Microsoft may have given up on Windows XP, but that doesn’t mean you have to. While there’s plenty of life in the old operating system, there’s also a good chance XP may start looking long in the ...
On April 7, Microsoft ended support for Windows XP. And because many, if not most, computers running XP don’t meet the system requirements for Windows 7 or Windows 8, that leaves XP users with limited ...
I didn’t include this in my history of Microsoft Bob, but maybe I should have–and it’s too fascinating not to share. In 2008, in Microsoft’s own TechNet magazine, Windows team member Raymond Chen ...
Although Microsoft has stopped supporting Windows XP, many people haven’t bothered to update from the legendary and now terribly aged operating system (you guys, seriously, just do it already).
No longer supported by Microsoft, Windows XP is vulnerable to security threats and can’t be freely and easily updated to Windows 10. Those who are happy to live online, though, now have a free and ...
In a bid to make up for past blunders, Microsoft is allowing information technology professionals, and pretty much anyone else, to download a free, 90-day trial of Windows 7 Enterprise edition. Many ...
For all its wide usage and market share, I never liked Windows XP, and never ran it on any system I’ve owned. I stuck with Windows 2000 until the release of Windows Server 2003, bought a license for ...
And the countdown is on – by the time you are read this there is less than a year left on the clock for Windows XP. April 8, 2014 marks the end of a marvelous 12-year run when support for the popular ...
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