Microsoft To End Support For Windows Vista In Less Than a Month (pcworld.com) 167
In less than a month's time, Microsoft will put Windows Vista to rest once and for all. If you're one of the few people still using it, you have just a few weeks to find another option before time runs out. (I mean, nobody will uninstall it from your computer, but.) From a report on PCWorld: After April 11, 2017, Microsoft will no longer support Windows Vista: no new security updates, non-security hotfixes, free or paid assisted support options, or online technical content updates, Microsoft says. (Mainstream Vista support expired in 2012.) Like it did for Windows XP, Microsoft has moved on to better things after a decade of supporting Vista. As Microsoft notes, however, running an older operating system means taking risks -- and those risks will become far worse after the deadline. Vista's Internet Explorer 9 has long since expired, and the lack of any further updates means that any existing vulnerabilities will never be patched -- ever. Even if you have Microsoft's Security Essentials installed -- Vista's own antivirus program -- you'll only receive new signatures for a limited time.
And now a Rant from all the Vista Supporters... (Score:2)
Much like how When Windows XP was released it was a hated OS with its FisherPrice Interface, All its problems from moving the Home PC to the NT kernel vs the DOS based Windowed Shell that use to be Windows. When went out of support we had a bunch of lover saying why get rid of it because it is so good.
I would love to see what love letters are coming out from Vista (one of the most hated WIndows Versions (besides ME) to be released)
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Except that Vista market share is far below XP, even today. So no, there probably won't be many rants.
Windows 7's end will make the end of XP look like a formal tea party, however. The last decent desktop version of Windows ever.
Re:And now a Rant from all the Vista Supporters... (Score:5, Insightful)
This is actually going to be the real problem here.
Retiring Vista is no biggie. I don't know anyone who didn't immediately replace Vista with Seven as soon as it became available. On the other hand, I can also not name that many people who replaced 7 with 8 once that hit the market. Even with 8.1, the amount of people who made the switch is rather low. And I know a lot of people and companies, myself and my company included, that rely heavily on Win7 even today. On the other hand, I do not know any large companies that embraced Win8/8.1 in any way and the acceptance of Win10 so far is, at best, lukewarm, at worst hostile with a big "when hell freezes over" stamp from the CISO.
More recently our development department even started to look around for a replacement of VS15, with the Telemetry blunder in VS15SP2 the switch to VS17 is not a given as it was in the years before from 10 to 13 and to 15. And I dare say we're not alone. CISOs talk. And I'm not the only one who is very unhappy with the direction Microsoft is heading. A simple Win10 rollout as it had been in the past with MS systems where the main concern was whether the key applications will run on the new platform will certainly not happen. This will at the very least include a lengthy and probably quite costly security audit as well. And not even whether it's secure against someone breaking in, more concerning the data that leaves the machine towards Redmond.
You can see that reflected in changes in bidding catalogs as well. More and more you find demands that software development has to be "OS agnostic" or they demand outright that a client has to be provided for Windows and Linux. My guess is that quite a few companies that I have to deal with are at the very least pondering whether it might be possible to think about considering leaving the Windows platform.
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I went from Vista to 8 and the 8.1. Was able to get 8 for $20. No such cheap deals for 7, and besides that, Vista worked fine for me.
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When Vista came out, it was crap. It improved as time went on, and became quite usable by the time 7 came out.
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Let's hope the same is true for 10 when 11 is about to surface...
Re: And now a Rant from all the Vista Supporters.. (Score:2)
Jet brains is doing a resharper/IntelliJ thing soon, apparently.
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Jetbrains Rider (their .Net IDE) has been in beta now for about a year, and is coming along nicely, but still not a VS replacement.
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This is actually going to be the real problem here.
Retiring Vista is no biggie. I don't know anyone who didn't immediately replace Vista with Seven as soon as it became available.
* Raises hand *. Me.
I have an old HP laptop that could not upgrade to Windows 7, and it's been running Vista since I bought it in 2008. My wife uses it for e-mail, photography, web browsing, google docs, and stuff. As it is, it is a good media consumption machine for her needs. It is also the laptop where my daughter does her computer-assigned work.
