Microsoft's Adoption of Windows Vista

Dogfooding was a new term to me when I joined Microsoft.  I quickly learnt what it meant as I was immersed in beta testing the latest builds of Windows Vista and the 2007 Microsoft Office System.  So what is dogfooding?  Here's what Wikipedia says about Dogfooding:

To say that a company "eats its own dog food" means that it uses the products that it makes. For example, Microsoft emphasizes the use of its own software products inside the company. If a company were to use a competitor's products for its own day-to-day business, it could be disparaged for "not eating its own dog food"; this would seem to show a lack of confidence in its own wares, and would send a negative message to its customers.

So why dogfood?  Well according to Microsoft IT we dogfood for the following reasons:

  • Simulate the customer’s business user experience
  • Ensure product readiness
  • Gain enterprise experience
  • Conduct compatibility testing for 3rd party and LOB applications
  • Validate product value
  • Develop and test training materials
  • Prepare partners and Microsoft Support Customer Care
  • Develop and document best practices for customer use: IT Showcase and Everyday Productivity Education (EPE) Guides

Microsoft IT released some stats yesterday on internal use of Windows Vista, 2005 Microsoft Office System and other beta products which have been RTM'd, or are soon to be RTM'd.  The number of machines we had running the beta software is quite impressive as the graphs below show:

Microsoft employees do so much dogfooding that many of the bugs are fixed before our customers get to test the product itself.  We make a great team when combined with our large number of public beta testers and together ensure that the software is as reliable and stable as possible.  I know that I submitted quite a few bugs and I was always pleased with how responsive and thorough the developers were when they contacted me about my issues.  We recently said thank you to our public beta testers by giving them a free copy of Windows Vista Ultimate Edition for all the hard work they put in – we really do appreciate it!

Application Compatibility

What about application compatibility?  Well, as you would imagine we've been running many different applications on Windows Vista and testing how they function to ensure that customers have a seamless upgrade experience when moving from Windows XP to Windows Vista.  The test results are fed back into the Application Compatibility Toolkit which customers can use to check which of their applications will work on Windows Vista.

Lessons Learned 

 

It's important we share what we've learned along the way so you can learn from our experiences.  The three areas highlighted by Microsoft IT were: 

 

  • Streamlined Deployment – Windows Deployment Service works with the Windows Vista Image format (WIM) to deliver out-of-the-box domain join and user addition to the admin group with no custom scripting.
  • Reduced Maintenance Overhead – Windows Vista installs on desktop, laptop, and tablet machines from the same WIM. Language packs are a component of the WIM, configurable from Windows Vista setup and allow image to be “localized” at install time.
  • Reduced Training Cost – The Enterprise Learning Framework (ELF) provides clear guidance for what help and training content is applicable for each deployment phase. Microsoft IT’s Everyday Productivity Education team provides templates to get this content to enterprise clients.

More Resources

Find out more about how Microsoft rolled out Windows Vista, Office 2007 and Exchange 2007

Download the productivity Guides

Find out how the Enterprise Learning Framework can help plan your product training

 


Comments

  1. Posted on: November 28, 2006 at 4:46PM  

    Re: "powertogether" website, I just read on ZDNet this site is registered to an invidual.

    Domain Name.......... powertogether.com

    Creation Date........ 2006-10-03

    Registration Date.... 2006-10-03

    Expiry Date.......... 2007-10-03

    Organisation Name.... Philip Colebrook

    Organisation Address. Flat 13, Inner City House

    Organisation Address.

    Organisation Address. London

    Organisation Address. SE14 6QP

    Organisation Address. -

    Organisation Address. GREAT BRITAIN (UK)

  2. Posted on: November 28, 2006 at 9:02PM  

    ZDNET also says the site is 100% genuine

    http://blogs.zdnet.com/hardware/index.php?p=164

    Robert McLaws also say the site is legit

    http://www.windows-now.com/blogs/robert/archive/2006/11/27/get-vista-and-office-for-watching-webcasts-at-powertogether-dot-com.aspx

    But Im still not sure if its legit!

    Anybody official that can confirm that the

    www.powertogether.com is legit.

  3. Posted on: November 29, 2006 at 9:36AM  

    Good Morning

    My name is Larry, and I wonder what is happening with Vista RC1? I tried it as part of the “customer preview program”. And as of November 10th media programs are expiring, i.e.: Windows Movie Maker, Windows DVD Maker, Windows Media Center, and Windows media Player are giving errors that basically indicate your system is running out of resources. Windows DVD Maker was the first indicator, as I tried to make a DVD, it gave the error: “Not enough storage available to complete this task”, although I had 17 gig available. Has Microsoft just abandoned those who participated in the “customer preview program” or do they have a plan to reward those who have tested their product to this point and now have messed up operating systems? Thanks in advance for your response.

    Larry Todd

  4. Posted on: November 30, 2006 at 11:27AM  

    The PowerTogether website is a legitimate Microsoft website.  Nick commented on another post about it:

    "That site is indeed legit; it's an offer put together by our US subsidiary, and so only US residents are eligible.

    If you have questions on how the program runs, you'll want to use the Contact Us link in the page footer to submit questions or feedback.

    FYI, their servers are overloaded right now, so if you have trouble accessing the site, keep trying.  I know that the team behind this is expanding their server capacity at the moment and so the experience should improve shortly."

  5. Posted on: December 08, 2006 at 1:15AM  

    i too didnt know where to post this... but i have been googling the past few nights about Vista and XP. when i first installed Vista, i loved it... knowing its a beta, there were a lot of things that didnt work as planned. then i built a new smoking machine to see Aero [because i HAD to see it for myself] and loved Aero transparency... the awe.

    BUT, i loaded in my design applications and all is good, office... good. but then i go to install my audio applications that work in XP and i get DENIED. my soundacard [NOT a soundblaster] DENIED... more and more stuff i load denied working properly, or at all.

    what sucks is i build high end audio workstations and am starting to test all the companies on Vista cause well, i took the bait and hate CP now... its depressing ;) but nothing seems to work for the machines i build. im still running the 32bit Vista because the XP64pro i installed didnt work with the applications either, plus i dont have the 64bit Vista

    what im wondering is; are all these apps going to have to be rewritten for Vista? what exactly IS the difference of applications runnign in Vista vs XP? and why do NONE of the window options like send to mail recepient or burn CD work for me? i cant even get Nero to burn an ISO.

    im just coming on a lot of roadblocks into actually eating the dogfood you are serving. im not trying to bash you... im just wanting to use Vista because i sure dont want to use XP [which i use in classic mode because XP looks like a tinkertoy GUI].

  6. Posted on: January 31, 2007 at 1:13PM  

    Hey "James Senior",thx for share

    ---------

    http://www.dl4all.com

  7. Posted on: August 28, 2009 at 9:37AM  

    well nick white you have shared a very vital info with us! i appreciate it.

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