September 10, 2007 (Computerworld) -- Much of corporate America may be holding
off on deploying Windows Vista, but many colleges and universities aren’t
waiting.
Spurred on by the need to keep up with their prime constituency
— students — schools both large and small began supporting or rolling out Vista
in time for the new academic year. Moreover, many universities have negotiated
campuswide licensing agreements that will enable students to get Vista upgrades
for as little as $10.
“We’ve just kind of had to go with the flow,” said
Sue Workman, associate vice president of support at Indiana University.
Workman’s team handles 20 million help requests per year from the more than
115,000 students and employees at IU’s eight campuses, and it began supporting
Windows Vista last November.
Some professors and other workers are
asking to stay with Windows XP, primarily for application compatibility reasons,
Workman said. But she added that one-third of the PCs used by employees and in
campus computer labs should be running Vista by year’s end as part of IU’s
rolling three-year system upgrade cycle.
The IT department at Temple
University issued a memo last January recommending that users not move to Vista
at that time. But the Philadelphia-based school plans to start a rollout of the
operating system this fall for new as well as existing PCs.
“We’ve been
testing and testing,” said Sheri Stahler, associate vice president of computer
services at Temple. In doing so, the university has encountered several
courseware tools and other educational applications that won’t work with Vista
or the Internet Explorer 7 browser, Stahler said.
But, she added, the
good news is that the vendors of those products are working to fix the
incompatibility problems.
Thomas College in Waterville, Maine, also made
an early move to support Vista. Thomas, which has 650 full-time students, began
testing the operating system and Office 2007 last November and completed a
campuswide upgrade of its school-owned PCs in June.
“Students are
demanding to get [Vista] as soon as possible,” said Christopher Rhoda, the
school’s vice president of information services. “If there is a better tool out
there, why would we hold back?