Microsoft Extends XP's Life By 6 Months 278
A reader writes "Despite Microsoft releasing Windows Vista more than nine months ago the adoption rate has not been as Microsoft hoped. Bowing further to pressure from OEMs and consumers, Microsoft has extended the life of Windows XP, which was due to end sale by OEMs on January 1 next year, to a new date of June 30. Asked if this was an indication of a strong demand for XP, a Microsoft representative sought to downplay the extension, stating 'We wouldn't term it strong, we would describe this as accommodating a certain element who needs more time.'"
Hmmm.... (Score:5, Funny)
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eve-ry-one
pronoun
Every person; everybody.
Re:Hmmm.... (Score:4, Funny)
5 Months? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:5 Months? (Score:5, Informative)
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Now, when I browse the Slashdot archives trying to find stories where somebody mistakenly thought something what January 1 when it actually was not, this one will come up.
Re:5 Months? (Score:5, Funny)
Jan 1 -> July 1 is 6 months.
Jan 1 -> June 30 is, truncated to an integer number of months, 5 months.
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Re:5 Months? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:5 Months? (Score:5, Funny)
* I used Excel to do this math, and checked it with a virtual slide rule.
5 months? (Score:5, Funny)
RTFA ... it's 5 months from Jan 31 (Score:3, Informative)
RTFA ... it's 5 months from Jan 31 to June 30.
Defeated by themselves... (Score:5, Funny)
Sooner or later this was gonna happen.
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And Vista is definitely worse.
I'm happy with this decision, i planned to buy a new machine next year, but only if i could get it without Vista.
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Recent Versions of Microsoft Windows (Score:3, Informative)
Windows 98 SE is the second-best version so far. Requires patching for current hard drives (>60GB) and processors (>2.1Ghz). Requires Mozilla and ZoneAlarm for security. Unavailable for purchase and unsupported since July 2006, but included here as the previous benchmark.
Windows 2000 did not have driver support for gamers.
Windows XP is a security hole disguised as an OS. Six years of constant patching and cons
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Gamers are one group who find it hard to move away from windows due to software compatibi, they are far from the only one.
Lower end less geeky gamers like most non-geeks will migrate to vista because the consumer arms of the big brand OEMs won't give them much option unless they want to pirate or pay retail.
[quote]The dedicated gamer is going to migrate to Vista just because of DirectX 10.[/quote]
They probablly will eventually but I suspect many will drag thier feet unt
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I don't actually WANT to change my OS to use 64 bit or DX10, but eventually i won't have a choice and that's what sucks.. i'd use linux in heartbeat if it had the performance and compatibility that XP cur
Re:Defeated by themselves... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Defeated by themselves... (Score:5, Funny)
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Sooner or later this was gonna happen.
XP can certainly be topped, it is by no means perfect. But it is a crowning jewel in comparison to Vista. THAT is Microsoft's problem.
Re:Defeated by themselves... (Score:5, Insightful)
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Vista SP1 Delayed (Score:5, Insightful)
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Agreed. I had my first serious foray into Vista a couple of days ago, helping a friend set up wireless for his new office, and let's just say those comparisons to WinME aren't far off the mark.
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The SP1 beta has been such a wild success (Score:2)
http://chris.pirillo.com/2007/09/28/vista-rants/ [pirillo.com]
Boiling frog (Score:2)
Microsoft has learned the lesson of the boiling frog [wikipedia.org], and this is a really smart move on their part. It's going to take a while for their customers to get used to the shackles of DRM (or Microsoft Genuine Advantage TM) before they stop chafing with all the new checks, slowdowns, monitoring, and restrictions. They wouldn't want to many customers to jump out of the pot while they still can.
Re:Boiling frog (Score:5, Funny)
Why would you want to jump out of the Microsoft love-pot? It's nice and warm. Come join us. We can be the best of friends.
One of us! One of us!
That's the way I read this. (Score:3, Insightful)
You'll see a lot of other interpretations on Slashdot, but I just don't see them bearing out for most businesses or in the non-Slashdot world in general.
