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Poco Loco February 3rd 14 03:04 PM

Windows XP users 'increasing'?
 
Maybe I'll stick with XP even after the support stops.

http://www.theinquirer.net/inquirer/...are-in-january


F.O.A.D. February 3rd 14 04:13 PM

Windows XP users 'increasing'?
 
On 2/3/14, 10:04 AM, Poco Loco wrote:
Maybe I'll stick with XP even after the support stops.

http://www.theinquirer.net/inquirer/...are-in-january

Or you could buy an upgraded motherboard with a fast 80286 CPU.

--
There’s no point crying over spilled 4-Methylcyclohexanemethanol.

F.O.A.D. February 3rd 14 04:49 PM

Windows XP users 'increasing'?
 
On 2/3/14, 11:46 AM, wrote:
On Mon, 03 Feb 2014 10:04:24 -0500, Poco Loco
wrote:

Maybe I'll stick with XP even after the support stops.

http://www.theinquirer.net/inquirer/...are-in-january

Microsoft has not given their business users any compelling reason to
switch.
If your mission is not significantly changing, why should you change
your hardware and software?
99% of all real business applications ran just fine on Windows 3.1 on
a 396. If you are just doing bookkeeping, inventory and point of sale,
you don't need that much computing power.
All of these flashy graphics do not actually add much to the average
business man's operation.
Hardware is pretty stagnant these days so I am not really sure why
they need a different OS.



Apple offers incremental improvements to its OS, not do-overs, and its
price is right. Mavericks, the latest, costs $0.00. I was going to put
Win 7 on my Macbook Air, but for $100+, I simply decided not to waste
the money.

--
There’s no point crying over spilled 4-Methylcyclohexanemethanol.

Poco Loco February 3rd 14 05:38 PM

Windows XP users 'increasing'?
 
On Mon, 03 Feb 2014 11:46:56 -0500, wrote:

On Mon, 03 Feb 2014 10:04:24 -0500, Poco Loco
wrote:

Maybe I'll stick with XP even after the support stops.

http://www.theinquirer.net/inquirer/...are-in-january

Microsoft has not given their business users any compelling reason to
switch.
If your mission is not significantly changing, why should you change
your hardware and software?
99% of all real business applications ran just fine on Windows 3.1 on
a 396. If you are just doing bookkeeping, inventory and point of sale,
you don't need that much computing power.
All of these flashy graphics do not actually add much to the average
business man's operation.
Hardware is pretty stagnant these days so I am not really sure why
they need a different OS.


And the new stuff is a PITA to learn. I'm happy with XP, But I was just as happy with 3.1 for
workgroups.


Boating All Out February 3rd 14 06:27 PM

Windows XP users 'increasing'?
 
In article , says...

On 2/3/14, 11:46 AM,
wrote:
On Mon, 03 Feb 2014 10:04:24 -0500, Poco Loco
wrote:

Maybe I'll stick with XP even after the support stops.

http://www.theinquirer.net/inquirer/...are-in-january

Microsoft has not given their business users any compelling reason to
switch.
If your mission is not significantly changing, why should you change
your hardware and software?
99% of all real business applications ran just fine on Windows 3.1 on
a 396. If you are just doing bookkeeping, inventory and point of sale,
you don't need that much computing power.
All of these flashy graphics do not actually add much to the average
business man's operation.
Hardware is pretty stagnant these days so I am not really sure why
they need a different OS.



Apple offers incremental improvements to its OS, not do-overs, and its
price is right. Mavericks, the latest, costs $0.00. I was going to put
Win 7 on my Macbook Air, but for $100+, I simply decided not to waste
the money.


What's $100 after spending $1000 on a laptop?
But if you don't need Win 7, why even think about it?

Wayne.B February 3rd 14 06:28 PM

Windows XP users 'increasing'?
 
On Mon, 03 Feb 2014 12:38:14 -0500, Poco Loco
wrote:

On Mon, 03 Feb 2014 11:46:56 -0500, wrote:

On Mon, 03 Feb 2014 10:04:24 -0500, Poco Loco
wrote:

Maybe I'll stick with XP even after the support stops.

http://www.theinquirer.net/inquirer/...are-in-january

Microsoft has not given their business users any compelling reason to
switch.
If your mission is not significantly changing, why should you change
your hardware and software?
99% of all real business applications ran just fine on Windows 3.1 on
a 396. If you are just doing bookkeeping, inventory and point of sale,
you don't need that much computing power.
All of these flashy graphics do not actually add much to the average
business man's operation.
Hardware is pretty stagnant these days so I am not really sure why
they need a different OS.


And the new stuff is a PITA to learn. I'm happy with XP, But I was just as happy with 3.1 for
workgroups.


===

Both of my navigation computers on the boat are still running XP and
doing just fine. Support for new hardware and web browsers is
becoming increasingly problematic however. My newer machines are
mostly Win 7 these days and I like it a lot.

Boating All Out February 3rd 14 06:30 PM

Windows XP users 'increasing'?
 
In article , says...

