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On 20/09/2024 01:47, Lawrence D'Oliveiro wrote:On Thu, 19 Sep 2024 19:01:34 +0000, MitchAlsup1 wrote:
In particular, MS has not added anything I want in Office since
2003 and in the OS in particular since 2005. Windows 7 is still
better than windows 10 or 11 or 12...
Would you entrust mission-criticial business operations to obsolete,
unsupported software?
His suggestion was to /continue/ the support and updates for existing
systems, rather than making new ones.
But would /I/ trust mission-critical business operations to Windows 7
over Windows 11 ? Well, I wouldn't trust it to anything Windows, but
I certainly trust Windows 7 more than Windows 10 or 11. The more
useless crap added to the system, the more scope it has for failures
or security issues. (The only Windows systems I currently have are
Windows 7.)
I am not sure I can think of anything I want to do on Windows, and
which I can do with Windows 11 that I could not do with Windows 2000
- excluding running programs that refuse to run on earlier systems
without good reason, or hardware that does not have drivers for older
systems. (In Mitch's dream world where MS continued to support old
systems, those would not be issues.) There are a few things that
newer Windows does better than older ones - it makes better use of
more ram and more cores, for example.
Open-source software is more responsive to community needs.
Absolutely. It is not perfect either, but it is a lot better in many
ways.
MS would make more money by allowing old OSs to keep running and
sent the employees home...
They’re going to charge businesses who want to stick with Windows
10 a steadily increasing support fee. Charging lots of money to
those who want to stick with old versions of your proprietary
software sounds like a business model with a much more promising
future, don’t you think?
MS can't make a business from supporting old software. While there
is a proportion of more technical people who are happy with "if it
ain't broke, don't fix it", a much larger proportion of potential
purchasers are in the "the latest is greatest" camp.
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