• @[email protected]
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    776 months ago

    I really doubt an average Joe would buy a new computer once the old OS goes end-of-life. Joe would just continue using an EOL system and hope everything is alright.

    • @kennebel
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      386 months ago

      I’m sure average Joe doesn’t even know what EOL means, or knows when it happens. :)

      • @Arthur_Leywin
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        146 months ago

        Yeah Elastic Orange Llamas will be difficult to deal with but I think Joe can manage.

      • @tpihkal
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        86 months ago

        *ELO it was a band.

      • @doppelgangmember
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        25 months ago

        Yeah we’re fucked :)

        I liked the suggestion to throw Linux on all of the “losses”

      • @moonburster
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        15 months ago

        Software updates will stop and render the possibility of an unsafe system more and more over time. Since there are no updates, if a backdoor is found it won’t be patched.

        Besides that you’ll probably be able to use it for a few more years as long as your apps still work

    • @Cannibal_MoshpitV3
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      6 months ago

      Having worked in tech fields, legacy devices as old as 20 years can pop up occasionally, functioning or not. Once was told a story where this tech was hired to fix a highschool bell system and the whole thing was running on windows 98. This took place in 2015 or so

      • @[email protected]
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        156 months ago

        I work in a field that is considered by many high tech. I have personally seen a system in use today that duel boots windows 2000 and windows 98.

        The product it’s used by is old generations and the system does not have any network access but still must be supported by government regulation for several more years…

          • @[email protected]
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            5 months ago

            Just another turning of the Wheel every time you boot it up.

            I have won again, Lews Therin. Flicker.

        • Toes♀
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          76 months ago

          Yeah there’s a lot of MRI machines out there where the brains are running windows 98

          • @[email protected]
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            66 months ago

            I think it was 2017 we got rid of our last system running freedos in a console since the original program required do to operate…

        • Random_Character_A
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          66 months ago

          Few years ago there was a story in a local paper about building automation systems running on Commadore 64 and still doing fine. Build by some company in the 80’s. They weren’t online, so no security issues.

          Tried to find the article online but no luck. It would have been in local language anyway.

          • @topinambour_rex
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            46 months ago

            Even if they was online, I doubt a lot of people have the knowledge for hack a commodore 64.

            • Random_Character_A
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              15 months ago

              I’d imagine it would have been some gprs-modem through an adapter for sms notifications, that was added afterwards in the 90’s

              • @topinambour_rex
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                5 months ago

                There is a device for connect it to internet, via an ethernet cable and with some software, for bbs by example.

                • Random_Character_A
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                  15 months ago

                  Getting a C64 to host an remote interface page would definitely be “beyond the call of duty”.

        • @tpihkal
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          15 months ago

          Good ole’ government policy!

          • @[email protected]
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            45 months ago

            In this case I do partially agree with it. They are for medical implants and since the expected lifetime of the device is 10 years we need to be able to support them for 10 years after the last surgery.

            If the dog eats your controller which allows you to turn on and off your device we need to be able to sell you a new controller and NOT tell you “sorry, you need to spend several hundreds of thousands of dollars in medical bills to replace the device and go through a traumatic surgery to install it”

            Now optimally my company would make a modern program that duplicates the technology but is compatible with modern computers but since are no longer making money on these old devices they don’t want to invest the time and money. So yeah…

      • @tpihkal
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        96 months ago

        The company I work for has no control over the air conditioning in one of our facilities because it’s automated and running on a computer system from the 80’s. No one knows how it works.

          • @tpihkal
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            5 months ago

            It’s my ass to freeze, not to pay for. I can switch between uncomfortably hot or cold; I just have to switch a lever (on top of the roof of the building) but I’m not really a heights kind of person.

      • ArxCyberwolf
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        45 months ago

        The restaurant I work at still uses Windows XP on one of its main tills. It breaks down and freezes constantly.

      • @[email protected]
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        16 months ago

        I still do monthly service checks to industrial computers that use win3.11, 2000 and unix from early 90’s. When machines that costs even up to million to replace require legacy os, you scrounge up older hardware to run them as long as you can.

    • @NoRodent
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      6 months ago

      I have a perfectly functioning PC (that will very likely be still perfectly usable by 2025) that cannot be upgraded to Win 11 because MS has for some strange reason put quite harsh but completely artificial hardware requirements on W11 that only CPUs manufactured in the last 3-4 years meet. And before you say “You can switch to Linux”, no I can’t. Not with the software I use for work. And then there’s gaming of course…

      (Now, I bought a new PC recently, so I’m fine for the foreseeable future but not everyone can either afford it or simply feels the need to upgrade their computer)

      • @[email protected]
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        106 months ago

        All the limitations can be bypassed easily, if you use Rufus (the program) and a windows 11 iso to make the usb installer it asks to disable telemetry and tpm requirements when you make the usb.