On 2/3/14, 11:46 AM,
wrote:
On Mon, 03 Feb 2014 10:04:24 -0500, Poco Loco
wrote:

Maybe I'll stick with XP even after the support stops.

http://www.theinquirer.net/inquirer/...are-in-january

Microsoft has not given their business users any compelling reason to
switch.
If your mission is not significantly changing, why should you change
your hardware and software?
99% of all real business applications ran just fine on Windows 3.1 on
a 396. If you are just doing bookkeeping, inventory and point of sale,
you don't need that much computing power.
All of these flashy graphics do not actually add much to the average
business man's operation.
Hardware is pretty stagnant these days so I am not really sure why
they need a different OS.



Apple offers incremental improvements to its OS, not do-overs, and its
price is right. Mavericks, the latest, costs $0.00. I was going to put
Win 7 on my Macbook Air, but for $100+, I simply decided not to waste
the money.


What's $100 after spending +$1000 on a laptop?
But if you don't need Win 7, why even think about it?

Mr. Luddite February 3rd 14 06:48 PM

Windows XP users 'increasing'?
 
On 2/3/2014 11:13 AM, F.O.A.D. wrote:
On 2/3/14, 10:04 AM, Poco Loco wrote:
Maybe I'll stick with XP even after the support stops.

http://www.theinquirer.net/inquirer/...are-in-january


Or you could buy an upgraded motherboard with a fast 80286 CPU.



Windows XP is still used in many non-personal computer applications like
gas station pumps, ATM machines and other "transparent" applications.
XP may be retaining a market share because the cost of upgrading both
software and hardware to support Win 7 or 8 is expensive for these
applications.

As a user of XP, Windows 7 and 8 (and now an iMac) I think XP was (is)
a very good and stable OS but Windows 7 has it beat hands down.
Even this Vista machine runs faster and has more capabilities than XP,
as good as it is.



[email protected] February 3rd 14 07:48 PM

Windows XP users 'increasing'?
 
On Monday, February 3, 2014 1:27:00 PM UTC-5, Boating All Out wrote:
In article , says...



On 2/3/14, 11:46 AM,
wrote:

On Mon, 03 Feb 2014 10:04:24 -0500, Poco Loco


wrote:




Maybe I'll stick with XP even after the support stops.




http://www.theinquirer.net/inquirer/...are-in-january



Microsoft has not given their business users any compelling reason to


switch.


If your mission is not significantly changing, why should you change


your hardware and software?


99% of all real business applications ran just fine on Windows 3.1 on


a 396. If you are just doing bookkeeping, inventory and point of sale,


you don't need that much computing power.


All of these flashy graphics do not actually add much to the average


business man's operation.


Hardware is pretty stagnant these days so I am not really sure why


they need a different OS.








Apple offers incremental improvements to its OS, not do-overs, and its


price is right. Mavericks, the latest, costs $0.00. I was going to put


Win 7 on my Macbook Air, but for $100+, I simply decided not to waste


the money.




What's $100 after spending $1000 on a laptop?
But if you don't need Win 7, why even think about it?


Besides, the Apple OS isn't really free. Its cost is just bundled into the overpriced Mac hardware.

Mr. Luddite February 3rd 14 08:06 PM

Windows XP users 'increasing'?
 
On 2/3/2014 2:49 PM, wrote:
On Mon, 03 Feb 2014 11:49:45 -0500, "F.O.A.D." wrote:

On 2/3/14, 11:46 AM,
wrote:
On Mon, 03 Feb 2014 10:04:24 -0500, Poco Loco
wrote:

Maybe I'll stick with XP even after the support stops.

http://www.theinquirer.net/inquirer/...are-in-january

Microsoft has not given their business users any compelling reason to
switch.
If your mission is not significantly changing, why should you change
your hardware and software?
99% of all real business applications ran just fine on Windows 3.1 on
a 396. If you are just doing bookkeeping, inventory and point of sale,
you don't need that much computing power.
All of these flashy graphics do not actually add much to the average
business man's operation.
Hardware is pretty stagnant these days so I am not really sure why
they need a different OS.



Apple offers incremental improvements to its OS, not do-overs, and its
price is right. Mavericks, the latest, costs $0.00. I was going to put
Win 7 on my Macbook Air, but for $100+, I simply decided not to waste
the money.


The OS is not free, it is just bundled into the overpriced hardware.
IBM did the same thing with the System 360, all the software was free
including on site support ... until LBJ sued them over it.

Apple gets away with it because they are still a small player.

Most people do not get the retail version of windows anyway. They get
it bundled with the software and it is about $35-40 that way based on
what you can get a bare (or linux) system for.

I don't even pay that. When you get an off lease machine the extra
cost is negligible and you could reinstall that OS on a brand new
machine if you wanted to. You just need the sticker ... or just the
numbers.
I am not even sure Microsoft is checking for duplicate XP
installations these days. I do have a good W-7 number if I wanted to
play with it but I have XP on that machine now.
I have still not seen a compelling need to go to 7 or 8.



I am not impressed with the idea that just being newer is always
better.



How about these?

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MpoX6Mh4kLw


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