Catch up on stories from the past week (and beyond) at the Slashdot story archive

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
AMD Intel Windows Microsoft Software Hardware

New Intel and AMD Chips Will Only Support Windows 10 (pcworld.com) 585

An anonymous reader writes: Buried in the announcement of the new Kaby Lake (seventh-generation) processors and a rash of incoming notebooks set to use them is the confirmation that they will have a Windows 10 future. Microsoft has been warning people for ages that Kaby Lake will not run on anything older than Windows 10, and it looks like AMD's upcoming Zen chip will be going the same way. Microsoft said, "As new silicon generations are introduced, they will require the latest Windows platform at that time for support. This enables us to focus on deep integration between Windows and the silicon, while maintaining maximum reliability and compatibility with previous generations of platform and silicon." "We are committed to working with Microsoft and our ecosystem partners to help ensure a smooth transition given these changes to Microsoft's Windows support policy," an Intel spokesperson said. "No, Intel will not be updating Win 7/8 drivers for 7th Gen Intel Core [Kaby Lake] per Microsoft's support policy change." An AMD representative was equally neutral. "AMD's processor roadmap is fully aligned with Microsoft's software strategy," AMD chief technical officer Mark Papermaster said, via a company spokeswoman. Slashdot reader MojoKid via HotHardware has some more details on Intel's Kaby Lake 7th Gen Core Series Processors for those yearning to learn more.
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

New Intel and AMD Chips Will Only Support Windows 10

Comments Filter:
  • Goodbye Windows. (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Berkyjay ( 1225604 ) on Thursday September 01, 2016 @05:52PM (#52811465)

    Hello Linux

    • Wine is often sufficient.

    • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday September 01, 2016 @06:00PM (#52811539)

      I expect UEFI lock down will soon prevent Linux from being installed.

      • by BringsApples ( 3418089 ) on Thursday September 01, 2016 @06:08PM (#52811593)
        Then goodbye Intel and AMD.
        • by FudRucker ( 866063 ) on Thursday September 01, 2016 @06:11PM (#52811621)
          Linux developers will have it cracked and running any distro within a few days, AMD & Intel is not going to shoot themselves in the foot, microsoft might commit corporate suicide
          • by ClickOnThis ( 137803 ) on Thursday September 01, 2016 @07:28PM (#52812007) Journal

            Linux developers will have it cracked and running any distro within a few days, AMD & Intel is not going to shoot themselves in the foot, microsoft might commit corporate suicide

            And I would be surprised if Intel and AMD didn't actually help Linux developers do it.

            This whole thing smells of Microsoft trying to sell more Windows 10, not Intel and AMD trying to sell fewer chips.

            • Re:Goodbye Windows. (Score:5, Informative)

              by Isca ( 550291 ) on Thursday September 01, 2016 @08:30PM (#52812353)
              This is actually good for news linux developers, just not in the way most people think. A very large part of this push is to try to make yet another step away from legacy x86 code. Newer windows binaries is much more easier to port to other systems and in fact Microsoft is developing the tools to do quite a bit of this for you. All of this easy to port code will be easy to port to linux and any other OS you want. Microsoft is trying to become the place to go for cloud hosted computing and while they know they are way behind apple and google right now they can stay relevant by making their tools and back end services work with as many different platforms as possible. It will be interesting to see what the market looks like 5 or 10 years from now. Who ever thought Microsoft would have even done a 10th of what they have done in the past year or two for open source based on what they were like 10 years ago? The landscape has changed and Google is becoming more and more restrictive with what they do and how they handle your data every year. Apple is the same, but they've always been like that to a degree.
            • And do they actually need "support" in order to work? Did they change the instruction set finally? Encrypted the whole thing so you need an MS signed cert?

        • Re:Goodbye Windows. (Score:5, Informative)

          by Anonymous Coward on Thursday September 01, 2016 @09:52PM (#52812681)

          AFAIK this is only about Microsoft choosing to support chip features in Win 10 only, not that the chip manufacturers are barring other OSes. If that assumption is right then I don't understand why such a misleading submission was posted without correction on Slashdot.

