• This thread is just the tip of the iceberg.The people ahead of the curve aren't Googling for answers — they're already in here, having the conversations you haven't found yet. DealerRefresh is free.Get the full picture →

What's the common operating system in your showroom?

What is the common operating system used in your dealership?


  • Total voters
    11
We finally got xp out of the last remaining part of the store in our parts dept. last month. XP really is a bear to manage and slow as mollasus compared to Win 7. I have been avoiding 8. Not sure if or how soon we will do Win 10. With Ford and ADP software limitations on adoption it takes a while for dealerships to embrace upgrades.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Chris Cachor
Yea, still on WebSuite, we planning to upgrade to Drive this year.

Just some friendly advice and not a sales pitch as you are not in my market anyway, shop around. Lots of good options out there for less money and better technology. ADP/CDK admits there is a security flaw in WebSuite at least that's what they claim. Not sure if it was a ploy to get people to upgrade early to Drive or not but at least research it. Just to go somewhere like DrivingSales vendor reviews page and look at some of the ones with high ratings.
 

✨ AI Highlights

Dealership showrooms are predominantly running Windows 7, with some upgrading to Windows 8, though legacy systems like Windows XP are slowly being phased out due to performance issues. A major barrier to OS upgrades is DMS software compatibility—particularly ADP's Web Suite, which doesn't support Windows 8 Pro—forcing dealerships to choose between staying on outdated operating systems or switching DMS providers entirely. The discussion highlights a broader tension in the industry where older software architecture limits technology adoption and security improvements across dealership operations.

Replies Views 7 3,211 Started Last Reply