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Microsoft Intel Hardware

Microsoft Extends Again Support For Windows 7, 8.1 Skylake-based Devices (zdnet.com) 85

Microsoft says it is giving more time to users on Windows 7 and Windows 8.1 devices running sixth generation Intel Skylake chips. Earlier the company had said that it would end support for such systems on July 17, 2018 (before that the end date was July 17, 2017). Today's announcement further pushes the deadline, giving Windows 7 users till January 14, 2020, and Windows 8.1 users till January 2023. ZDNet adds: Today's latest change to the Skylake support cut-off dates also applies to Windows Embedded 7, 8 and 8.1 devices. As of this latest change, supported devices running Skylake -- here's the list of PCs that qualify, along with embedded devices -- will get all applicable security updates for Windows 7 and 8.1 until the end of support dates for each product. What we don't really know is why Microsoft made this latest change. Did Intel "fix" Skylake? Did customers, especially those wanting to downgrade to Windows 7, complain a lot? The official word is "This change is designed to help our customers purchase modern hardware with confidence, while continuing to manage their migrations to Windows 10."
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Microsoft Extends Again Support For Windows 7, 8.1 Skylake-based Devices

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  • by danbob999 ( 2490674 ) on Thursday August 11, 2016 @02:49PM (#52685803)

    coincidence?

    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      by Anonymous Coward

      Of course not. The intent for the free Windows 10 upgrade was to get everyone onto one codebase so they could repurpose half the maintenance and debugging efforts, ideally by focusing all of those efforts on three UIs of what is basically the same OS.

      Since much of the userbase refused to upgrade, Microsoft is conceding to user demand and extending support. No surprise at all. This same dance will probably keep going until 2030, when 7 finally goes out of extended, extended, extended, long-term support.

      • by The Real Dr John ( 716876 ) on Thursday August 11, 2016 @03:37PM (#52686151) Homepage

        Well, considering that MS made their OS into a service as a way to push ads for the app store, which really has nothing to do with desktop computers, and took away lots of control from users, it is not surprising that half the user base stayed with Windows 7 despite Microsoft's underhanded tactics in trying to force the "service" onto people's computers. I still think they might be able to get more people to switch if they made a Windows 10 Ultimate version that people could buy that was based on the Enterprise version, just like they did with Windows 7 Ultimate. But turning the OS into an app store ad interface while taking lots of control away from users is never going to fly with the remaining Windows 7 user base. MS could not have screwed up much worse.

        • by Anonymous Coward

          I still think they might be able to get more people to switch if they made a Windows 10 Ultimate version that people could buy that was based on the Enterprise version, just like they did with Windows 7 Ultimate.

          I feel it is too late for that. Microsoft has lost my trust many times over with their downright unscrupulous action regarding Windows 10 and backported spyware for Windows 7 and 8. I don't even do system updates any more because I weigh them to be much more risky and damaging than the small possibility that my systems might get injected by viruses or (third party) malware.

          Microsoft has done too much damage to their image to ever be trusted with anything again.

          • by The Real Dr John ( 716876 ) on Thursday August 11, 2016 @04:18PM (#52686377) Homepage

            Agreed, but Windows updates can still be managed if you do due diligence in checking into each of them before installing. That's the beauty of having control over your updates in Windows 7. You are still in control. Woody on Windows over at InfoWorld does a great job of keeping track of the bad vs. the good patches. Of course we shouldn't have to think twice about installing updates to our OS, and shouldn't have to spend one minute checking if they are adware or spyware, but that is the deal with the devil that MS made. We will see if they change their minds when their market share slips more and more. They assumed everyone would capitulate and just allow the "upgrade" because it was "free" (except for the forced ads). They assumed wrong. They are probably in for more pain in the future as the lawsuits work their way through the courts. They have pretty much squandered any good will from their customers, and now they will have to live with the blow-back from their poor decisions. They deserve everything bad that ensues.

            • by Hylandr ( 813770 )

              Windows updates can still be managed if you do due diligence in checking into each of them before installing.

              I tried this, then a reinstall later I just boot-loaded it and disabled it from ever calling home after SP1 and a few other basic updates.

              I am dual booting for now, and only use Windows for gaming. Too bad Overwatch is only PC or playstation right now. :(

              • by Gr8Apes ( 679165 )

                disabled it from ever calling home

                It's been the only way to deal with it ever since MS created it.

                • We all know that it could have been different if MS had chosen a wiser path, and worked with their customer base. The whole Windows 10 insider program was a sham from the beginning. They listened to the sycophants that agreed with everything they were doing, and ignored all the input from long time power users who hated the new direction. Someday we may all wake up and be shocked to find that suddenly companies actually started to act like members of the community, rather than evil overlords. At least we ca

        • "...considering that MS made their OS into a service as a way to push ads for the app store..."

          That's not a fair statement. Come now.

          They also push ads for Office upgrades and replace your specifically-chosen default programs with their own. So let's not sell them short.

        • by rtb61 ( 674572 )

          The question then is can you trust M$ to not change the rules after they sell it to you for double the price behind a bunch of wishy washy marketing terms. So windows SE secure edition for the first year on the upgrade becomes windows anal probe+ with deeper penetrations, more power cycle pumping and bigger bandwidth flows and endless marketing ejaculations, just when you thought the experience could not become more unpleasant they make it worse and this all with the backing of the US government because th

      • ...The intent for the free Windows 10 upgrade was to get everyone onto one codebase...

