Tuesday, July 8, 2014

THINK LINUX!: In Six Months, Microsoft Will Pull The Plug On Windows 7 Support

7/8/2014

Government crony capitalist Microsoft thinks consumers have no choice but to spend their hard earned money evertime the company wants it. There is another, quite excellent choice besides forking out precious dollars in a down economy than Windows and it's even more costly commercial competitor, the MAC operating systems. 

Check here for a wide variety of 100% free distrobutions of the Linux operating system

Microsoft is warning customers that the end is soon coming for Windows 7 in much the same way it came for Windows XP earlier this year. Microsoft will end free mainstream support for Windows 7on January 13, 2015.
That means no more security patches if hackers find holes, no more updated features or performance improvements.
This covers all versions of Windows 7, Mary Jo Foley points out.
This move will mostly affect consumers. Businesses that pay for extended Windows 7 support, as most of them do, will be supported for another five years, until January 14, 2020.
That's important, because many businesses are right now are in the process of upgrading their old Windows XP PCs, but they're moving to Windows 7, not Windows 8.
There's some speculation that, given the popularity of Windows 7, Microsoft might change its mind as the date nears and continue to support it a bit longer, like it did for Windows XP. All told, Microsoft supported XP for about 13 years.
That kind of extension doesn't seem likely at this point. Remember, Windows 8 basically includes a full version of Windows 7, called Desktop mode. With Windows 8.1, it's possible to run a Windows 8 machine in Desktop mode and almost avoid the new-and-confusing Windows 8 part of the OS.
And Microsoft really needs to nudge consumers into buying Windows 8 machines. More Windows 8 machines means more developers will want to write software for Windows 8, which will make more people want to buy it.
By the way, Microsoft also set an end-of-life of mainstream support for Windows 8 (including the latest version, Windows 8.1), for January 9, 2018.
This is another hint that Microsoft should have its next version of Windows ready in 2015, code-named "Threshold" (sometimes referred to as Windows 9).
If Microsoft plays its cards right, Windows 9 will be to the unloved Windows 8 what Windows 7 was to Vista, which InfoWorld ranked No. 2 on its list of the 25 biggest tech flops (also PCWorld's "Biggest Tech Disappointment" of 2007.)
Here's the chart from Microsoft's Lifecycle Support page.



source: TBI

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