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Activation servers? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Activation servers? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Activation servers? (Score:4, Funny)
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Re:Activation servers? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Activation servers? (Score:4, Funny)
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If not, then Microsoft is saying that I can no longer use an application I bought!
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Because (take your pick):
Big business is under the "You didn't care" as they get versions that basically don't require the activation, or manage their own activation servers; and in either event they usually are o
XP Works (Score:5, Insightful)
XP Sucks (Score:5, Insightful)
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Re:XP Works (Score:4, Interesting)
Actually, I think this is pretty fortuitous for Microsoft, despite the fact that it calls attention to Vista's lack of popularity. Computer stores around here are using the fact that they "still" sell computers with XP as a sales tool, and the support extension is a pretty nice method of keeping everyone happy and quiet while Microsoft does whatever they do to Vista to make it a reasonable upgrade. Although I've not used Vista beyond a few tries in the store and a minute or two at a friend's house, it seems from popular opinion (beyond the completely unsurprising groupthink here at Slashdot) that Vista was born prematurely, and Microsoft is fortunate to have a historical product like XP they can use as a tool of placation until the new one is what it always should have been.
XP *is* really good, and Microsoft is pretty lucky that Vista didn't come after, say, Windows 98 or ME, because those are not something they'd want to fall back upon in a situation like this. I guess the old saying is true -- business is as much about timing and luck as it is about skill.
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XP is *not* really good, it is merely good *enough*.
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Indications, Clarifications, Underestimations (Score:3, Funny)
Pressed for clarification, the Microsoft representative continued:
Q: "Would you term the market's adoption of Vista as slow?"
A: "We wouldn't term it slow, we would describe it as approaching that of a sloth on valium."
Why the uptake is slow (Score:5, Informative)
1. It needs a lot more RAM. Or atleast people seem to think so.
2. People are waiting for it to "settle down" - probably until Service Pack 1 is released.
3. There is a lot of confusion about different Vista [diffen.com] versions [microsoft.com].
There is also the issue of some drivers not being available [sony.com]. But things will settle down soon enough. One year is not that long of a timeframe to wean marketshare away from one operating system monopoly to another.
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You have to scroll down to the bottom to read about the other versions.
Re:Why the uptake is slow (Score:4, Funny)
(aka, obligatory Penny Arcade post)
Good Decision (Score:3, Insightful)
...but it was inevitable. Think about it: while Windows Vista is a great operating system and a recommended upgrade from Windows XP, it has been shown all too many times that there are still growing pains evident with it. There are many drivers that are still being tested and revised due to vastly new frameworks implemented by Microsoft (Creative's situation immediately comes to mind, even though it's thankfully been resolved). Furthermore, there are many software packages that have or will definitely have compatibility issues with Vista (financial applications are a huge example of this, since they tend to be much more conservative. I'm not including the super-large firms that absolutely need to continue relying on extremely antiquated software).
While officially removing Windows XP support will be mostly transparent to end users, developers will be forced to migrate all of their time and energy to a new operating system with a lot of changes under the hood instead of spending time steadily updating current software while researching and testing compatible Vista software as well. Many IT managers and decision-makers will have to devote much more energy to supporting Vista faster, which can result in less-than-stellar results (it's corporate habit to accept a new operating system much later than their introduction).
I think this is a good way for Microsoft to ensure that they keep the risks of transition as minimal as possible. Vista migration will undoubtedly happen, but it's best that it is slow and exceptional rather than rapid and disappointing (as many users are quickly finding out).
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Which would be what product, exactly?
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A couple of years ago, I started pushing for OpenOffice, instead of MS Office at my old company. Not even switching whole hod to Linux, just going to OOo. Did a whole usability analysis, cost structure, retraining, conversion of existing tools, all that crap. This was a $100M division of a 1/2 billion dollar company.
