Ballmer hints at extension for XP

Mon May 12, 2008 6:55PM EDT

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With concern over the end of the road for Windows XP reaches feverish levels, Microsoft appears to be altering yet again its timeline for killing off the popular operating system, which would ultimately force people into upgrading to Vista.

The latest news comes from Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer, reacting to criticism at a recent news conference, who said "XP will hit an end-of-life. We have announced one. If customer feedback varies, we can always wake up smarter, but right now, we have a plan for end-of-life for new XP shipments."

As of now the June 30 deadline stands, but PC makers may be encouraging Microsoft to get "smarter" by taking the rare step of openly combating Microsoft's direction that vendors move from XP to Vista. HP, Dell, and Lenovo have all said they will downgrade operating systems on new machines from Vista to XP at customer request and will continue to do so until 2009 (specific ending dates vary).

Note that no one's breaking the law here. Legally, anyone with a volume license or an OEM license for Vista can downgrade to XP without having to pay extra for the OS. The only exception is for those who purchased "full packaged product (FPP)" editions, which do not include downgrade rights, though Windows Vista Professional and Ultimate editions do. Whether XP drivers are available is another issue.

If asked, many companies will include an XP disc with your order, but Dell is installing XP at the factory as well. Cnet also offers some additional helpful advice on obtaining XP if you're buying a Vista machine.

My best advice is that if you're buying a new machine and want XP, get on the phone instead of using the company's website to configure the product. Salespeople can make options available, like downgrades, that you won't get online.

Of course, all of this could be moot in the next month or so if Microsoft bows to pressure from users to continue to sell XP. Stay tuned to see if Microsoft has a change of heart before the end of June.

Comments on Ballmer hints at extension for XP

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  • 1 Posted by alexgannis on Thu Sep 3, 2009 2:50PM EDT Report Abuse

    Whatever people just can't ever change I don't see what the big deal about window xp, I remember before window xp came out nobobdy wanted to upgrade then.

  • 2 Posted by rogueist on Thu Sep 3, 2009 8:49PM EDT Report Abuse

    Lets see what happens. Vista really has tons of headaches. One of them is that SP1 gets into an infinite install loop which never finishes. It installs, reboots, and then asks to install what you just installed once again - over and over and over again. Vista is like a mentally unstable child with an Uzi roaming the neighborhood thinking he is saying "hi" to people by pulling the trigger...

  • 3 Posted by agustin2489 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 2:47PM EDT Report Abuse

    Funny, the install loop didn't happen to me. I wonder how you stop that.

  • 4 Posted by bobf4 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:10PM EDT Report Abuse

    Alex is right. When XP first came out, people were so loathe to use it, they were downgrading to Windows 98. And, there were discussions back then of trying to get Microsoft to delay 98's EOL. XP is a good OS, but, in my opinion, Vista is way superior. I never had any boot loops when I installed Vista SP1, so I don't know where that one came from. What people fail to realize is that most manufacturers are simply not writing XP drivers for OEM equipment. So, NIC's, sound cards, etc. will simply not work in XP. And, most component manufacturers see writing XP drivers as a waste of time, since XP has an already set EOL. So Microsoft should not cave in to people's demands, and make their June 30 EOL date a set-in-stone date.

  • 5 Posted by bobf4 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:10PM EDT Report Abuse

    Alex is right. When XP first came out, people were so loathe to use it, they were downgrading to Windows 98. And, there were discussions back then of trying to get Microsoft to delay 98's EOL. XP is a good OS, but, in my opinion, Vista is way superior. I never had any boot loops when I installed Vista SP1, so I don't know where that one came from. What people fail to realize is that most manufacturers are simply not writing XP drivers for OEM equipment. So, NIC's, sound cards, etc. will simply not work in XP. And, most component manufacturers see writing XP drivers as a waste of time, since XP has an already set EOL. So Microsoft should not cave in to people's demands, and make their June 30 EOL date a set-in-stone date.

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