For what it is being used, we'd never had a reason to spend money in upgrading.
I know that this day was going to come, but it still sucks. I need to find
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Same here - we have 1 laptop running Vista (only Windows system in the house, generally secure network, and it doesn't leave the house typically - IOW, security risks are minimal). We missed the upgrade to Win7 - in part b/c we had Vista Ultimate and there was no equivalent upgrade any Win7 product. However, now I'd like to swap the HDD for an SSD but Vista makes that impossible (Vista could use a flash for some things, but not the primary OS; the optimizations for that didn't hit until Win7, so if you do use an SSD with Vista you're chewing up the disk life.).
The laptop, however, is near EOL entirely (2006/2007 purchase IIRC). It might get a new life with Linux but as it needs a new battery and only has 4 GB RAM total (max'd out) that is not likely.
Unfortunately, I really don't want to give my wife Win10 on any new system we buy. I'd much prefer giving her Win7 but we won't likely have a choice.
One option would be to find a used Win7, Win8.x laptop somewhere, and buy it for cheap. As a media consumption, it'd be perfectly fine. That's what I'm looking right now.
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Exactly. It's not difficult to a keep an out of date Windows machine secure as long as you are smart about it. I've run Windows XP past the expiration date, and if you don't want Microsoft's telemetry in Windows 7/8 you've basically been running unpatched as of last October when they started the monthly update rollups.
Otherwise, I'd try Linux.
Besides, why won't it run a newer version of Windows? I have an old laptop running Windows 10, despite some of hardware only having Vista drivers available. I was
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I really hope Windows 11 goes back to the Windows 7 look and feel. Otherwise I am switching to a Mac or Linux desktop. Windows 8 and 10 have terrible interfaces. Classic Shell helps a lot, but it isn't as good as an actual Windows 7 interface.
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Supposedly there isn't going to be a Windows 11. Instead, 10 will turn into some sort of bastardized rolling release thing that you'll be tricked into paying for eventually. After you've gotten used to the phone-home privacy invasion and anal probes.
You missed the point. It's about relativity. (Score:3, Insightful)
What you're ignoring is that everything is temporally relative. When you factor that in, there's perfect consistency between what people said when Windows XP was first released, and when support for it was terminated.
In the early days of Windows XP, it was being compared against Windows 98 and Windows 2000. Yes, it did have a childish and inferior default UI relative to what it was being compared against, and people disliked it for that reason. But when support for it was ended some years later, it wasn't b
Re:You missed the point. It's about relativity. (Score:5, Interesting)
I sincerely doubt the UIs are getting worse year after year. If that were the case, we would have unusable devices by now.
What is really happening is that people are resisting change. The new thing is different---unfamiliar and possibly confusing. That doesn't mean it's worse, but it does mean people will react negatively.
A good UI is difficult. It needs to meet a lot of goals:
*It must expose typical functions with a minimal number of key presses or mouse clicks, yet not overwhelm the user with too many options or unclear organization.
*It should be reasonably configurable, yet it should be consistent enough that developers can rely on some essential elements.
*It should be simple enough for a basic user to grasp intuitively, but it must accommodate a wide range of users and tasks.
Each of those goals is a balancing act, and any change pushes that balance in a way that demands adaptation from either users, administrators, or developers. Of course people are going to be upset.
The initial round of upset, ranting, and whining is virtually irrelevant. If complaints remain after sustained use of the new UI, then it's time to reevaluate. The real measure of a UI is how upset people are when it comes vs when it goes.
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IMO, that recently UIs have swinged too much towards being good for touch use.
I agree with almost everything you wrote, but I think the above overlooks the real problem, which is that it is almost impossible to design a good UI for some tasks when you're constraining yourself to what works on small touchscreen devices. You can do OK if your presentation and interaction requirements are simple, and that's where those kinds of devices are useful: share a photo, write a short message, log a site visit. However, for more complicated systems, we have big screens with multiple information
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I agree with almost everything you wrote, but I think the above overlooks the real problem, which is that it is almost impossible to design a good UI for some tasks when you're constraining yourself to what works on small touchscreen devices.
