โApr-14-2017 04:00 AM
โApr-24-2017 06:42 AM
โApr-24-2017 05:34 AM
โApr-24-2017 03:00 AM
Army11Bravo wrote:
Although Apple computers are more expensive than most PC's, they typically last far longer than a PC computer. I used to replace my desktop PC's after 3 or 4 years, but my 2007 iMac desktop is running strong ten years later. My wife junks her work laptop PC's every 2 years, but my MacBook should last me 8-10 years. Many friends have 8+ year old MacBook computers.
The cost up front is higher, but if you take into account how long they last, they are a great value.
โApr-23-2017 09:29 PM
mr. ed wrote:Army11Bravo wrote:
The last decent OS from Microsoft was XP. When they moved to Vista, I jumped ship to Apple and haven't regretted the decision a single day since 2007. Too many headaches come with Windows. Good luck...
I also liked XP, but have to admit I also like W10. I had no problems installing the Anniversary edition. True, it did take a little while, but not the 6 hours it took for the OP. As I recall, it was just a few hours, or less, during one evening.
I wouldn't mind jumping to Apple, just for the experience. but those Mac computers can be pretty pricey. :E
โApr-23-2017 06:33 AM
โApr-22-2017 12:51 PM
mileshuff wrote:delwhjr wrote:
Microsoft only is continuing support for XP for large corporate and enterprise users and that is subject to change at any time. The 2019 date is not official just speculation based on previous extensions. Microsoft will support an XP update to all if a critical security issue erupts that would compromise other systems. This info is direct from MS Developer Support.
All of my XP PC's are receiving updates on a regular basis. Anyone can, not just big corporations. Just have to know how!
โApr-22-2017 11:28 AM
โApr-19-2017 03:44 PM
delwhjr wrote:
Microsoft only is continuing support for XP for large corporate and enterprise users and that is subject to change at any time. The 2019 date is not official just speculation based on previous extensions. Microsoft will support an XP update to all if a critical security issue erupts that would compromise other systems. This info is direct from MS Developer Support.
โApr-19-2017 12:11 PM
mileshuff wrote:delwhjr wrote:
For those wishing to run older programs on the newer boxes; get a virtual machine program like VMWare. You can create virtual versions of 7 ,XP or even DOS 6.0. You can also check out MS Hyper V for Windows 10.
While that can work for some applications it's far from an ideal solution. Full screen apps are not allowed starting with Windows 7 for instance. 64 Bit OS's will block most direct hardware I/O regardless of running in a 32 Bit VM or not. VM's suffer from timing issues for programs that rely heavily on such when communicating with external hardware such as DAQ devices.
I tend to feel most people that are general users, browsing, MS Office programs etc. are unaware of the complexity of problems that lack of backwards compatibility cause. Reliability is first and foremost as well as the massive expense of continually rewriting complex custom software every few years. OS's such as Unix/Linix do not suffer from that despite technological gains made over the years.
This is one reason why MS was forced to continue support for XP at least thru 2019 despite the very public announcement of ending such in 2014.
โApr-18-2017 08:08 PM
delwhjr wrote:
For those wishing to run older programs on the newer boxes; get a virtual machine program like VMWare. You can create virtual versions of 7 ,XP or even DOS 6.0. You can also check out MS Hyper V for Windows 10.
โApr-18-2017 01:55 PM
โApr-18-2017 01:50 PM
โApr-17-2017 06:20 PM
โApr-17-2017 05:39 PM