Windows 7 Support End-of-Life (Also, Why I'd Prefer Upgrading to 8.1 Over 10)

This is what people will see when going to Microsoft's website up until the deadline shown. It is expected by most Windows users that Microsoft would no longer support Windows versions that become 10 years old and older, but it's damaging to Microsoft when they kill support for a platform that was still going strong and expect people to upgrade. Even worse when there aren't better alternatives.

Windows XP End of Life

View attachment 180478
The message that was sent to users shortly before the end of support.

Go back to 2014. After 12 years of support due to there being so many people who loved using Windows XP, and perhaps arguably Microsoft's best version of Windows to date, Microsoft announced that support for all editions of Windows XP would end. They also used imagery of an old computer system running Windows XP versus a new system running the latest Windows at the time, Windows 8.1. Ridiculous, to say the least, as there were newer systems which could efficiently run Windows XP 64-bit. Yet, despite the security risks of a dead system, according to StatCounter a surprising 1.54% of people still use Windows XP. It may not sound like much, but considering that there are approximately 7 billion people on the planet, roughly 100 million still use Windows XP. Now, this estimate can very much be inaccurate, since not everyone owns a computer, but it could still be a fairly high amount considering that this is a statistic basing on how many computers have Windows XP, not exactly how many people use it, since more than one person can use a desktop or laptop. I wouldn't be surprised if I were to discover that 50 million still use XP.

Windows 7 End of Life

January of next year, all Windows 7 versions will no longer be supported (save those that are protected by volume licensing, in which it is extended until January 10th, 2023). What will this mean for Windows 7 users? Of all the currently supported Windows version, Windows 7 is the best, beating Windows 8.1 in the market share by over 25% globally according to StatCounter. Microsoft is now pushing messages on systems still running Windows 7, prompting users to upgrade to Windows 10.

Why I Do Not Recommend Windows 10

640px-Windows_10_Home_Version_20H2_Desktop.png

Windows 10 integrates several new features, including Cortana, which collects user data automatically.

There are those who are gonna scoff, but it's actually been proven over and over. Microsoft is collecting your data. Even as recently as August of this year, because of the GDPR Microsoft is consistently being investigated about their data collection. The best way that they are doing it nowadays is with Windows 10, which has various diagnostic and info-collecting services on by default. Even after turning these features off, some personal information can still be collected by Microsoft. There is a way to remove built-in software manually, but it becomes reset after every major update.

Is Windows 8.1 Safer Than Windows 10?

Windows_8.1_Pro_Default_Start_Screen.png

Due to there being many gripes about lack of desktop integration in Windows 8, Microsoft released Windows 8.1, which can be either seen as a mere upgrade or a separate version altogether.

Let's be honest here - unless Microsoft has stopped using it altogether, there really isn't such a thing as a "safe" version of Windows. However, many of these things which can be potential privacy breaches are built into Windows 10 by default. Windows 8.1 lacks several features (like Cortana) which collects and stores information remotely that has to be manually deleted or retrieved, so unless you add them to Windows 8.1 (via Windows Update or their own website), then yes it is somewhat better, in regards to privacy and security from the very developers of it. One thing's for sure: it's a heck of a lot better than Windows 8! :P
  • Like
Reactions: 7 people

Comments

As a side note, you don't even need to do that if you don't want all of the advanced settings - Windows 10 still has the classic Control Panel. You can set a shortcut to it, job done.
 
  • Like
Reactions: 1 person
@Scott_pilgrim PTSD? From using Windows 8.1? That's one I've never heard before.

Seriously, though, 8.1 is not so bad if you mess around with it. I managed to get drivers installed that I thought couldn't be installed ever - they were Windows 10 drivers, but modifying the INF file within the driver package caused it to work - also, tinkering with BIOS settings can make them work.

As for the tiles that you are so afraid of (really, now! :P ), there are several "classic" Start Menu replacement apps that you can install that can skip the Metro screen entirely. I've tried a few of them once before (be wary of some that have spyware, though - go reading about them, first!), and there were some that I liked a lot. I think IOBit even has one, IIRC.
 