I wish somebody would go give Microsoft and Mozilla noogies (substitute knee to the groin for larger values of disapproval) until they agreed to stop fucking around with their perfectly alright UIs.
Software projects seem universally doomed to achieve all their major goals, then suddenly realize they don't have an excuse to continue development and start fixing things that aren't broken.
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Star Trek Actor's Death Inspires Class Action Against Car Manufacturer [slashdot.org]
Jeep/Chrysler's New Gearshift Appears To Be [slashdot.org]
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I sincerely doubt the UIs are getting worse year after year. If that were the case, we would have unusable devices by now.
I couldn't use Windows 8 until I found classic shell. I seriously could discover how to do anything as far as box admin. BUt in think geek consensus is that 10 is better than 8, just still (much) worse than 7.
A good UI is difficult. It needs to meet a lot of goals:
But we had UIs that met those goals, and lost them due to "designers" seeking fashion over function. Heck, just last month some update pushed to my Android moved its UI from tolerable to unusable. I now cant guess what the icons on the lock screen mean, and I cant read the light-grey-on-white alerts
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Can we just kill all the "designers" and start over?
Or just hire some real ones. I'm sure they can afford it, and it's not like no-one in the design industry has criticised the modern generation of UIs for the same reasons many of us are here.
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I sincerely doubt the UIs are getting worse year after year. If that were the case, we would have unusable devices by now.
Lately, we are sometimes coming awfully close to that. The lack of affordances in modern flat, touch-friendly, most-things-hidden UIs is horrible for usability compared to the explicit menus and toolbars and consistent conventions we had before. The things some UI designers seem to think people understand or want and the comments you hear and behaviour you see if you observe real users trying to operate the UI seem to be in different universes at times.
What is really happening is that people are resisting change.
That is also true, but there is a good reason for that.
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I highly suspect you of being a microsoft employee.
No, really. This is what they believe is going on in people's heads.
YES, the windows UI has been getting worse over time. 98 was
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*It must expose typical functions with a minimal number of key presses or mouse clicks, yet not overwhelm the user with too many options or unclear organization
This part of a UI change is almost self defeating. A lot of "too many / unclear options" are not considered too many or unclear by veterans who have used the software for years. A UI change that therefore makes the software much more accessible to new consumers or a wider audience therefor appears as a jaring stupidification by the existing users. i.e. All new UI = bad.
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No, whats happening is that UI's are all being dumbed down for fucking phones. And more so, all new interfaces are designed first and formost for the web and fucking phones. (look at the new v centre for instance, where it was perfectly acceptable to have a thick client and that really didn't bother anyone. But no, vmware wants more people using their shitty unfinished web interfaces, so they obsolete the client thats better, and you got no choi
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With Vista it wasn't just UI changes. Like most new versions of Windows, Vista had problems during the initial release with stability and driver support, etc. However, Vista development was troubled. Most companies didn't release new drivers partly because they didn't think MS would release it on time. Also the drivers infrastructure was so new.
Adding to Vista's problems was the artificially lowering of hardware requirements so that the lowest computer models could advertise that they were Vista Capable* (*
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When support for Windows 7 ends there will be a whole other problem since there is the whole "rent a OS" thing going on with Windows 10
I've been wondering about this "rent a OS" thing myself. I've been running windows 10 for almost two years, on several machines. I have yet to have it stick out a change pan.
Personally, I would rather pay a reasonable fee every year than get hit with a enormous upgrade cost every 4 years. I would rather have a gradual change over a period of time instead of huge change with a reinstall every few years.
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Personally, I would rather pay a reasonable fee every year than get hit with a enormous upgrade cost every 4 years.
Windows 10 (retail version) costs about $130. Over 4 years, that works out to $2.71 per month. Maybe you can just drop $3 in your piggy bank the 1st of each month, to help soften the terrible economic blow.
I'd leave Windows if it went to a rental-only model. (For what it's worth, I'm only on Windows because...games. Otherwise, I'd be just as happy on macOS or desktop Linux.)