        • Re:Goodbye Windows. (Score:4, Interesting)

          by The Real Dr John ( 716876 ) on Friday September 02, 2016 @07:15AM (#52814135) Homepage

          The push to force Windows 10 has now reached absurd proportions. Windows 7 is going to be my last version of Windows, and that means I won't be buying new Intel or AMD processors if they are going this route. Windows 10 is not particularly popular in its current form, so I am not at all sure why other companies would want to jump on that shit wagon.

      • by perpenso ( 1613749 ) on Thursday September 01, 2016 @06:46PM (#52811787)

        I expect UEFI lock down will soon prevent Linux from being installed.

        Linux is already supported by UEFI. The major Linux distros have paid the one-time US$99 fee to be able to get their code on the UEFI supported list.

        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          by Anonymous Coward

          Only until Microsoft changes its signing certificate.

          Then they won't work anymore. Just like it didn't work for Windows RT devices.

      • by AchilleTalon ( 540925 ) on Thursday September 01, 2016 @07:03PM (#52811897) Homepage
        Pretty much silly reasoning given the number of Linux servers around the world. Almost every large corporate is depending on Linux for something.
      • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

        by jstwinkles ( 4027729 )
        UEFI doesn't have anything to do with what OS you can install and run (aside from compatibility issues one might encounter when trying to run legacy software). If you're thinking of things like Intel Boot Guard or UEFI Secure Boot, those are meant to prevent modification to the firmware image stored on the motherboard's ROM chip, not lock down the OS. The only way to restrict what OS you can load would be to add in very specific code outside the scope of the UEFI spec that probes the boot media and says y
    • Hello Linux

      Goodbye Windows. Hello Linux

      Why? This affects no existing hardware. Its just that future hardware will not support Windows 7 and 8.

      And frankly this is pretty much what happens under Android too, a chip vendor developing some new chip's drivers only for the current Android version. Will that make Android/Linux fans flock to iOS when they learn their Samsung Galaxy S8 can not run Android 4.4?

      • by Berkyjay ( 1225604 ) on Thursday September 01, 2016 @07:15PM (#52811943)

        Intel chips still support Windows XP. Funny how all of a sudden Windows 7 will be such a pain to support for future architecture.

    • Re:Goodbye Windows. (Score:5, Interesting)

      by Tough Love ( 215404 ) on Thursday September 01, 2016 @07:05PM (#52811903)

      What about Linux? Microsoft's Kaby Lake support or lack of it appears to be based on detecting the processor version, and not any lack of backward compatibility in the chip architecture.

  • Linux and ReactOS (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward

    Microsoft is shooting themselves in the foot, and it will bleed out.

  • linux etc (Score:4, Insightful)

    by vux984 ( 928602 ) on Thursday September 01, 2016 @05:53PM (#52811473)

    ok.. so... im fine in principle if intel and microsoft aren't interested in porting chipset drivers backwards for old windows versions.

    I presume that this isn't creating windows 10 lock in though; and that linux / bsd / etc will be fully supported?? Or am I mistaken?

    And also, is if things are that different, does it mean only a next-generation kernel version will run on them?

    I'm also curious about virtualization? Can old windows versions run in virtualization on these new chips?

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      > I presume that this isn't creating windows 10 lock in though; and that linux / bsd / etc will be fully supported??

      Sounds like the lock-in is specific to versions of Windows. I think we would have seen folks in the Apple Universe flip their shit by now otherwise.

      • > I presume that this isn't creating windows 10 lock in though; and that linux / bsd / etc will be fully supported??

        Sounds like the lock-in is specific to versions of Windows. I think we would have seen folks in the Apple Universe flip their shit by now otherwise.

        This is the first I've heard of this; but I don't like the sound of it, not one little bit...

    • I presume that this isn't creating windows 10 lock in though; and that linux / bsd / etc will be fully supported?? Or am I mistaken?

