It is really simple why IT environments are deploying it, consistency.
Take my environment for example. About 10% of our people are using software that either will not or runs really poorly in Vista. The producers of the software are also being painfully slow about releasing Vista compatible software. So I had to make a choice, move to a split environment with some people running Vista and some people on XP, or keep everyone on XP.
Anyone who has spent any time in IT knows which answer will make life much, much easier. Then there is all of the political office bickering if some gets "upgraded" to Vista and someone else doesn't.
I really, really like Vista; but the business world can't adjust to things so quickly. I remember going through this same problem with OS X. First couple releases were buggy, you had to run any old software in a horrible emulation environment, and it ran like complete and total shit on the average Mac hardware. But as the hardware improved, the bugs were worked out and all the other crap wrong with it were fixed, it really started to shine. Even though Windows 7 will just be a Vista rehash, the hardware by then will be much more capible, they should have most of the bugs worked out and people will probably be much more happy.
I think the biggest overall thing that caused problems for Vista was that MS made people feel forced into it. If people felt like they had more of a choice and it wasn't being forced down their throats, Vista wouldn't be viewed so negatively.
Take my environment for example. About 10% of our people are using software that either will not or runs really poorly in Vista. The producers of the software are also being painfully slow about releasing Vista compatible software. So I had to make a choice, move to a split environment with some people running Vista and some people on XP, or keep everyone on XP.
Anyone who has spent any time in IT knows which answer will make life much, much easier. Then there is all of the political office bickering if some gets "upgraded" to Vista and someone else doesn't.
I really, really like Vista; but the business world can't adjust to things so quickly. I remember going through this same problem with OS X. First couple releases were buggy, you had to run any old software in a horrible emulation environment, and it ran like complete and total shit on the average Mac hardware. But as the hardware improved, the bugs were worked out and all the other crap wrong with it were fixed, it really started to shine. Even though Windows 7 will just be a Vista rehash, the hardware by then will be much more capible, they should have most of the bugs worked out and people will probably be much more happy.
I think the biggest overall thing that caused problems for Vista was that MS made people feel forced into it. If people felt like they had more of a choice and it wasn't being forced down their throats, Vista wouldn't be viewed so negatively.