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I think I'd rather pay them a $2/month subscription for security updates, so that they have a revenue stream for keeping the old version supported, rather than requiring them to push new stuff out to keep their income.
How come?
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Not really I still think vista was a worthless POS.
XP had a lot of updates that significantly improved it and added features.
Vista at launch was slow as hell because microsoft didn't hike the minimum requirements enough for it to run decent this was never fixed they jumped to windows 7 and promptly gave up on trying to fix it.
IME windows 7 actually runs faster than Vista on the same hardware.
I noticed a lot of vendors actually dropped support for Vista long before they dropped support for XP I think that sa
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Windows moved to the NT kernel with Windows 2000. Windows ME was the last version based on DOS.
Vista had the ignominy of being the first version where Microsoft tried to enforce the admin vs user privilege model that Unix had from its inception. Prior to Vista, Win32 app makers would just program assuming they had root privileges (as if they were writing a DOS program). This had the unfor
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"Windows ME was the last version based on DOS."
ME was more of a mix of NT and DOS (.VXD and .DLL driver hell was rampant) and real-time DOS mode was heavily restricted (which made a bunch of my older disk utilities no longer work.)
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> Windows moved to the NT kernel with Windows 2000.
That's misleading. The Windows 9x kernel was killed off with Windows ME.
* Windows NT 3.1
* Windows NT 3.5
* Windows NT 4.0
* Windows NT 2000
* Windows XP
* Windows Vista
* Windows 7
* Windows 8
* Windows
ALL of these use the NT kernel.
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Much like how When Windows XP was released it was a hated OS with its FisherPrice Interface, All its problems from moving the Home PC to the NT
I don't remember anyone hating Windows XP for this reason. It would be strange considering you could easily go back to spitting image of Win95 by adjusting a couple of settings in windows control panel.
kernel vs the DOS based Windowed Shell that use to be Windows. When went out of support we had a bunch of lover saying why get rid of it because it is so good.
The problem was software interoperability not a love of DOS. People just wanted their existing software to work.
I would love to see what love letters are coming out from Vista (one of the most hated WIndows Versions (besides ME) to be released)
There were a couple of real issues with Vista. It was less stable than XP at the time due to immature hardware drivers out of the gate and it used more ram than people had at the time. What peop
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Much like how When Windows XP was released it was a hated OS with its FisherPrice Interface
XP was hated because, when it was released, it sucked resources and it crashed. The FisherPrice Interface was collateral damage. It was hated because it ran slow on PC's that ran Windows 98 fine, and it disappointed Windows 2000 users because it ran slow and crashed where 2K ran solid.
XP earned its love after many painful Service Packs, but not before people figured out how to write malware that ripped through XP's (and 2000's) lousy security model. I mean, NT and NTFS offered file permissions, but using
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The issue was this was the move for the majority of people from the 9x to NT kernel which impacted drivers.
Vista had the exact same issue as 64-bit was now a thing and new drivers for old hardware had to be written. The drivers were created and working when Windows 7 was released so suddenly all the issues with Vista went away even though 7 was mostly just a reskinned service pack.
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Windows 2000 was never released for the consumer market. Windows 98 Second Edition and Windows Millennium Edition were released to that segment until Windows XP finally unified their product line-up.
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Sure it was - I had it. It was the blatantly obvious better choice over the end-of-life 98/ME trash. The big problem was that it didn't support many games, as it was very early days for DirectX. I played the Hell out of Starcraft though.
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Windows 2000 was a lot more expensive than ME and only had Pro, Server, and Advanced Server variants, no Home edition. The XP Home Edition was the same price as 95/98/ME had been. A few higher-end machines and motherboards came with 2K Pro OEM edition, which was a bit cheaper than retail.
The majority of home users of 2000 were likely to have been students. Microsoft's student licensing had a single price for an OS, which bought you either Windows 95 or NT, later Windows 2K or ME. Given the choice bet
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> Windows 2000 was never released for the consumer market.
