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Dell Will Offer XP Past Cutoff Date

Dionysius, God of Wine and Leaf, brings news that Dell will be offering Windows XP pre-installed on their computers past the June 30 cut-off date. Computers purchased with Vista Business or Vista Ultimate past June 30 will come with a copy of XP Pro. Dell plans to simply install that copy upon request to save users a step. Perhaps this will help Microsoft officials make up their minds about another extension.

9 of 351 comments (clear)

  1. Submitter diversity by peipas · · Score: 5, Informative

    I couldn't help but notice that the submitter, a commercial entity, currently has four articles on the front page.

  2. Re:Ubuntu Instead? by iamhigh · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Selling a computer with XP past the Microsoft cutoff date is pretty irresponsible. At least Ubuntu has community support, whereas XP will have no support? Is it really Dell's place to oversee microsoft's business decisions? Why, because that is what the customer wants? We have already moved our purchasing to used retailers in expectance of this day. We have no plans on installing Vista, and as much as I would love it, Linux is not a viable option at this time.

    I applaude this decision and will do my best to support them if they continue selling XP.
    --
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  3. Re:Ubuntu Instead? by electrosoccertux · · Score: 5, Informative

    At least Ubuntu has community support, whereas XP will have no support? Is it really Dell's place to oversee microsoft's business decisions? ?
    XP has support into 2014. Wiki.
  4. Re:Ubuntu Instead? by edremy · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Umm, because Outlook (especially calendaring) is *the* critical app for many businesses?

    Sure, I'll replace the most important app for 1000 people with " couple of Linux projects which at least claim to support that."

    You'll pick up my mortgage and other expenses when I get canned, right? Please be slightly realistic in the Linux fanaticism.

    --
    "Seven Deadly Sins? I thought it was a to-do list!"
  5. Re:Ubuntu Instead? by Mikesch · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Businesses don't run based on ideals, they run based on productivity. If applications like Open Office fail to open an Office document even 1% of the time then they're useless if that document is really something you need to open. Gimp still isn't a satisfactory replacement for Photoshop. Sound in flash still doesn't work correctly out of the box on Ubuntu systems, there's no mp3 support by default, nor does Quicktime really work. There's still not a decent movie player.

    This doesn't even begin to take into account that most businesses I've come across use some kind of custom industry application. CAD applications, specialized accounting applications, lending an loan applications, guess what they're all written for? Windows. Linux still doesn't work for those customers.

    If the Linux community wants to advance they're going to have to give up on some of their ideals and actually provide what people are looking for, which is a stable operating systems that run applications people actually want to use with a consistent look and feel everywhere. I ran Ubuntu for over a year and reverted to XP because I couldn't deal with the slowdowns for no reason, application crashes, incompatibilities, mystery feature additions and removals based on the whims of the developers (what's pigeon going to include or disable this week!), and decisions that were made purely for philosophical reasons (no mp3 support by default? please.)

    Most of my machines still run some kind of Unix (mostly FreeBSD and OSX) but when I need Windows, I really need Windows and nothing else will do.

    Besides, Outlook is still the best email/productivity/calendaring application out there. Nothing I've seen on UNIX even comes close, especially when I need to share data with others.

    And just because XP will be end of lifed, the security updates for it will continue for a few years, which is all anyone really needs. If 75% of the market is still on XP, developers aren't going to move to being Vista only any time soon because it'd kill their sales.

  6. Re:Ubuntu Instead? by alex4u2nv · · Score: 5, Funny

    2012!
    When Microsoft stops supporting Win XP, the world will crash!
    It was predicted: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2012

  7. Re:Ubuntu Instead? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    Selling a computer with XP past the Microsoft cutoff date is pretty irresponsible. At least Ubuntu has community support, whereas XP will have no support? Is it really Dell's place to oversee microsoft's business decisions? Why, because that is what the customer wants? We have already moved our purchasing to used retailers in expectance of this day. We have no plans on installing Vista, and as much as I would love it, Linux is not a viable option at this time.

    I applaude this decision and will do my best to support them if they continue selling XP. Microsoft has stated XP will be technically supported until 2014.
  8. Re:Ubuntu Instead? by Kashra · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Microsoft Action: Set a date to stop selling a product years before you intend to stop supporting it.
    Slashdot Answer: Why the hell would you stop selling it if you are still supporting it? Stupid Microsoft. I would sell it until the same year as I stopped supporting it, this is just a ploy to get more Vista sales by scaring people.

    Microsoft Action: Stop selling a product only a few months before you intend to stop supporting it.
    Slashdot Answer: Its so irresponsible of Microsoft to be selling a product they don't plan on supporting! This is just a way to milk more money out of the consumer and force upgrades when their OS becomes suddenly outdated next month.

    Microsoft Action: Donate $1m to "Save the Kittens" foundation.
    Slashdot Answer: What about the mice? Microsoft is subverting the poor mouse by an illegal and monopolistic process of buying out a 'charity' that directly kills mice.

    --
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  9. Microsoft is software's Dr. Death. by Futurepower(R) · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "Microsoft has stated XP will be technically supported until 2014."

    I've always thought that somewhat misses the point.

    The fact is, solely to make more money, Microsoft has claimed that its earlier product will die. The death is completely independent of customer demand.

    Who would want to partner with such a company? Because that's what you are doing when you buy an operating system, you are partnering with the OS supplier. You are betting that the supplier will be a true partner and will care about your needs, and not choose to be adversarial.

    Even though Vista is just Windows XP with new features, Microsoft expects to be paid as though it is an entirely new product, with no relevance to the earlier version.

    It seems to me that Microsoft is the Chief of Grief, software's Dr. Death. Other deaths:

    Declared dead: FoxPro database programming language

    Dead soon: PlaysForSure was corporate-speak for "we will kill it and destroy access to your music any time we want". Apparently the reason Microsoft executives wanted to reassure buyers by saying "Plays for Sure" is that they knew it was not sure.

    This is connected with the rise of 3-year-old thinking: "I can do anything I want. You have no power."

    The U.S. government is worse: "We can take your money and give it to weapons and war suppliers. You have no power. All laws we don't like are invalid."