      I'm wondering if this is where they employ the 'secure boot' where the OS needs an Intel/MS-signed key for the chipset to run it. If that's the case, then Redhat and Ubuntu may be the only non-MS OS'es with the wealth to pay the extortion money demanded by MS/Intel to get a key signed.

      No more Intel chips for me. They and their criminally-colluding accomplices at MS can collectively set themselves on fire take a flying leap into a wood-chipper.

      Strat

      • Sorry for replying to my own post, but in reading further I see AMD is joining the conga-line of criminal-collusion also.

        I guess this means buying used/older hardware from this point on. At least, until Intel/AMD/MS lobby for laws making the sale/transfer of old PC hardware and running of non-MS approved OSes illegal.

        Strat

      • by mysidia ( 191772 )

        I'm wondering if this is where they employ the 'secure boot' where the OS needs an Intel/MS-signed key for the chipset to run it.

        I'm wondering how long before the Windows activation process during installation will involve Microsoft digitally signing your individual system's specific boot image and bootloader configuration of each computer, so Microsoft has to approve the hardware Windows is running on, before you'll be allowed to even boot the installed OS.

    • Re:linux etc (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward on Thursday September 01, 2016 @07:59PM (#52812169)

      This thing needs to be pulled apart and examined from a slightly higher level.

      First of all, it is HIGHLY UNLIKELY that these chips do not support Windows 7 or 8 outright. Intel and AMD, despite their apparent lobotomy, will only shoot themselves in the foot if they start making x86 architecture backwards-incompatible. Indeed, the fact of the matter is that this is the one thing they bring to market that ensures their dominance. Additionally the processor itself is unlikely to be able to specifically lock on to Windows 7 or 8 and refuse to run because of that.

      Furthermore, Windows 7 or 8 out of the box CANNOT recognize these new chipsets and CANNOT refuse to install because of them. If someone sucks down all the updates Microsoft throws at them, there may well be a Win 7 update that deliberately bricks it somewhere down the line. But if you keep updates off Windows 7 will not commit suicide on behalf of Microsoft, at least not in this manner.

      What is more likely is that things like the chipset drivers are not going to be backported. Does this mean inherent incompatibility? The answer for that is unclear. It is likely, IMO, that it will run, but with degraded performance, e.g. a lot of the onboard goodies may not work. I doubt that it is so obsessed with specific drivers that everything will be disabled. For instance, I imagine USB 2.0 will work but 3.1 might not. It is also possible that there may be attempts by users to backport the drivers, which may or may not be successful. In terms of the need for a next-generation kernel, if the chipsets are so incompatible that they REQUIRE new drivers to operate, and there is no way around that, even by using legacy protocols and drivers, then yes, only a next-generation kernel will run on it. However, that strikes me as unlikely (although it's possible, at least in theory).

      Now, is any of this absolutely for certain? No, not really; the only way to test that out is to actually attempt to install it.

      In terms of virtualization, unless Intel has put in some kind of anti-virtualization sabotage to shoot down Windows 7 (which again would be difficult for the processor to detect), it is unlikely that it will work.

      In terms of Secure Boot, that IS a problem, but it is an entirely separate problem that, in theory, applies to all recent UEFI machines. It may very well cause serious problems for Linux installations. I've heard some references to a signed version of GRUB, but I think that there is a serious danger of Microsoft cooking up ridiculous reasons for refusing to sign binaries for anything they dislike. Additionally I recall hearing on at least one occasion about needing everything in the boot loader's chain to be signed (e.g. drivers). I do not know how they would manage that once the kernel is running, but if that is the case then that is a significant problem, and any machine which Secure Boot cannot be disabled on is as such essentially Microsoft-owned hardware.

      Ultimately what this boils down to is part sabotage and part FUD with Intel and AMD being willing co-conspirators with Microsoft, and essentially participating in collusion. I'm not sure why Intel and AMD are so loyal to Microsoft, though; Microsoft has demonstrated it has no loyalty to x86, and has done so repeatedly over the years (see: Windows Phone, Windows NT for Alpha, etc.).

