Last 1000 days for Windows XP support

By Liam Tung on Jul 13, 2011 3:21 PM
Filed under Services

OS nears 50 percent market share

Microsoft has begun counting down the last 1000 days of support remainining for aging stalwart Windows XP as it urges companies to upgrade.

The software giant would stop supplying security patches and hotfixes for all versions of 11-year-old operating system on April 8, 2014, potentially making it vulnerable to issues that may arise after that time.

The day would mark an unusually long support period for a MIcrosoft operating system, lengthened by companies hesitating to upgrade away from XP. Many have only now begun migrations to Windows 7, refusing over past years to switch to Windows Vista.

"Windows XP had an amazing run and millions of PC users are grateful for it. But it’s time to move on," Microsoft's senior community manager for Windows, Stephen Rose, wrote Monday.

"Bottom line, PC's [sic] running Windows XP will be vulnerable to security threats."

Microsoft first announced last year that it would end support for the operating system by 2014, coinciding with a move to wind down supply of machines pre-installed with XP.

Despite continue take-up of Windows 7, however, Gartner analysts last year warned that most organisations running XP would not make the April 2014 deadline, predicting a rush to gain Windows 7 skills.

To ease transition, Microsoft had already flagged that those companies upgrading to Windows 7 would be able to downgrade to XP any time until 2020.

Not surprisingly Microsoft is encouraging users to upgrade to a newer OS, namely Windows 7, which chief executive Steve Ballmer yesterday touted as the on-ramp to its multi-device successor, Windows 8 due next year.

Microsoft has sold 400 million Widows 7 licenses to date, Ballmer said, and ran on 27.13 percent of the world's computers according to June figures from NetApplications.

Despite Windows 7's increased share, Windows XP still ran on 51.13 percent of the world's PCs, according to the analyst firm.

 
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Last 1000 days for Windows XP support
"Yep I agree so what if MS stops support. I suspect that there will still be millions of users out there quite content to keep running it and we are likely to see a new industry emerge. Companies ..."
 
 
 
 
Comments: 2
petergman
Jul 18, 2011 6:59 PM
So what if XP will not be supported. Biggest problem to most computer suers is the regular updates!
The real problem will come when anti virus makwers stop supporting XP. Minimum os will be Vista!
Microsoft has already shown its disdain for the XP operating system by not letting XP users ahve access to IE# 9. So it has already started.
I am sure most users wiull not care that their XP machine can not use certain new technologies - thats why they are happy with XP.
I fo one will be quite happy to see XP disappear. Its an absolute nighhtmare trying to support both XP and Win 7 machines living on a Server 2008.
Its even harder than supporting a multi collection of pcs on a novell network - form dos only, through to Xp!
kwalablue
Sep 20, 2011 11:35 PM
Yep I agree so what if MS stops support. I suspect that there will still be millions of users out there quite content to keep running it and we are likely to see a new industry emerge. Companies that offer support for XP and I suspect that rather than stop making anti virus software that the companies will in fact make more as the machines will still need protection against the newer viruses and other nasties.
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