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Windows XP update could cause support chaos

The overhauled OS is due out in the third quarter

June 28, 2004 12:00 PM ET

IDG News Service - The major changes to Windows XP included in the upcoming Service Pack 2 are expected to cause support headaches, and analysts, users, PC makers and Microsoft Corp. are all expecting a spike in help desk calls.
SP2 is due out in the third quarter, so it could be available as soon as next month. The service pack, which will be downloaded automatically into many PCs through Microsoft's Windows Update service, could break current applications, disrupt networking setups and prompt nontechnical users to make PC configuration decisions that may be beyond their grasp.
Meanwhile, Microsoft is still working on a plan to support the security-focused update. "We're working hard on getting together a support plan," said Matt Pilla, a senior product manager at the software maker. One decision has been made, however: Microsoft will offer no-charge, worldwide telephone support for the service pack, Pilla said.
Microsoft is returning to its policy to provide free support for service packs after leaving support for Windows XP SP1 to the PC makers, Pilla said. Nevertheless, Hewlett-Packard Co., Dell Inc. and Gateway Inc. are also gearing up for the release of SP2 and will support their customers, spokespeople for those PC makers said.
Support directly from Microsoft is more valuable than help provided by PC vendors because it is more in-depth, said Victor Go, vice president of technology at Landmark Theatre Corp., which has about 600 PCs running Windows.
"We don't call unless it is something extremely technical that would require something beyond the first-line help desk. We used to try the support that goes with the PC, but whether it is HP or IBM, we just never got the response we needed," Go said.
Although Microsoft has deemed Windows XP SP2 a service pack, the update is more comparable to a Windows upgrade. SP2 contains bug fixes and updates, but it also offers new features and makes significant changes to the Windows software in four main areas: network protection, memory protection, e-mail security and browsing security.
Microsoft will have to treat SP2 like a new operating system release, said Rob Helm, a director of research at Directions on Microsoft Inc., an industry research company based in Kirkland, Wash. "It is that level of change," he said.
The anticipated changes are making Go and other users uncomfortable. "Businesses like us don't run the latest version of an operating system. We did not roll out XP until almost a year after it came out," Go said. "It is kind of scary that in order to get


Reprinted with permission from

IDG.net
Story copyright 2009 International Data Group. All rights reserved.

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