      • Uh, Microsoft was pretty loyal to Intel/AMD. Windows NT was never properly supported on Alpha or MIPS. Yeah, the OS ran on them, but Microsoft didn't port many of their applications to those things. Visual C++? They had something for the Alpha, but it was DEC that had to support it. MIPS, nothing happened. Office support? Only Word and Excel, no PowerPoint or Access. The support was so bad that every workstation company that tried to sell such boxes - DeskStation, Carrera, Aspen, NeTpower, Microway,
    • Regardless of support for older versions of Windows, it would be utter insanity to not support Linux (which would also lead to BSD support). Yeah, you might need a newer kernel but, the entire damn internet runs on Linux. Chip vendors aren't going to stunt that upgrade path.

      As for virtualization, it should be fine to run older versions in a VM. A Windows VM doesn't see the bits that might affect compatibility.

  • Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)

    by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Thursday September 01, 2016 @05:54PM (#52811479)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • This article is saying that older versions of windows won't work with new chips. It doesn't mean that Linux or OSX can't use them.
      • by Khyber ( 864651 ) <techkitsune@gmail.com> on Thursday September 01, 2016 @06:13PM (#52811631) Homepage Journal

        There is zero reason for Windows 7 to not work with the processor. Otherwise, you might as well NOT call it x86.

        • by Truekaiser ( 724672 ) on Thursday September 01, 2016 @06:40PM (#52811755)

          The article is misleading. It is not that the chips won't work with the older os's. It is that only windows 10 compared to previous versions will support their newer features. Stuff like enhanced speed stepping and powering down cores when not in use.

          • by sexconker ( 1179573 ) on Thursday September 01, 2016 @08:05PM (#52812205)

            Intel already tried to break the Windows 10 installer with their latest chipsets.

            They forced the USB controller into XHCI mode for no reason, so when you get to the point in the Windows 7 installer where you need to interact with it, you're fucked if you're using USB installation media or a USB keyboard. Using an optical drive and an unattended setup answers file or an optical drive and a PS/2 keyboard works. Guess which things modern Intel platforms tend not to have.

            Of course, the Taiwanese mobo manufacturers all released the workarounds (use a DVD and a PS/2 keyboard, use USB ports 7 and 8 which are powered by the non-Intel controller, etc.) and even published tools to patch the Windows 7 installer to just make it work. Intel and MS responded after much outcry by releasing official versions of those same tools.

            Fuck both Intel and MS. If AMD goes the same way, fuck them too. Windows 10 is the worst thing to happen in computing this decade.

    • by rahvin112 ( 446269 ) on Thursday September 01, 2016 @06:11PM (#52811623)

      It's not collusion, they've been doing that for years, this is planned obsolescence. People aren't buying new hardware because they don't need it. Newer processors aren't any faster overall and haven't been for years now. You have to go back almost 5 generations to get a significant difference between mainstream Intel CPU's (single thread performance) that would be enough to justify buying a new processor. The focus on power efficiency has essentially stalled all growth in processor power.

      So they are doing what they can, you want new hardware you need a new OS. They think it's a win win for both of them, though i think it will delay the upgrade cycle even more and will end up hurting them.

      • ... you want new hardware you need a new OS ...

        By the time the hardware arrives Windows 10 won't be new, it will merely be the current OS.

        And its not exactly a new thing. I recently built a new PC based on a recently released ASUS motherboard. ASUS only provided chipset drivers for Windows 8 and 10. Not sure if 7 would work. Doubtful Vista and older would work correctly.

      • It's not collusion, they've been doing that for years, this is planned obsolescence. People aren't buying new hardware because they don't need it. Newer processors aren't any faster overall and haven't been for years now. You have to go back almost 5 generations to get a significant difference between mainstream Intel CPU's (single thread performance) that would be enough to justify buying a new processor. The focus on power efficiency has essentially stalled all growth in processor power.