Incorrect for two reasons:
* It WAS sold in consumer stores.
* Why is DirectX 8 and 9 even available [falconfly.de] for it if it isn't a "consumer" market?
A lot of us game devs used Windows 2000 to do game development back in ~2000, including myself. Windows 2000 was the stepping stone between Windows 98/ME and Windows XP. Windows NT 4.0 was the start of the migration path when it adopted the Win95 Shell.
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There is a difference between market segmentation and what retail outlets choose to carry. Microsoft's own internal roadmaps reflect that a consumer edition was planned and scrapped.
You give one very likely explanation of why they would include DirectX in Windows 2000 (and before it Windows NT, for that matter) - as a workstation platform for developers.
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I'm pretty sure he meant the "Home" market. Windows 2000 was the predecessor to Windows XP Pro. Windows ME was the predecessor to Windows XP Home.
You could certainly buy Windows 2000 and run it at home, and running Windows 2000 had huge advantages over 98/ME, unlike in XP where the Home edition is basically the same as the Pro edition except for a handful of features most home users never miss like being able to join a domain. On the other hand, Windows 2000 was expensive (most people I knew running it w
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Just because some vendors sold into the consumer market does not mean it was released /for/ the consumer market. I can go out and buy an F-750 as a daily driver, too, but that does not reflect on Ford's market segmentation.
There was a consumer version planned at one point, called Microsoft Neptune, but that was canned after one alpha release.
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A workstation edition is not the same as a consumer edition. Home users had little call to run a directory server for a heterogeneous network back then.
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As noted in other replies, just because someone CAN be bought by a consumer (or more to the point, typically prosumers, as in the DAW market; thanks for the example) doesn't mean they were the primary market.
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Windows 2000 wasn't marketed as a Home Operating System. It was a business Workstation OS to Replace NT 4.0
XP was marketed to Replace Windows 98 and ME. When 2000 was released a lot of people did use it for their home PC. But that wasn't MS Intent. But seeing its popularity probably urged XP development toward the NT kernel.
But when 2000 was released when you got your standard Compaq, eMachine, Gateway 2000 or Dell PC. It came with 98 or ME standard. Unless you were going with a business account.
If you can't say anything good about Vista... (Score:2)
...say nothing at all.
Let the silence begin!
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Well, to Vista's defense, it was equally easy to replace it with Win7 as it was to replace it with Ubuntu Linux.
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Seriously, I liked it, where MS shot themselves in the foot was changing the driver model, most peoples biggest gripe about Vista was performance, and bad driver support. I was running it on a gaming rig, so I did not notice the performance issues, and I could understand about the lack of drivers due to the change in driver model, so I kept a VM with XP installed for the odd occasion I needed it, otherwise I made sure that any new hardware that I bought had Vista support BEFORE buyin
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It doesn't matter how fast your PC is, Vista will be slow on it. The delays are not because it is doing heavy processing or disk access, they are because it waits for stuff far too often. A lot of it was compatibility stuff, some dev finds that if he inserts a 5 second delay that old DLL has a chance to get going or that slow 2x CD-ROM drive has time to spin up.
The reason Windows 7 is fast is because Microsoft used their newly developed game performance tools for the XBOX on it, and figured out which delays
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The biggest "bug" I can think of is the whole Superfetch algorithm is way too aggressive. It's not technically a bug - it's likely working as designed, but it's also responsible for a lot of the performance complaints in Vista. Microsoft turned it way down in Windows 7, and could have pushed out a patch to Vista to do the same, but never did.
The other big bug is Windows Explorer will randomly hang and shit itself, but it does the same thing in Windows 7.
I guess the other bug is the 497 day bug, which kill
Obligatory (Score:2)
More secure than Linux (Score:5, Funny)
It was more secure than Linux. Literally every time I tried anything on the standard Vista install on my brand new Dell, it froze or crash. No way an attacker could take that over.
Re:More secure than Linux (Score:5, Funny)
It was more secure than Linux. Literally every time I tried anything on the standard Vista install on my brand new Dell, it froze or crash. No way an attacker could take that over.