The reason it got shot down? All our clients/customers were on MS Office, and
Asked what he says to (Score:5, Funny)
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Though that is what the rep claimed, independent testing showed that only odor has been inherited and rest of the beneficial aspects of manure have not been found in Vista.
notevenitsmother (Score:4, Funny)
Carbon? (Score:2)
Microsoft playing Chicken (Score:5, Insightful)
If I were a Windows user, this language would make me sick to my stomach. This is the reason I use GNU software: the "life" of that software is as long as somebody wants to use it. RMS isn't sitting in the offices of the FSF waiting to pull the plug on Linux 2.6 so that people have to buy Linux 2.8; (this might upset Linus a little bit too). Moreover, even "dead" GNU programs can come back to life, if somebody is willing to dig up the body and run it through the compile-o-matic.
If the market wants Windows XP, let them buy it until there isn't enough plastic left on Earth to mint another CD. Software can't "die" unless a very greedy vendor decides to murder it in cold blood. "Extends XP's Life" should be rewritten "Decides Not to Shank XP/XP Users".
Microsoft is playing chicken [wikipedia.org] with the free market, and they are going to lose.
Can we start calling Windows Vista (Score:2)
The obvious solution (Score:2)
That plan worked for Apple with Mac OS 8, didn't it?
Oh, wait--Microsoft made the mistake of releasing VIsta. Too bad.
OK by MS? (Score:4, Insightful)
These people are still buying a MS Windows license. Maybe they'll even buy an upgrade to Vista later.
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These people are still buying a MS Windows license. Maybe they'll even buy an upgrade to Vista later.
Not necessarily - If I'm a small-to-mid-sized business, I could simply buy all my new machines with no OS at all (it's a common option for business purchasers at most OEMs), and continue to use my existing licenses as long as I have enough of them to go around.
This means that, instead of buying new shiny Vista licenses, I get to keep my old XP ones (and then use whichever extra ones are freed up by obsolescing old machines), which in turn means less money for MSFT - not only in that I'm not buying new
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Unfortunately activation plays hob with that idea. When you replace the machine, your old copy won't activate since the hardware signature doesn't match. You need to call Microsoft to get a new code that'll work. If Microsoft starts refusing to give out those codes (they can legally do that already if you've an OEM copy of Windows that's only legal on the original hardware), your XP disc becomes a nice shiny coaster and your license a not-very-good paper to sop up a coffee spill with.
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Of course MSFT can refuse to activate 'em anyway - but if they're already running scared from their own kill-off deadlines, do you think they'd chance angering their business custom
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This does not affect their income, but it affects their stock price.
Financially I think you might be right. They keep selling licenses. This is a HUGE failure for MS management. Essentially, they spent countless millions on something that is going nowhere and their revenue stream continues to come from a product that has already been established. Since the stock market is forward looking, this completely shakes investor confidence that MS management knows their head from their arse. I honestly don't kn
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If you're downgrading to XP you'll just re-install whatever version of office you already have and presto microsoft's gravy train slows down by 50%.
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Clarfication (Score:2)
I love PR speak (Score:4, Interesting)
Hmm...
Journalist: "Did Vista fail?"
Microsoft Representative: "I wouldn't say it failed. I'd say it successfully failed in succeeding to fail in successful failure."
Journalist: "Oh.. right, exactly what I had in mind!"
It's just so transparent when companies spin things, it hurts. And you know behind the curtains they shout and curse and spit, and say things like this:
"I am not sure how the company lost sight of what matters to our customers (both business and home) [..] our teams lost sight of what bug-free means, what resilience means, what full scenarios mean, what security means, what performance means, [..] I see lots of random features and some great vision, but that doesn't translate into great products. I would buy a Mac today if I was not working at Microsoft."
And, as you know, this is an actual quote from Jim Allchin's private email to Gates and Ballmer. Regarding Vista. Not quite like their public claims of vicious unstoppable wildfire Vista success, now, is it.
