the    respondents. Hardware migrations, in which the OS gets upgraded as new   desktops  get deployed, was the plan of 49 percent. The third-place   choice, at 44  percent, was to perform centrally managed in-place   migrations using systems  management software, such as System Center   Configuration Manager or LANDesk. There  were 25 percent in the survey   that indicated they planned to use desktop  virtualization to accomplish   the upgrades.
Some organizations even planned to let end users themselves perform  in-place upgrades to Windows 10.
"That showed up on the survey at 14 percent -- 'users  can upgrade themselves when they like,'" Vilushis said. 
The idea of just buying new Windows 10 hardware as Windows 7  falls   out of support has some drawbacks as a strategy for organizations, given    Microsoft's Windows-as-a-Service release approach, according to Rolls. 
"We have heard this a lot from customers -- they'll  say, 'No, we'll   just order new hardware with Windows 10 as it expires and  that's how   we'll get there,' which is, for most organizations, going to be a    flawed strategy for a couple of reasons," he explained. "First of  all,   the enterprises will still require a corporate-standard Windows 10 build    that they know is compatible with all of their applications. So,   unless you  have one of these arrangements with your hardware vendor   where you sent them  the image and they put it on there for you, then   you only just get a build of  Windows 10 turned up and it's going to   vary continually. You get the current  branch on there and it's going to   change every six months. Maybe you'll get the  current branch for   business on there. But again, you get this twice-a-year  upgrade cycle   and you need to keep it up to date across all of your  desktops."
Hardware also will be an impetus for organizations to move  to   Windows 10. Rolls noted that it will be "very hard to order new    hardware that will run Windows 7 or Windows 8 in the near future."   Intel's  latest generation of Kaby Lake processors aren't built for   those OSes, he added. 
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Kurt Mackie is senior news producer for 1105 Media's Converge360 group.