        Source: running windows 11 on my old overclocked intel x5690 since the betas came out

        • @Rednax
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          35 months ago

          This info needs to be more widespread.

        • @[email protected]
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          5 months ago

          The problem with that is the same I’ve had trying to update an old MacBook my mother uses.

          The patching tools work most of the time, but especially with Windows what happens when there is an update forced on you that breaks everything and you have to wait a few days and reinstall the whole OS again.

          Most people don’t want that insecurity. And don’t tell me if it catches on in the slightest that Microsoft won’t do everything they can to break the patches.

          Just look what John Deere did when people made 3rd party GPS devices for their farm equipment.

          As much as I hate to say it for people who won’t use Linux isn’t there that version of chrome OS you can run on a normal x86 laptop. That’s a lot better then making a ton of landfill ( and it pains me to say that because I really hate Chromebooks, but that’s better then wasting tons of perfectly good computers).

      • mycus
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        36 months ago

        there is virtualization so you can run windows on it and work with those pesky proprietary softwares, but yeah performance will never be better than running things directly (except games with shitty directx implementation that run better with dxvk, ie sekiro, elden ring), albeit it can get really close. If you’re into tinkering, this will not be a problem.

        on that topic, I was considering giving cassowary a try since my partner uses some windows only software too, looked promising.

        then there is the game problem, but really, unless you play something that uses anticheat that doesn’t support proton, you’re good to go.

        I’ve been gaming on it for over three years now.

        • @TheGrandNagus
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          5 months ago

          Quite a lot of games run the same or better on Linux, converting Windows system calls to Linux ones isn’t much of a performance hit, and often the lean-ness of Linux overcomes it. It’s not like emulation where it’s always going to be worse.

          The issue is more to do with some anti-cheat implementations (namely ones that rely on installing a kernel-level windows rootkit), and GPU makers not contributing many “game ready” drivers, I.e. patching game issues in-driver.

          That second one is why Linux framerates are on average higher, but the .1% lows tend to be lower.

      • PrivateNoob
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        16 months ago

        Win 10 Iot saves your day, for now…

        It’s supported until 2032

    • Chaotic Entropy
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      36 months ago

      For your average and below user, it wasn’t part of the deal on purchase.

    • @[email protected]
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      16 months ago

      Many will, but most people will not. The average user barely knows Linux even exists as an option, let alone wants to learn something new.

      It’s all moot for now. Microsoft will end up extending out security updates for 10. They’ll just wait until the deadline is closer before they announce it.

    • @thedirtyknapkin
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      16 months ago

      it’s about the hardware requirements. most Windows 10 machines CAN’T be upgraded.

      • @[email protected]
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        76 months ago

        CAN’T be upgraded

        *to windows 11.

        There’s lots of OSs out there. Plenty will just keep using win 10, others will move to various flavors of linux, and others still will continue to stick with win 7/XP as they always have. (yes, I know people still actively using XP)

        Windows 10 no longer receiving updates doesn’t make those computer’s cease to function. Hell some even consider the lack of updates a great new feature.

      • @DontTreadOnBigfoot
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        6 months ago

        Well, a lot of them that officially “can’t” actually can, but it’s a much bigger PITA than if the machine has the “required” specs.

      • @[email protected]
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        16 months ago

        Setup.exe /product server ;) Not a magic bullet, but helps in many cases. You have to use older ISO, thou.

  • @Brkdncr
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    146 months ago

    Big Landfill once again pulling the invisible strings.

  • @Kbobabob
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    126 months ago

    Microsoft has already announced it will offer extended security updates for Windows 10 to 2028.

    • @Vqhm
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      25 months ago

      ESU is a paid service for enterprise. They didn’t even offer ESU for windows 7 home at all for any price.

      Windows 7 pro ESU per device cost $50 for 1 year, $100 for the next year, $200 for the final year.

      Windows 7 enterprise was per device 1 year $25, second year $50, and 3rd year $100.

      Micro$oft is not going to give win10 ESU away for free and they probably won’t supported home edition.

      You can however bypass the win11 hardware checks to upgrade unsupported devices.

  • @[email protected]
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    116 months ago

    Meanwhile, Apple’s refusal to support computers only three years old has been far, far worse for the environment.

  • @someguy3
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    6 months ago

    Consumers will just keep going. But businesses that actually care about security? Yeah it might be a lot. I wonder if they will just toss them or if they’ll actually donate them.

    • @[email protected]
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      16 months ago

      Many companies I work with either sell their old workstations for pittance to their employees after we have nuked the drives or donate them to projects that provide laptops to students or refugees who can’t afford them.
      But many companies lease their hardware nowadays, so those end up to landfill or to companies that refurb them and sell them for profit.

  • @[email protected]
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    16 months ago

    Well, this is horrible. And all the Windows 11 requirements are just arbitrary from what I can tell.