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Tags WTF? (Score:2)
Can Linux Users make that 6 months count? (Score:3, Insightful)
What are some ways the calculating Linux user can use this to further undermine MS?
Why I'm resisting upgrading (Score:2, Interesting)
Another thing that bugs me are the X million flavours, can we just stick to Server, Pro and Home! and as to why the new functionality can't be integrated into XP is beyond me.
Final
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The (optional, aero) GUI uses about 256mb of RAM.
Or, in $ terms, approximately $20 worth in today's aussie dollars. Too much for you? CPU power wise, it runs just fine on a 5 year old machine. Much older than that and you're facing possible hardware failure due to age in any case.
If you want to run some bunky old piece of shit hardware, stick with a bunky old piece of shit O/S (XP, dos, whatever.
I don't get it? (Score:5, Insightful)
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The thing is, MANY developers, especially the "in-house" developers at a lot of businesses, haven't exactly been following the rules. Microsoft has been tolerant of that for a long time, but with Vista, they are finally saying "Look. You HAVE to use Win32 and follow a
Another example (Score:2)
Like I said, Microsoft sells lies, not software. No Microsoft employee authorized to talk to the public - and most that aren't - are anything but liars.
2.5 years for WinXP Starter Edition (Score:2)
Good news for embedded/kiosks (Score:2)
My guess is the majority of kiosks you see in stores will be running XP for many years. There is little (no?) reason for these kiosks to upgrade to vista which means in a very short time tens of thousands of machines around the world will be unsupported, unmonitored and over taken by bot networks or trojans.
Been running Vista since launch with no problems (Score:5, Interesting)
And I have had no problems with instability and apart from an obscure Belkin USB IrDa device I have had no problems getting other devices to work, either with Vista drivers or XP Drivers and I find it stable and fast, apart for copying files which is a dog.
At this point you may be thinking "Ah, he thinks Vista is great", but you'd be wrong. I quite like Aero, I love the way Vista Ultimate talks to my XBOX 360, but I'm left thinking "Is that it?" There is nothing there worth the £350 Microsoft is asking for the full version, asking that is taking the piss. The basic version I think is £100.. is it worth that.. even then probably not.
While we have no plans to roll out Vista at work at the moment, we said to any of the IT support staff they could install it if they liked on their PCs/Laptops and only 2 of us (including me) did it out of 120 people.
It seems no-one is really interested or cares about Vista.
Jonathan
~~~~~~~~
http://www.irvtheswerve.net/ [irvtheswerve.net]
And that's the bottom line... (Score:2)
That's the bottom line. People don't upgrade their operating system unless they have to. Upgrading is, for most people, traumatic and expensive... unless you get a huge win (like you got going from Windows 9x/Me to Windows 2000/XP) who's going to bother?
This is, I suspect, one reason Apple doesn't want to be making their money from selling the OS. They get their profits from hardware, they don't lose much if someone doesn't bother to upgrade from Jag
Vista will be adopted sooner or later (Score:2, Insightful)
A Certain Element (Score:2)
Microsoft Sales Reps
Who cares (Score:4, Interesting)
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That's a good point. The last time I heard "element" associated with a group of people (other than those dumb Dow commercials), the word "undesirable" was in front of it. (Or "criminal". I forget which.)
So, in Microsoft's estimation, people who won't "upgrade" to Vista are....those...people.
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Yeah, plugging in your USB thumb drive and finding out the helper software won't run on Vista is really increased usability. Finding out that your two year old scanner won't work for lack of drivers is increased usability.
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Re:Is this a PR guy? (Score:5, Insightful)
Just say no to mandatory registration, dongles and other similar shenanigans.
This isn't even a "pro free software" or "anti commercial" thing. Not all
commercial software vendors choose to treat their customers like this.
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Not really. Most systems are being bought w/ Vista and a "downgrade" to XP. For the price of Vista, you get Vista and XP. All you need to do is install Vista if they ever get enough bugs out of it for you to use it.
If Micro$oft put out good products, a lot of us would be out of a job! ;->