Windows XP support shutdown countdown begins

Windows XP support shutdown countdown begins

Extended support for Windows XP ends in under 1,000 days, but will that drive corporates to move to Windows 7 or push them to dump Windows altogether?

Windows XP's upcoming end-of-life means that some 200 million PCs will need upgrading or replacing.

That's according to Microsoft reps, speaking at the Microsoft Worldwide Partner Conference keynote in Los Angeles this week and writing on the Windows team blog.

Windows XP was removed from retail channels three years ago. It remained available through OEM channels rather longer though, and is still available as a 'downgrade' from Windows 7 for users unwilling to migrate to the newer version.

However, Microsoft says it will stop providing security fixes, updates and online tech support for the 10 year-old operating system on 8 April 2014.

For those determined to stay with Windows, the length of time needed to do large roll-outs means that the deathknell – even though it is almost three years away – is a call to action.

In a Gartner report last year analysts Michael A Silver and Stephen Kleynhans suggested that organisations planning to deploy Windows 7 needed to get XP out well before support ends, ideally by 2012 and certainly by mid 2013.

But XP's replacement does not have to be another Windows PC, of course. As well as alternative desktop operating systems – Mac OSX and Linux, most obviously – there are plenty of other ways to deliver information and applications to users, as Ovum principal analyst Richard Edwards noted.

“Most businesses and institutions gave Windows Vista a wide-berth because of technical and compatibility issues, and so Windows 7 has quickly become the operating system of choice for new PC deployments," Edwards said.

"But with sales of tablet and thin-client computing devices growing rapidly, and alternative application delivery architectures starting to take hold, we believe that by 2014 many organisations will have decided to adopt alternative end user computing models; thus making Windows XP the last major corporate version of the Windows desktop operating system.”

This article originally appeared at itpro.co.uk

Source: Copyright © ITPro, Dennis Publishing

See more about:  windows  |  xp  |  support  |  shutdown  |  countdown  |  begins  |  securitysoftware
 
 

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Comments: 2
tecma
20 July 2011
Never ceases to amaze how well we fall into Microsoft's FUD, Fear, Uncertainty and Doubt. Their publicity machine works overtime to convince us to upgrade, upgrade, upgrade. WHY?
What is wrong with a system that many say works well. "if it ain't broke, don't fix". We are advised that XP still has 51% of the market. Why? Maybe it is because people and corporations are happy with it. We were previously told by Microsft to go to Vista and look what happened. Vista was a disaster, and now we have to go to Windows 7. Yet already we have Windows 8 on the horizon. Does this mean that we pay to go to Windows 7 and pay again to go to Windows 8. Of cause it does. There is no free lunch with Microsoft. The reason Microsoft wants us to move away from XP is that they are not making any real money out of it anymore. And remember for most of us, there is no upgrade from XP to Windows 7, you must purchase a full copy and it ain't cheap. Surprise!
I wonder if many others are wondering if it is time to bite the bullet and go to an alternative. It may be less costly, both in the short term and long term


Comment made about the PC & Tech Authority article:
Windows XP support shutdown countdown begins?
Extended support for Windows XP ends in under 1,000 days, but will that drive corporates to move to Windows 7 or push them to dump Windows altogether?

What do you think? Join the discussion.
Slatts
20 July 2011
tecma wrote:
Never ceases to amaze how well we fall into Microsoft's FUD, Fear, Uncertainty and Doubt. Their publicity machine works overtime to convince us to upgrade, upgrade, upgrade. WHY?


Well tecma, that would be because Microsoft is in the bussiness of selling software.

It's what they do.

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