Citigroup to upgrade 500,000 PCs to Vista

Steve Ballmer mentions mega-sale during Redmond event

Citigroup may be in the midst of massive IT restructuring, including layoffs (as reported in Computerworld last week), but it is planning to upgrade as many as 500,000 of its PCs to Windows Vista in the next 13-14 months, according to Microsoft chief executive Steve Ballmer.

Speaking at an event for IT professionals held on Microsoft’s Redmond campus earlier this month, Ballmer also dismissed reports that a large number of US federal government agencies have forbidden the move to Microsoft’s new operating system. “Vista has certainly not been banned in many government departments,” he said. “I’m involved in a number of accounts where I expect to see deals signed in the next couple of months.

“It’s about the same as the corporate uptake” of Vista, Ballmer said, before citing Citigroup’s plans to upgrade 500,000 computers to Vista.

Ballmer may have been referring to not widely circulated information from the mid-January business launch of Vista in New York. During the event, a top Citigroup IT executive, Jagdish Rao, said the company plans to begin rolling out Vista “on a large scale”, starting in July, to its 350,000 desktop PCs.

A Citigroup spokeswoman verified that the firm plans to begin rolling out Vista in July to the desktop PCs of all 325,000 employees. She did not comment on how long the migration is expected to take, or on whether Citigroup also plans to update its employees’ laptop computers.

Citigroup is rolling out Vista even as it plans to lay off 17,000 workers and offshore more of its IT operations to save US$10 billion (NZ$13 billion) over the next three years.

Microsoft, which plans to spend US$500 million in 20 countries to market Vista, has given seemingly conflicting predictions on Vista’s closely watched uptake.

Late last month, it reported that it had sold 20 million licences of Vista in its first month of general availability, putting it at more than double the pace of Windows XP.

At the same time, Ballmer has also dampened outside expectations, especially from Wall Street, around Vista’s uptake. Despite those bullish comments, Ballmer, in response to an audience member’s question, also said: “I’m not arguing with the idea that it [Vista adoption] has not been fast, it’s just not that much different”, [from other operating system releases].

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