[vip_students] Re: Microsoft is Ending Support for Windows XP in 2014: What You Need to Know

  • From: "tony sweeney" <deirton711@xxxxxxxxx>
  • To: <vip_students@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Mon, 29 Apr 2013 00:24:05 +0100

Very good that as I thought.

Thanks for confirming.

Any more on this from folk too would be also very welcome.

Best, Tony
----- Original Message ----- From: "Eleanor Burke" <eleanorburke@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
To: <vip_students@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Sunday, April 28, 2013 6:49 PM
Subject: [vip_students] Re: Microsoft is Ending Support for Windows XP in 2014: What You Need to Know


Windows 8 is having a poor press with regard to screen reader accessability and a new layout of the OS. Windows 7 would appear to be the current recommendation.
-----Original message-----
From: tony sweeney
Sent:  28/04/2013, 5:48  pm
To: vip_students@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [vip_students] Re: Microsoft is Ending Support for Windows XP in 2014: What You Need to Know


Thanks for this Paul,

Well we shouldn't be surprised with this sinformation, a long time really
supporting, 12 years.

Well where to then for us using XP?

Perhaps I'll wait till nearer the deadline to work it out but would any of
you have any ideas, Windows 7 or 8 perhaps?

It's only Microsoft in this instance I write of and don't need any advice on
other products by other providers at this stage.

Tony Sweeney
----- Original Message ----- From: "NCBI Support" <support@xxxxxxx>
To: <vip_students@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Friday, April 26, 2013 5:24 PM
Subject: [vip_students] Microsoft is Ending Support for Windows XP in 2014:
What You Need to Know





defunct-windows-xp

Microsoft will be ending support for Windows XP on April 8, 2014 after 12
and a half years of supporting it. Microsoft has gone out of their way to
extend support on several occasions, but the 2014 deadline looks like the
final one.

We’ve already explained why you should leave Windows XP behind. It’s still
widely used, however – it’s the second-most popular operating system after
Windows 7, with around double the market share of all Macs combined,
according to various statistics.

Windows XP’s Current Support

“Mainstream support” for Windows XP ended in 2009, but “extended support” is
still continuing. Microsoft is still creating security patches and hotfixes
for Windows XP. Windows XP users may be using an operating system that’s
over 12 years old, but Microsoft is still writing security patches for them
and sending them out via Windows Update.

Microsoft also offers both free and paid technical support for Windows XP,
which can be particularly useful for businesses.

At the moment, you can kind of get away with using Windows XP – as long as
you don’t want to use new hardware or software that doesn’t support it.



What Happens on April 8, 2014

Starting on April 8, 2014, no new security patches for Windows XP will be
produced. Windows XP will remain vulnerable as new patches are found, and
Microsoft will advise you upgrade your operating system. Microsoft will also
no longer offer any technical support for Windows XP.

Windows XP systems won’t stop functioning. You can continue to use them and
even download old security patches, but no new ones will be produced.

As Microsoft drops support for XP, the industry will follow. Much new
software already isn’t necessarily tested to work on Windows XP, and new
hardware may not have drivers for Windows XP at all. As Microsoft drops
support, the amount of software and hardware that doesn’t support XP will
grow.

How often do you see new hardware and software supporting Windows 98? XP
will become the new Windows 98 — an orphaned, outdated operating system with
no official or third-party support.

Security patches are crucially important, particularly in enterprises that
still use XP. Migrating to Windows 7 (or Windows 8) is the smart move for
people that are still clinging to XP.






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