        So they are doing what they can, you want new hardware you need a new OS. They think it's a win win for both of them, though i think it will delay the upgrade cycle even more and will end up hurting them.

        I have a W7 OS on my Mac running in bootcamp. Not too bad at all. It runs the one piece of Software I need Windows for. Uptime has been 100 percent so far.

        The W10 Box, which I used for the same purpose has been borked a number of times, with issues running form sound card drivers, removing fonts that had no reason to be removed, changing all my security settings, and most recently, killing my ethernet driver and updating something else so it won't even use a USB to ethernt adapter. You leave it working,

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by BenJeremy ( 181303 )

      Collusion against who? Microsoft circa 2014?

      This isn't locking out any competition - Linux and MacOS will still run on the newer processors.

      Honestly, Slashdotters seem to be growing into old men yelling at clouds, lamenting passing of the days when you would wear an onion on your belt and memory was measured in hog's ears.

      I'd say "in before" but I see "this will be the death of Microsoft!" and "Hello Linux" already posted, as they get posted on every Microsoft story since 1998. Keep shaking those impotent,

  • Linux anyone? (Score:5, Informative)

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday September 01, 2016 @05:56PM (#52811493)

    "Windows 10 will be the only Microsoft OS to support new Intel and AMD chips"

    Little to see here, moving on.

  • In time (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday September 01, 2016 @05:56PM (#52811495)

    It will be illegal to run any other version than Windows 10.

  • by ArtemaOne ( 1300025 ) on Thursday September 01, 2016 @05:57PM (#52811501)
    I know they never update their hardware anymore, but will they adjust OSX to the processors as well, or what? This is interesting and, while promising for efficiency, bothersome in several ways.
  • Alrighty then, I guess I'm not upgrading my notebook any time soon then. There was no real reason to do it, and now I have a real reason not to do it. And if it breaks, I'll pick up something used for cheap that can run what *I* want, and not what Microsoft/Intel/AMD wants me to run with artificial limitations. And then they wonder why PC sales are in deep decline...

  • deep integration between Windows and the silicon

    Because Microsoft has a hugely successful track record with "deep integration" with ANYTHING. I guess this is the "Extinguish" phase for CPU manufacturers. You made a deal with the devil, now you reap the rewards. Don't say no one ever told you so.

    I guess I'll be hunting for old CPUs and motherboards and buying second-hand in my retirement years.

    • Not even "old." Just current. CPUs aren't advancing at a breakneck pace or anything. A modern Skylake processor will last the better part of a decade for most purposes, and by then, Intel should have come to their senses, or a competitor will step in.

      Also, this should only affect the consumer line (Core i). I can't imagine them locking Xeon processors into Windows 10, so just get yourself the equivalent Xeon (e.g. Xeon E3-1230v5 vs Core i7 6700). You lose the integrated graphics, but that's easy to wor

      • by fnj ( 64210 )

        If you don't limit yourself to stupid brain-dead pared-down models of Xeon, you don't sacrifice the integrated graphics. Those that end in 0 are crap. Those that end in 5 or 8 are good. The e3-1225v5 is cheaper than the e3-1230v5 and has graphics. A much, much better deal. There isn't any 1235 (yet), but there is a 1245 and a 1275.

  • Forced Obsolecence (Score:3, Insightful)

    by darkwyrm76 ( 1030616 ) on Thursday September 01, 2016 @06:00PM (#52811535)

    If it weren't for dirty tricks like this, users would treat Windows 7 like XP... M$ would need to pry it from their cold, dead hands.

  • Doesn't matter (Score:5, Interesting)

    by DogDude ( 805747 ) on Thursday September 01, 2016 @06:02PM (#52811551)
    It doesn't matter. I would imagine 95% of all Windows licenses are sold with hardware, anyway. We are going to keep buying refurb machines with Windows 7 licenses, because that's the OS we need. The hardware really hasn't mattered for workstations for a decade or so, anyway.
  • by zenlessyank ( 748553 ) on Thursday September 01, 2016 @06:03PM (#52811557)

    Soon all our machines will be totally infected with spyware sponsored by our own tax dollars.

