Windows Vista customers can now receive the first service pack for the operating
system via the Microsoft Automatic Update service, Microsoft said Wednesday.
Windows Vista Service Pack 1 will download automatically to PCs that have the
automatic update feature of the OS turned on, the company said. Previously,
Vista was available to customers via Windows Update, but people had to specifically
download it.
Not all customers will receive SP1 immediately via Automatic Update, however.
The company is distributing it in phases to "ensure a seamless download
experience," Microsoft said. A timeline for when all customers would receive
Vista SP1 via Automatic Update was not immediately available.
SP1 is a rollout of software updates that fix bugs and glitches in Vista and
is seen as a milestone that will inspire many customers -- especially those
in the business market -- to adopt the OS. In fact, in a recent report, "Building
the Business Case for Windows Vista," Forrester Research said more business
customers plan to upgrade to Vista now that SP1 is available. This comes as
no surprise, considering companies often wait for the first service pack after
a major Windows release to update corporate desktops.
However, even SP1 will not guarantee that enterprises and business customers
currently running XP or an earlier version of Windows will upgrade, as some
have said they would skip the OS altogether. The same Forrester report said
as much, although the research firm is recommending that companies don't skip
Vista because they would not be well-positioned for future versions of Windows
if they do.
Microsoft has acknowledged problems with application compatibility and lack
of driver support, among others, that customers have had with Vista. It says
SP1 and other updates that the company continues to make should remedy these
problems. What the company hasn't said is why there were so many problems with
the OS when the company had more than five years between the releases of Windows
XP and Vista to ensure a smooth transition.
In fact, Microsoft seems to be looking past Vista to the future rather than
addressing continued concerns about the product. In a meeting with reporters
on Microsoft's Redmond, Washington, campus on Tuesday, a presentation on Windows
Vista turned out to be anything but that.
Instead, Shannen Boettcher, general manager of Windows product management at
Microsoft, discussed future plans for tools to virtualize corporate desktops
and applications. He implied this would be an important aspect of the Windows
client OS going forward, but was vague about timing.
Apart from that, Boettcher's main discussion specifically about Vista was a
mention of its green-computing merits. He asserted that upgrading 10 corporate
desktops to Vista is comparable to taking one automobile off the road in terms
of reducing carbon footprint.
When asked about criticism of Vista in the marketplace and why there were so
many problems after five years of development, Boettcher had little to say other
than to acknowledge that Microsoft did not do "a very good job in preparing
people for when we shipped" Vista.
He added, however, that the upgrade cycle for an OS doesn't begin to pick up
until 12 months to 18 months after the OS is released, and since Vista was released
to business customers in November 2007, it's right on schedule.