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In 2016, Microsoft will retain almost 90% of the projected 370+ million PCs sold
According to the new study by Forrester Research titled "Windows: The Next Five Years", Microsoft will retain almost 90% of the projected 370+ million PCs sold in 2016"
Ready or not, come April 8, 2014, Microsoft will execute the Windows XP lifecycle end
Fujitsu: “The whole industry is excited about tablets, but serious corporations still need desktops”
Researchers Gartner and IDC: PC Market Rebounds In Q4
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Family Packs
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Goldman Sachs survey: 85 to 90 percent of respondents are still on Windows XP
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Windows IT Pro Magazine: "What is Zinstall?" product review
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Survey: What is your biggest barrier to deploying Windows 7?
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Windows 7 XP Mode loses hardware requirement
Microsoft recognized that the vast majority of its customer-base still relies on the legacy Windows XP operating system, and wanted to give those customers incentive to upgrade to Windows 7 by providing a means of maintaining backward compatibility. Unfortunately, there were two significant catches to taking advantage of XP Mode. The first catch was that the computer hardware that Windows 7 and Windows XP Mode were installed on must support hardware-assisted virtualization. The hardware virtualization requirement led to confusion and backlash from frustrated users hoping to take advantage of XP Mode.
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"...With VDI... client-side hardware and software -- notably, Windows -- become relatively unimportant."
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