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Microsoft Quietly Cuts Off Windows 7 Support For Older Intel Computers (computerworld.com)

An anonymous reader shares a report: If your PC doesn't run Streaming Single Instructions Multiple Data (SIMD) Extensions 2, you apparently won't be getting any more Win7 patches. At least, that's what I infer from some clandestine Knowledge Base documentation changes made in the past few days. Even though Microsoft says it's supporting Win7 until January 14, 2020, if you have an older machine -- including any Pentium III -- you've been blocked, and there's nothing you can do about it.

6 of 383 comments (clear)

  1. Good thing there is Linux... by wertigon · · Score: 4, Informative

    The last Pentium III chip ever created was released in 2001.

    2001. That is 17 years ago. Last computer built with this ancient technology is probably from 2005, over ten years ago. Much of the hardware machinery, such as mechanical drives and fans, should've stopped working by now. If they miraculously still work, Linux is a prime candidate to run on this super-old system for that last mileage.

    Face it, Windows 7 is on it's death bed, and if you do not like it, go Linux or go home. :)

    --
    systemd is not an init system. It's a GNU replacement.
    1. Re:Good thing there is Linux... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

      I regularly use diagnostic x-ray machines that run Windows XP - these are considered "current" models by the manufacturer. I've also seen in regular use an OPG machine running Windows 98.

      The key is that these machines are carefully isolated from the internet and are only able to communicate with their designated PACS and RIS servers. The XP based machines do have the ability to communicate with the manufacturer, but only if we take it out of use and place it into remote access mode, which requires the infrastructure team to enable a VPN on their end.

      Most interaction between manufacturer and machine involves an engineer connecting a flash drive to it and downloading the logs to interrogate on a company laptop.

  2. Re:Who cares? by b0s0z0ku · · Score: 4, Informative

    Last P-III was 2001 or 2002. People/companies generally nurse such old hardware along because they have to (it controls factory hardware, etc), not because they want to.

  3. Re:Who cares? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    Doesn't change the fact that Windows 7 officially supports Pentium IIIs (32-bit x86 1GHz or higher) and has stated support to 2020. And that this inherently means if they're running in specific applications and are exploited because of malware because of a lack of updates, Microsoft can be sued through the ass not to mention be potentially brought up on fraud charges*. But, yea, let's try to spin this into being a minor issue and wholly the users fault.

    PS - Even using your out of the ass numbers of 0.5% of computers (really using just Windows 7 sales (300 million), which is a smaller number), and you're talking 1.5 million computers. You don't think 1.5 million computers as part of a botnet would be a big thing? Or replacing 1.5 million computers early would be a big thing? Seriously, the sheer scale of expected support should have shut down Microsoft considering such changes.

    Of course, the real lesson here is to cut Windows products out of your environment as much as possible. Any company that believes it can just mandate substantial changes to your business so you can keep accepting patches to fix ITS bugs is a trainwreck.

    * Large corporations quite specifically are maximizing the life of bought hardware and scheduling software purchased based upon a support cycle. Anything that upsets that can be a massive loss.

  4. Re: Who cares? by Junta · · Score: 4, Informative

    Yes:
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
    RHEL5 released in 2007 and is in extended support until 2020.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
    SLES11 came out in 2009, LTSS ends in 2022.

    For fun, Solaris from 2005 is supported until 2021:
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

    So while OSX and community distributions and Ubuntu LTS don't go that far, there are OSes that do. This is one reason why people snicker at Ubuntu's proclamation of 'Long Term Support', when the competitors have so much longer support cycles.

    Of course, I wouldn't wish a RHEL5/SLES11 desktop on anyone, they are missing so many features in the current distros. Then again, XP also was pretty pathetic desktop experience wise when it was still popular relative to contemporary Microsoft desktops.

    --
    XML is like violence. If it doesn't solve the problem, use more.
  5. Re:Windows 7: The Best Windows by fizzer06 · · Score: 5, Informative
    I agree. Win2K required a lot less memory, at least until all 6 service packs were installed.

    In its original incarnation, its memory footprint was about 35 megabytes and it was insanely fast compared to anything that came after.