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On June 30th,
2008, Microsoft started the death march for Windows XP. As of that date,
Microsoft stopped shipments of Windows XP as a stand-alone
shrink-wrapped product. So after supplies are exhausted, you won't be
able to go into a store and purchase Windows XP. Microsoft also stopped
most sales to PC manufacturers. So Dell, Lenovo, HP and others will not
get any new copies of Windows XP to install on their mainstream
computers. However, Windows XP, Microsoft's longest-lived and best-loved
operating system, isn't going to vanish overnight. You will still see
copies of the XP software and/or computers with Windows XP in stores
until inventories and depleted.
Microsoft has made four important concessions that will also keep XP alive:
1. Microsoft will support Windows XP until
April 2014. They will offer updates, security patches, and technical
support until that time.
2. Smaller local PC makers can continue to sell PCs with Windows XP until January 2009.
3. Computers with limited hardware
capabilities which are sometimes called ultra-low cost PCs (ULCPC) can
sell with Windows XP Home until June 2010.
4. With the purchase of Windows Vista Business
or Windows Vista Ultimate, the two most expensive versions of Vista, a
customer will be able to move back to Windows XP Professional via what
Microsoft is calling "downgrade rights." Details on how this will be
handled have not been clearly defined to the public at this time. It is
even possible that different manufacturers will handle this in different
ways.
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To the home users,
this all means very little, unless you need a new computer and are
violently opposed to Windows Vista. To business users, these new
policies and extensions mean that they will be able to keep their fleets
of Windows XP computers running for several more years. Microsoft has
announced that Windows 7, the next version of Windows, will be available
in 2010 so many businesses will be able to skip Vista entirely instead
(moving) to Windows 7. Intel has already announced that they will do
just that.
What this means for everyone is that
Microsoft, while not writing off Vista, has made it an "interim"
operating system. Microsoft is still pushing Windows Vista. They
recently announced that Vista now supports 77,000 printers, cameras,
speakers and other devices and components. They also brag that more than
140 million copies of Windows Vista have already been sold, making it
the fastest selling operating system in Microsoft history. So Windows
Vista is not a flash-in-the-pan like Windows ME which was quickly
replaced by Windows XP.
In my opinion, Vista is both better and safer
than Windows XP and if you are already using Vista or plan to make the
move, it is not a bad choice. Yet Vista has become a lame duck.
Microsoft definitely has a dilemma on their hands. The only way they
will come out of this is if they can get Windows 7 out quickly while
making it faster, safer, and easier to use. They also need to give it a
good name and get the members of the press behind it. I'm not sure if
the lumbering giant can pull that off - especially if Apple and/or Linux
find a way to take advantage of this Microsoft predicament!
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