When the employees of a company or government agency start telling them what operating system or programs they will use and there not going to change. Folks you have a management problem. Management and there I.T. with a lot of research should and will decide what operation system and programs will be used and when. Those that don't want to change or learn the new systems will just have to work some place else. Just a little side note. I would not allow any body bring in some thing, (laptop, thumb drive or any thing else) and plug it into the companies net. Any company laptop that is also used from another place will have the programs and operating system the company chooses only. User right will be configured so no changes will be permitted. No programs downloaded, access to many web sites blocked, ect. There is no way to keep a secure company network allowing employees to use a companies net as there personal net. If the employee doesn't need internet access to do there job then don't allow it. This is basic security for what ever operating system is decided to keep or move to.
I think this is one extreme on a scale of how to provide IT support. In most organizations, IT sits under management, and while your method surely keeps a safe network, by locking people out, you encourage circumventing. And the biggest culprits of that are usually the management, those guys that IT reports to.
Again, if you are dealing with state secrets and national security, absolutely, your scenario is a requirement, however, that is not the norm.
I do agree with the statement that employees will not dictate what OS, OS version and software version they will run. Those decisions are IT's, with management approval. However, that also means that when IT does make the change to a new OS or software version, they better be able and available to provide support. Not everyone is computer literate and what we deem a minimal change can be frightfully different for some employees.
What I commonly see is a change to new software and once the update is complete, IT disappears to the server room and lets the employees figure out the new changes. That's not fair either.
My Computer
At a glance
Windows 7 x64 (RTM via MSDN)Intel Core 2 Duo T9300 (2.5 GHz)4 GB SODIMMS (System Max)nVidia 8600M GS 256MB
- Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
- MPC Transport T2500 Laptop
- OS
- Windows 7 x64 (RTM via MSDN)
- CPU
- Intel Core 2 Duo T9300 (2.5 GHz)
- Motherboard
- MPC
- Memory
- 4 GB SODIMMS (System Max)
- Graphics Card(s)
- nVidia 8600M GS 256MB
- Sound Card
- Realtek On-Board
- Monitor(s) Displays
- 15.4" LCD with a Dell 2005FPW 20" attached
- Screen Resolution
- 1680x1050 (15.4") and 1680x1050 (20")
- Hard Drives
- Toshiba 2.5" 320 GB 7200 RPM