Ahh security through inoperability.
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A database-based file system? Funny, KirbyCMS went without a database and uses the pure file system for RAW PERFORMANCE.
Who the fuck would add a secondary layer to make shit run slower? (Besides Oracle?)
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As a user of Adobe's Lightroom and someone who wanted WinFS, this actually makes me quite sad that nothing like it ever came to be system-wide. Lightroom is basically what WinFS was trying to be, it uses a Sqlite database to tag metadata to photos, but it is just a proprietary solution just for images and nothing more.
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I have my own Vista anecdote that isn't too far off... One time I signed on and got the following (almost) infinite loop:
1) Login
2) (unresponsive for ~5 minutes)
3) Dialog pops up with "The following program is forcing explorer to crash: explorer.exe. Do you wish to restart it?"
4) Click okay
4) GOTO 2
It was a Toshiba laptop, so that could also be the reason...
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Still nothing compared to our ME machine. Whenever it didn't shut down properly you'd get ScanDisk which would run the next time you booted it up. But if you let ScanDisk run past 10% completion or so, it would just hang. So of course you powercycled it, which would result in a dirty shutdown...then next time you hit Cancel before the progress bar got too far.
In a few instances it actually booted directly to a BSOD. Impressive.
Speaking of risk (Score:2)
I just heard today from a control system vendor in a passing conversation that they expect to exhaust their Windows 7 licenses sometime mid year given how pre-installed sales were ended last year.
If their goal was to get a sudden surge in sales it worked. We're trying to buy up a few new operator stations for a very large chemical plant before the only thing left with which we can control the plant is ... Windows 10.
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Apart from refurbs, it's getting harder to buy machines with Windows 7 on them. We saw the writing on the wall last year, and, with a great deal of trepidation and no small amount of regret, bumped up to Win10. While Windows 10 does run better on older hardware (we've got eight year old Dell towers with 2gb to 3gb of RAM which run it fine), I still simply do not like Windows 10 at all. But seeing as we are in an Office/Backoffice ecosystem there doesn't seem to be any real escape.
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it's getting harder to buy machines with Windows 7 on them
As of October 2016 Windows 7 (all versions) preloads were withdrawn from sales. If you're buying a Windows 7 machine now it's either a large reseller with existing licenses, or (not all that unlikely) it comes pre-loaded with a pirate copy.
I actually like Windows 10 as a desktop, it just doesn't have any upside and a hell of a lot of downsides on industrial equipment.
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What downsides? Yes the upside is you are compliant now for security and insurance purposes. Machines break man. That is life. You can't keep expecting them and PCs to work forever.
Reminds me of stories about a VP freaking out that the IBM 1981 hard disk went out on that mission critical machine or that 1978 digital PDP robot failing. The tech almost gets a write-up and raises hell that these things need to be upgraded !
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Err PCs breaking had nothing to do with anything. Windows licenses are transferable. The only issue is vendor support and that won't change in the next 5 years for the equipment we have. We will be compliant until then. As for insurance, well if they don't complain about the ancient videospec system that predates the pc running in one side of the plant they won't complain about Windows 7 either.
Downsides? Lack of a proven reliability track record and the shortest period to market from vendors for any major
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WTF does this have to do with an industrial control system.
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Did any IT department learned any lessons from XP?
The Enterprise edition has no spyware and is a lot more secure and quicker with SMB file sharing than 7. Go make a GPO with custom looks if you don't like UI?
This can go very smooth if you plan and migrate and not be that costly if you start TODAY. A large enterprise should take a year to gradually migrate with little additional costs compared to wait and hire ontractors and 3rd party PM's
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If samba file sharing is a critical feature of an industrial control system... You're doing it wrong. Actually if IT are touching it you're doing it wrong too.
These things don't come with enterprise licenses.
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We're trying to buy up a few new operator stations for a very large chemical plant before the only thing left with which we can control the plant is ... Windows 10.
You should make the migration now. Then you would get informative pop-ups that could help you improve your manufacturing process:
It looks like you're synthesizing "polycaprolactone". Users of that compound were also interested in: polybutadiene, polymer initiators, reaction vessels, and industrial tubing. Click [here] to shop now.