Also, system crashes are probably more on the hardware level; perhaps you're running software the PC can't handle, or the hardware is wearing out, or it was defective when you got it. Might want to upgrade to a better computer, in that case.

...This coming from the guy typing this out on a nearly ten-year-old laptop. :wacko:
 
"Might want to upgrade to a better computer, in that case."
i upgraded about a year ago, but i still use the old laptop for goofing off wiht linux and whatnot
 
  • Like
Reactions: 1 person
Linux is good, too. I can't really argue over replacing Windows with Linux; that's something else I would recommend (and have done several times). :)
 
I sual-boot Windows 10 and Linux Mint (whatever the latest is, I keep it updated) so I have a backup OS incase the other shits itself. (Usually Linux rescuing Windows)
 
  • Like
Reactions: 1 person
In my experience switching to Linux full-time just means you'll spend your days tweaking the OS instead of actually using it - I'm yet to see one distribution that wouldn't be detrimental to my workflow. If you're already modifying Win8.1 and replacing the UI, just do the same thing except in Win10 which I arguably has a better, more stable kernel.
 
  • Like
Reactions: 1 person
@Foxi4 I've actually found the reverse to also be true, in my case! Sure, having Windows pre-installed on a device means not as many headaches, but ever since I got Windows 8.1 on my custom system, I've had to tweak various things - for instance, it wouldn't install on top of an existing Windows 7 installation, even though you're supposed to do that, so I actually got a separate, smaller hard drive to put Win 8.1 on.

Here's some food for thought: Linux pre-installed on a system. It's not common, especially in major retailers like Best Buy, but it exists. Do such systems require tweaking, or are they already pre-configured? IIRC, Gateway (which became part of Acer) offered Linux-based laptops, but I wouldn't know which models.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Nikokaro
G
They can steal my info as long as it's not bank account or credit card info, or social security number stuff like that I don't care. Too many good games on Windows 10 you can't get on other OS', so I deal with the rest.

But I even got a notice the other day that Windows 10 version 1903 was dead and that i had to update, and that there'd be no virus protection for it going forward. So, can't win.
 
  • Like
Reactions: 1 person
@HarvHouHacker
yeah no it's a shit mess
my computer is fukt now because of it
as of about 3 windows "updates" ago it fucked up my wiif now it drops literally every 30 seconds
all networks disappear , the machine is an ultrabook designed for 8 and it was updated to 8.1 soon after ,there is a 10 update for it but everything I read says not to install it cause it breaks just about everything
i have tried it all removed all drivers for the card back to zero and reinstalled them and i still get the same problems, removed and reseated the card and removed and reconnected the antennas , this is a windows problem and started after an "update", i had similar problems before but not like this, now the machine is totally unuseable and i am stuck with it
i went and ordered another card .an AX wifi 6 card in hopes the drivers for the new card will not have the same problems but i am not hopeful , but the card was onl $13 so worth a shot
windows is a fucking pile of shit and the kerenel is an unstable POS ingeneral
 
@HarvHouHacker Linux requires 24/7 attention from the user even when pre-installed, at least in my experience. I don't knock it, it has its uses, but it's just not a very good consumer OS. I like to use the race car analogy - I'm sure people can make it very fast, I'm sure it can take tight corners, but you spend all day under it to make it run at all. Linux is great for applications that you deploy once and never touch again, like embedded systems. It belongs on computers that are designed for a specific task where the environment doesn't change and user input is minimal, that's why it's used in networking so much - you install it, mess around with the package installer once and it will chug until the end of time... until you touch it, then it just falls apart. Windows is the opposite - it's effecient for the end-user. It's not the fastest, it's not the most secure, it's not the most customisable, but you throw tasks at it and it just does them. Coaxing Linux to do anything at all, especially autonomously, is always a project in and out of itself.
 
  • Like
Reactions: 2 people

Blog entry information

Author
HarveyHouston
Views
2,082
Comments
258
Last update

More entries in Personal Blogs

More entries from HarveyHouston

General chit-chat
Help Users
    BakerMan @ BakerMan: