Perhaps the delay of Windows 2000 is not such a bad thing,
after all.
Delay Away
Perhaps the delay of Windows 2000 is not such a bad thing,
after all.
- By Linda Briggs
- 03/01/1999
No one outside Microsoft really knows when Windows 2000
will ship. Microsoft has never committed to a date, and
continues to insist it will ship in 1999. But in the past
few weeks, it’s looked more and more like the new
release may slip into the year 2000.
The disappointment voiced by analysts about rumored additional
delays started me thinking—is it really bad news
for all of us? Somehow, I imagine that most of you are
dealing with more pressing problems this year than when
to upgrade to Windows 2000. Are you really waiting impatiently
to start redesigning your networks and collapsing domains
to accommodate a major upgrade?
On the surface, another delay in such a major product
is problematic. For one thing, it gives your customers
an excuse to impatiently look elsewhere for what they
think is missing in NT (at NetWare 5.0 and its heralded
NDS, for example, or at Unix). It’s also unfortunate
news for all those in a holding pattern waiting for the
new launch: product vendors with add-ons for Windows 2000,
training centers ready to offer a spate of new courses,
book publishers, and, of course, the certification group
at Microsoft. It’s possible it may hold up other
BackOffice products, like the next rev of Exchange. And
yet another delay may be bad news for those of you with
disorganized, unsecured spaghetti domains looking for
an excuse to start over.
But what about the rest of you? You’re the IT professionals
who install, configure, monitor, and administer NT networks
on a daily basis. Is a 12-month delay really such a bad
thing?
Plenty of you have written us to suggest that Microsoft
could make your job easier by slowing down the release
cycle. Even if you don’t upgrade every time, deciding
whether or not to keep pace with Microsoft’s rapid
upgrade schedule for every product you support is guaranteed
headache material. Delaying the ship date until 2000 gives
you time this year to focus on more pressing issues, such
as Year 2000 testing, Internet and intranet challenges,
security issues, installing and stabilizing on Service
Pack 4.0, and much more. (If you have upgrade fever, there’s
always Office 2000, set to ship this month.) A delay also
gives your organization a chance to stabilize what you’re
already running, knowing that this will be your OS of
choice for at least another 12 to 18 months.
If you’re hot to get your hands on new features
promised in Windows 2000, including support for USB (Universal
Serial Bus) and XML (Extensible Markup Language), perhaps
the delay simply means more testing, better quality control,
and fewer bugs in the end.
Finally, more delays give you a chance to gradually prepare
for the upgrade by taking a course, reading a book, maybe
planning your new domain structure. (For starters, see
this month’s article on “10
Steps to Prepare for Windows 2000.”)
Do more delays in Windows 2000 have you worrying about
current customers, shrugging your shoulders, or reaching
for the Advil? Send me email at [email protected].
About the Author
Linda Briggs is the founding editor of MCP Magazine and the former senior editorial director of 101communications. In between world travels, she's a freelance technology writer based in San Diego, Calif.