03-13-2021, 04:37 PM
(03-13-2021, 03:30 PM)tbelldesignco Wrote: That may be the case from vendors, but Microsoft themselves are not providing service, support or updates for Windows 7. The company I was with made the transition to Windows 10 due to the EOL of Windows 7 and 3 of my clients all made the transition precovid due to this same thing. Windows 7 was a great platform, but from the horses mouth they are no longer supporting it.
I'm in the same boat as @sagher. I did try an upgrade to Windows 10 with an old laptop Thinkpad with decent specs (4GB RAM), but soon learned that Windows 10 can only work optimally on a computer of which the motherboard has been designed for Windows 10. The initial upgrade was awesome, but when those updates started to rain down it completely froze my laptop. There were all kinds of strange things happening too - i.e. hardware issues because of incompatibility with Windows 10. Kudos to Microsoft for the really efficient upgrade system from earlier versions of Windows, but if they could have fixed it so that the updates could be managed more optimally for an older computer system, then it could have worked much better. That part killed it for me as the packages were just too large, and the sad thing is too that not all of those updates are really necessary. If Microsoft could have created a "lite" version of updates intended for Windows 7 upgrades it could have made all of the difference.
But then maybe I'm also a bit cynical as Microsoft has been in cahoots with hardware manufacturers from the very start of Microsoft from the 1980s. So possibly the intention is to get us to throw out our old and perfectly working hardware and replace it with a new more compatible system to fit Windows 10. I'm not ready to do that yet. So am keeping fingers crossed for a little longer life on my Windows 7 computer.
So far I haven't had any issues yet, but I do anticipate that as time marches on that there will be new applications created with no support for Windows 7. I haven't felt that pinch yet, but if it does affect me, then I'll have to think of doing something different. Who knows, maybe Arch Linux?
In the meanwhile I agree with you. Businesses obviously don't have any choice but to upgrade to Windows 10 and what a lovely lucrative business has been created for the hardware companies as I guess the upgrade to Windows 10 would also include upgrades to more up to date hardware that is completely compatible with Windows 10.