  • Bad news for Apple (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday September 01, 2016 @06:04PM (#52811565)

    Their notebooks are DOOMED.

  • M$ said the same thing with Skylake on Win7. And Skylake works fine on Win7, you just need to install the Intel INF drivers and the proper usb 3.0 drivers.

    So unless Intel refuses to makes their drivers for Kaby Lake work on Win7 (and I don't think Intel is quite that stupid), this is a non issue.

    Or to be more accurate, its more FUD and outright bullshit from M$.

  • They're both doing everything in their power to intentionally lose.
  • by ffkom ( 3519199 ) on Thursday September 01, 2016 @06:18PM (#52811663)
    ... since after all, there are much better, free operating systems out there that run well on both old and new CPUs.
  • Kaby Lake will not run on anything older than Windows 10

    Just how do you disable older versions of the OS without also disabling older applications?

    Maybe, there is code buried into Windows XP/Vista/7/8, that will prevent them from running on some future CPUs. I can believe that. But for a CPU to reject an older OS on its own? I do not know, how this can happen even in theory — not without disabling a whole lot of other already existing binaries...

    Maybe, it is not the CPUs, but the chipsets using some

  • by swell ( 195815 ) <jabberwock@poetic.com> on Thursday September 01, 2016 @06:47PM (#52811789)

    The headline is crystal clear. Linux, Mac, Win 7-- fuggedaboudit.

    Or is this another Slashdot clickbait? Ah, they are off the hook because they copied the clickbait at PCWorld. At least PCWorld had the decency to add this statement "But a change in Microsoftâ(TM)s support policy means that it will be only be officially supported by Windows 10." which seems to soften the misleading headline.

    As most here agree, ways will be found to deploy these chips in a useful direction despite the monopolistic desires of Microsoft.

  • by OrangeTide ( 124937 ) on Thursday September 01, 2016 @07:01PM (#52811871) Homepage Journal

    Lots of motherboard manufacturers still run diagnostics on DOS. I don't think very many of them have moved their diags over to run as UEFI applications.

    I could imagine (and the article implies this) that older versions of Windows won't work on the newer CPUs, as disappointing as that is, I suppose that makes some sense.

  • Orwellian much? (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Joska ( 78000 ) on Thursday September 01, 2016 @07:15PM (#52811945)

    Intel and AMD are so committed to a good and trustworthy experience for their customers that they are only accommodating installation of the perpetual beta, that data mining sensation, Windows 10? This constitutes a big bet that nearly all of their customers are completely ignorant or utter fools, with the remainder being an insignificant minority that can safely be ignored.

    After 20 years of Windows, I'm finally in the process of switching to Linux. I can clearly tolerate a somewhat rubbish OS for a long time but when it's essentially a sinister joke and a toy rather than a serious tool, even a procrastinator like me is motivated to make a change. Of course much of the Win 10 evil has been back ported to Win 7 and 8 but could in theory be avoided. After a while though, one tires of the cat and mouse game of choosing which updates to avoid and now how to get around the update rollups. This business with chip support is just the most recent slap in the face from an increasingly cynical and adversarial Microsoft who is apparently the driving force in this present fiasco.

    KDE Neon, for example, is way faster on an old laptop than Windows on a recent Xeon workstation, so this no painful switch. Thus ends the promise of Longhorn, at least for me.

  • by BlueCoder ( 223005 ) on Thursday September 01, 2016 @08:16PM (#52812277)

    The hardware is mature enough and ram is cheap. With PCI passthrough and modern video cards I can afford a 2% frame loss for games since that is all I use windows for. It also makes reboots cheap and easy while browsing the web on another VM. Furthermore it provides a sandbox for security risky applications like web browsers where it can be setup temp/read only and resets at boot. It makes it easy for me to migrate the windows installations so they are no longer locked down to a single machine. So I can setup games once for it's intended windows version and then forget about it. It also empowers easy incremental backups.