        To me, it appeared that the main intent of the free Windows 10 upgrade was to rain massive data harvesting down upon the users of Windows. The unification of the codebase was a nice side benefit.

        ...Since much of the userbase refused to upgrade, Microsoft is conceding to user demand and extending support....

        Or Microsoft has found a way to back-port the data harvesting to Windows 7.

        "Conceding to user demand" - oh, that is so cute when you say it.

        • To me, it appeared that the main intent of the free Windows 10 upgrade was to rain massive data harvesting down upon the users of Windows. The unification of the codebase was a nice side benefit>

          Agreed.

          I find it odd, also, that Android and Apple wouldn't agree to gov't requests to help provide a "EasyIn(tm)" method of spying on/getting data off of any device they wish, yet around the same time Microsoft releases the first "Free" major version of their operating system... ever. It's not a bit of a conspiracy theory that they decided to play along and are probably getting some kind of benefits from the gov't in return.

          Coincidence happens, but sometimes it isn't. Perhaps it was going to be the big o

      • Don't forget that the Windows 7 life cycle was originally announced as "extended support until Jan 2020". Microsoft then tried to partially revoke that promise and said "new generations of computers won't get support until 2020, buy those with Win10".

        They have now backtracked on this, but that is merely returning to their original support promises. A true extension would be Windows 7 support past 2020.

    • by donaldm ( 919619 )

      coincidence?

      You have a point there. I have the Skylake chipset with a GA-Z170M-D3H motherboard and it's latest BIOS is "f7". Just to be sure I checked the update site and it is still the same. I guess they have not got the memo yet.

      My motherboard only supports Windows 8, 10 and "other OS, which means it supports Linux. Since I run Fedora 24 I can even use secure boot if I wish although by default it was not enabled.

    • Enterprise users pushing back A lot of places have really moved to 7 and 10 is to soon. As for 8.1 some places are using they starting to move to it be for windows 10 / windows 10 LTSB came out. And with windows 8.1 10 is an easy upgrade.

      London's Met Police still has some XP moving to 8.1 with plans for an in-place upgrade to Windows 10

  • Change happens and life continues just fine. You can still continue to use what works

    • Re:Let it go (Score:5, Interesting)

      by TheGratefulNet ( 143330 ) on Thursday August 11, 2016 @03:11PM (#52685969)

      I use win7 for windows based things. I almost never have it access a public network, if I can help it.

      I have turned off updates a year ago or more; when the ftdi-gate first happened, I gave up trusting any MS updates. with win10 madness, I was reassured my decision was still valid.

      win7 is fine and if you avoid the bad patches and ignore updates, PLUS you stay the full off the internet and use linux or some other safer os to do online stuff, 'support' from MS is now meaningless.

      I won't ever take another MS update. that ship has sailed. but again, I am careful not to put my machine online; which really was always the smart way to deal with windows.

  • I guess MS will still rather have people on Win7/Win8 than gong completely for alternatives. And because Win10 is an absolute no-go for quite a few people that have actually looked at what it means, it is either that or lose these customers.

    • > Enterprise customers are moving to Windows 10 faster than any version of Windows.

      LOL. At work the word is still "hell no." And as we move away from old crufty SW we make sure that all updates or replacements are open enough so they work with Linux.

      • by gweihir ( 88907 )

        The large enterprises where I know the IT are still recovering from the move to Win7. One upgraded the last users end of 2014. They will not move to Win10 anytime soon and with all the UI changes and BS features that have no place in a workplace, I expect many large enterprises will not even seriously consider it before there is no choice. And with enough pressure, I bet Win7 will get enterprise support way beyond 2020, if the alternative is losing the customers completely.

  • That should be about the same time that DX12 support becomes an issue. At which point I'm just going to shine the whole AAA gaming thing on, apparently. Or maybe by then Bethesda and R* will start releasing for Linux. Naaaah

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Abused trust to install an entire operating system without consent from within Windows Update. No one will ever trust Windows updates again. Every update is labeled generically as "security update for Windows 7 for x64 based systems" or "update for Windows 7 for x64 based systems". Forces users to waste time looking up each individual KB. Been that way since XP. Treating us like idiots. I want to know exactly what a KB is for without spending 5 minutes to look it up and research exactly what's include

  • This is utterly ridiculous. About 3 years ago I looked at the end date of 7 and it was universally stated as Jan 2020. Now they claim they're "moving" it to 2020? I've been telling my customers every single day for the last few years that the cutoff was Jan, 2020 so obviously they, at some point, moved it backwards then forwards again to pretend they're doing something.
    • I looked 3 weeks ago and it said that Microsoft will continue providing extended support (security updates) for Windows 7 until January 2020. They stopped providing other updates in January 2015. I didn't notice anything about specific CPUs.

    • by jonwil ( 467024 )

      What happened is that Microsoft originally said that people with Skylake hardware would stop getting updates for Windows 7 and 8 on some earlier date than the date at which people with older hardware stop getting those updates. Now it seems like the date for Skylake users to stop getting updates (including security updates) for Windows 7 matches the date at which people with older hardware will stop getting those updates.

      As someone who upgraded from a Core 2 Duo to a Skylake i5 in January (before Microsoft

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