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City of Miami Moves to Windows Vista

I recently had the chance to talk to James Osteen, Assistant Director of the City of Miami's IT Department about their Windows Vista deployment.  I thought that many of you could relate to his position and would appreciate his insight into what it takes to keep a major city like Miami up and running.

The Windows Blog:  Hi James, thanks for joining usTell us a bit about yourself.

James Osteen: I'm James Osteen, an Assistant Director with the City of Miami's IT Department with Infrastructure responsibility.  I work with all aspects of our IT infrastructure, including desktops and mainframe, networking, storage, security, and the web.  The best part of my job is that it is ever changing...the pace of change in IT allows us to constantly provide more and better services to our citizens and internal clients- and at a lower cost.  Let's put it this way, we certainly never get bored!

The Windows Blog: From an IT perspective, what are the top three challenges you face?

James Osteen: That's easy: First is the security of our infrastructure - this isn't something we've had issues with before, but it's always something we're thinking about.  We want to be sure our system is secure...our motto is that being prepared before an issue reduces the chance of it happening.

Next would be cost effectiveness of solutions.  IT departments can be the first place funding is scaled back, so when we invest in technology, it has to be top notch and show immediate value.

Finally, I'm concerned about the reliability and robustness of service.  This is pretty self explanatory, but our job becomes easier if the products we're using are reliable.

The Windows Blog: How do you think Windows Vista can help advance your IT mission and address the challenges you described before?

James Osteen: The mission of the City's IT Department is "to deliver high-quality, focused, aggressive business solutions to the City of Miami by offering consumer-centric services and cost-efficient communications and information technologies."   

So to break it down, the security enhancements in Windows Vista have made the operating system one of the most secure options available today, with response times to new security threats that are some of the best in the industry.  For us, the deployment of Windows Vista is translating into direct savings for the City and our citizens: it's enabling us to save approximately $80K in power savings through the deployment of GPOs available in Windows Vista, and by migrating from our current mainframe environment to a Windows Server infrastructure, its helping us eliminate approximately $1M in annual costs.  That's just the start...these savings are projected to grow to $190K annually within 4 years!  And, we expect to see productivity gains through the use of new tools available in Windows Vista, such as desktop search and the snipping tool.

As far as reliability and robustness of service, I have been using the Windows Vista OS in a production environment for 10 months with zero reliability issues.  The OS has proven to be highly stable and reliable and one of the side benefits to us from a support standpoint is the "built-in protection of system files."  From a robustness of service perspective, we are migrating to a centralized storage platform for our enterprise data. The depth provided by the Offline Files implementation in Windows Vista, including the bitmap differential transfer, makes this goal achievable - it would have been more of a challenge for our clients previously.

The Windows Blog: How many desktop and mobile PCs are you deploying on Windows Vista? In what timeframe? 

James Osteen: We plan on migrating approximately 900 desktops/laptops to Vista by end of August 2009.

The Windows Blog: In our current economy, what role does cost savings play in your IT strategy?   

James Osteen: Cost savings are becoming increasingly important to our operations with the current economic downturn.  We are constantly asked to perform higher levels of service with fewer dollars, and in today's economy this has become even more important.  The $1M in mainframe cost savings plus the $80K in power savings alone make this project a no-brainer (not to mention that reducing our carbon footprint is extremely important to us in Florida).

The Windows Blog: Did knowing Microsoft is working on Windows 7 affect your choice to deploy Windows Vista? 

James Osteen: The impact of Windows 7 on our decision to move forward was zero.  We replace 20% of our desktop/laptop inventory on an annual basis, so that means that desktops we place in production today could have a production life of 5 years... we can't afford to stand still and be rooted in the past.  In making our decision to deploy Windows Vista now, we looked more at the immediate benefits that Windows Vista can currently provide our environment - such as cost savings, security, reliability - those factors made the decision an easy one.

The Windows Blog: Would you recommend that other businesses take a look at Windows Vista and consider upgrading? 

James Osteen: Absolutely! Any organization concerned with delivering cost effective, secure and reliable services to their clients would be well served taking a hard look at the benefits that Windows Vista can provide to them. 


Comments

  1. Posted on: November 17, 2008 at 5:10PM  

    Nice!!!!

  2. Posted on: November 17, 2008 at 5:23PM  

    "it's enabling us to save approximately $80K in power savings through the deployment of GPOs available in Windows Vista"

    That sounds wonderful! What are these Vista specific GPOs that allow for that kind of a "green shift"?

  3. Posted on: November 19, 2008 at 1:13AM  

    Are we going to hear any feeback from the workers about how much time they spend watching that wheel spin or how Vista search can't find all the files XP always found without a problem?

  4. Posted on: November 21, 2008 at 1:28AM  

    Well like it or not technology moves on, and provides real benefits to end users.  I recently changed jobs from a company where IT was a high priority, things just worked Outlook, Office, WebAcess, Sharepoint.

    Then I moved to my current job, where IT is less of a priority and let me tell you its not funny when you send an email and it gets stuck syncing then goes out 12hrs later.  I'm seriously considering getting a new job just because when your job consists of being in front of a computer 6-8hrs a day, your computer should work!

    The IT systems in my new company needs a upgrade desperately, new infrastructure and software can save power, time and make people more productive.  If you cant see that then your either stuck in the past or your IT department is doing a great job making legacy software and hardware stretch way beyond its average life expectancy.  Sooner or later though, you need to move forward.

    Its actually real funny to me on a certain level, everyone in my department has 14-15" LCD Monitors, and all we do all day is sit in front of our machines and send emails and phone people.

    No matter what you think Office 2007 is designed for a large wide-screen environment, same with Vista.  My boss spends half her time squinting at her 15" monitor because she cant read it, and I'm thinking a 19" LCD can be picked up for $130, a 22"LCD for $200.  She probably makes $80K to $130K a year, what is that in terms of cost 2hrs of her wage, and she would be way more productive!

    The IT department gave me an old computer they had in the board room, the one they used for testing all their beta and RC software and patches for the last 5 years...not suprising it doesn't work that well!  The annoying part is I want to wipe the most likely trojan infected relic, but my IT policy doesn't allow it.

    Don't be fooled people sooner or later you need to move forward or you'll end up in IT hell like me, your employees are more productive when they have hardware and software that lets them use their machines productively.  Ultimately that's what you want as a bussiness, happy employees = more productive employees.

    Just my 2 cents!

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  7. Posted by: Windows Experience Blog on December 10, 2008 at 2:53PM

    After some positive feedback from our customers about last month’s customer interview with City of Miami

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