    Only problematic thing is the cracks I still need to use for games I purchased. I'm one of the few holdouts from steam. I'm old school and like boxes and actually installation media when it's available. But with game VM's being sandboxed it's not so bad. When games get released without copy protection I ultimately buy those versions of the CD or the GOG download. Only thing I use steam for is online games since those games will all go EOL and disappear in 10 years anyways; which is why I incidentally try to stay away from most of them.

  • No problem (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Trogre ( 513942 ) on Thursday September 01, 2016 @08:23PM (#52812325) Homepage

    Just add these to the growing list of hardware that is Linux only.

    It's usually older gear such as PCI cards or scanners that makes the list, so it's nice to have some newer CPUs on our side too.

  • by jsepeta ( 412566 ) on Thursday September 01, 2016 @09:44PM (#52812647) Homepage

    Making a new chip incompatible with older operating systems is stupid. And what about alternatives to Windows? Apple relies on Intel for CPUs for their computer line.

  • by Snufu ( 1049644 ) on Thursday September 01, 2016 @10:56PM (#52812867)

    Skin crawling.

  • If I really need a Windows environment, I'll spin one up in VMWare. It works just fine there and it's not like I'm gaming on it.

    Fuck Microsoft and their attempt to force upgrades by removing choice from the owner of the computer.
    And damn Intel and AMD for slobbing the Redmond knob and helping them!

  • by marmot7 ( 4676645 ) on Friday September 02, 2016 @12:54AM (#52813173)
    It comes off as *only* Windows 10. That's borderline Huffpo click bait as of course x86 Linux users don't have to lose a moment's sleep over this distressing headline. :-)
  • by ytene ( 4376651 ) on Friday September 02, 2016 @06:48AM (#52814057)
    This is an incredibly shrewd move by Microsoft.

    All the millions of copies of pre-W10 Windows still in use are essentially "dead" to Microsoft: they are in fact an overhead, since MS have to continue to host all the patches and update materials for these releases, but can't generate revenue from them once the product is sold and installed. However, from a Microsoft perspective, W10 is the product that keeps on giving. It's incredibly intrusive SpyWareOS(TM) capabilities mean that the moment you have installed it, you become a Microsoft Product again. At any point in time they can send an update to your machine [because you can't turn off auto-update] that reverses any privacy settings you have made. They're not obliged to tell you that they have done it.

    In other Words, this move will prevent people from moving their personally-owned Windows 7/8/8.1 Licenses to newer hardware in the event of a hardware failure, so that, over time, those people will be forced to upgrade to SpyWareOS and become part of the Microsoft Product.

    Microsoft's defence against any potential future investigations by Monopoly/Market Abuse investigators will be: "It is unreasonable to expect us to continue to offer support for legacy software forever Additionally, we have not only made upgrading to Windows 10 incredibly simple, but we have actually made it free for all existing users for a considerable period of time. Lastly, anyone not happy can go buy a Mac..." And certainly, in most of the world, that will be enough.

    What this does is force anyone happy enough to run older Windows versions to upgrade, whether they like it or not. Or migrate. One thing that wasn't completely clear from either this post or the linked articles though: will the new CPU actually prevent say W7 from running at all? Will it's ID string be so alien that older versions of Windows simply won't recognise it and refuse to install? HP tried something like this by putting tiny ICs into their original toner cartridges, such that 3rd party cartridges would not work in their printers. That got overturned in court, though, because it was shown that the IC served no purpose other than to act as a barrier to entry. Could this be shown in a similar light? i.e. Could it be argued that some sneaky microcode work-around serves no purpose other than to enforce the hegemony?

    Anyone fluent in legalese lurking today?

Two can Live as Cheaply as One for Half as Long. -- Howard Kandel

Working...