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I'm more worried about:
Click here and pay 100BTC to not send your entire control system code to Bayer.
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You have to switch to 10 anyway. Perhaps your IT department should be spending this time preparing for a migration strategy instead of panicking and waiting until the last minute.
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We don't have a choice and the IT department doesn't get a say.
But I'll let you come up with a business case for our management. I'll put some figures in to get you started:
1. Upgrade 6 control stations with Windows 10 and current vendor: $90k, 2 weeks
2. Migrate away: $30m 5 years.
Oblig (Score:2, Funny)
Hasta la Vista, Baby!
We're still trying to get our users off XP (Score:2)
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I saw a recent article about the United States Navy spending MILLIONS of dollars for Microsoft XP support. Sad and most likely a waste of money, but they (the Navy) have applications that will not run on anything else and instead of spending the Millions of dollars to rewrite or replace, they spend Millions of dollars getting XP support.
Sigh - government contracts make me cry
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That's because they use IE 7 and hired an Indian contractor to writethe software with quirks in all just to get the CSS to work. The thought process was it was more future proof being web based
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> but I'm pretty sure that our license agreement with Microsoft will not allow us to keep running old versions of their OS past their expire date.
Why do you allow yourself to be held hostage by Microsoft ??
I don't see anything in the Windows 7 Terms of Service PDF [microsoft.com] that says anything about not running after the expiration date. Just that _support_ is terminated.
The Sky Is Falling! (Score:2, Insightful)
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Serious question: How do you KNOW you don't have malware? Modern malware is designed to be invisible, not the virus style of the '90s that would pop up a skull and cross bones telling you "OMGZ UR H@X0R3D"
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Modern malware is designed to be invisible
Modern malware is designed to be invisible yet not ineffective. It must show up somewhere or it will have no effect. The last time our house had malware I was informed by my ISP. The time before that by poor network performance. Ransomware by its nature will show up front and centre. Background mining will grind your computer or decimate your battery life (if on mobile). In the good old days of email viruses your friends will start shouting at you to stop spamming them. But it was nothing compared to the go
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No, he did say he blocked web ads, which is 95% or so of the attack surface these days.
Goodbye, Vista... *sniff* (Score:2)
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If that is your metric for a "not bad" OS then what does a "bad" OS look like?
Running the OS on minimum hardware spec and then discovering that it runs slow with Minesweeper. Minimum hardware spec is a marketing department lie. Always go for the recommended hardware spec or better.
Any other OS made in the last 15 years seems to be able to do fine with a dual core processor and 1.5GB of RAM for web browsing except Windows.
Hardware is cheap. Live a little. I got a new motherboard for $50, an AMD eight-core processor for $100, and 8GB RAM for $50. On the opposite extreme, I got an Intel dual-core Dell laptop for $200, SSD for $50 and 8GB RAM for $50. Both runs Windows 10 just fine.
Well It's now time... (Score:2)
To install Linux on that old laptop and be done with that vista thing once and for all... I feel better.
The Beta Test Ends (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Nice to have an SP3 or SP2 rollup ISO or installer (Score:3)
Nice to have an SP3 or SP2 rollup ISO or installer. If just to have install for older systems that have a vista key.
The problem with Vista (Score:2)
Vista hit what I call the sour spot in memory. If you had less than 2 GB, it was slow. If you had more than 2 GB, it only saw the first 2 GB and was still slow.
I used Vista for years (Score:2)
No new security updates (Score:2)
"No new security updates"
I'm fine with that: I'll keep reinstalling the old ones over and over until everything will be OK.
Talking of Expiry (Score:2)
Last of the US MP3 patents expires a month from today. [osnews.com]
May it rest in peace (Score:2)
Time to (Score:2)
Thank you, Microsoft (Score:2)
Re:taking risks (Score:5, Funny)
I agree, your computer looks clean.
Though I would change that background image, every time I use it as a jump host to do my ... work I get kinda distracted by the babe.