←back to thread

268 points tech234a | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0.226s | source
Show context
samiv ◴[] No.43513408[source]
I'm also 100% convinced Microsoft will introduce mandatory code signing at some point and make it so that you can only ever install software from Windows Store.

They are envious of the Google and Apple walled gardens/cashcows and are now determined to turn Windows into one.

Windows is no longer a product for users, the users of Windows are the product for Microsoft to be shoved into the Azure sales funnel.

replies(13): >>43513481 #>>43513509 #>>43513544 #>>43513761 #>>43513801 #>>43513860 #>>43514065 #>>43514218 #>>43514472 #>>43516006 #>>43516046 #>>43529439 #>>43529599 #
cedws ◴[] No.43513761[source]
That would never work, they would have to have some kind of override. Microsoft doesn’t have that kind of leverage over Windows users because they don’t have tight vertical integration. If Windows 12 enforced that, users would just stay on Windows 11 and MS’ leverage would decrease even further.
replies(3): >>43513805 #>>43513821 #>>43516852 #
sshine ◴[] No.43513805[source]
I can’t believe people didn’t stay on Windows 7. It seems to have slid into some always-online ad-filled cloud hellhole since. Office365 is worse than Office 2000. This is the OEM strategy still at play. You gotta hand it to Bill Gates for capturing PCs for decades. People truly don’t care how poor their operating system behaves, because your only other option is to buy a Mac.
replies(5): >>43513879 #>>43514044 #>>43514083 #>>43517068 #>>43522047 #
jasode ◴[] No.43514044[source]
>I can’t believe people didn’t stay on Windows 7.

Normal mainstream users can't stay on very old operating systems like Windows 7 because they'll eventually be forced to install newer software that's not compatible with it. Outside actors other than Microsoft force os upgrades.

- buy a new printer and it only has drivers for newer os like Windows 10/11 and later

- need for installing newer software like latest versions of Google Chrome, Mozilla Firefox, Adobe suite, TurboTax 2024, etc. They don't install on Win7. For Windows 7, the last version of Chrome was January 2023. Last version of Firefox was August 2024.

So setting aside commercial apps like Adobe, TurboTax, etc. -- why can't a user just stay with old version of Mozilla Firefox that's compatible with Win7 and turn off updates?!? Because bank websites like JP Morgan will block the user with an error "You need to upgrade your web browser" because the SSL/TLS encryption algorithms in old Firefox versions are obsolete.

Deliberately trying to freeze your computer on Windows 7 or Windows XP means relegating it into a "museum piece" that becomes less and less useful for practical real-world tasks. That's ok for an isolated machine that runs old video games but no good for online banking.

replies(2): >>43514169 #>>43514710 #
1. abanana ◴[] No.43514710[source]
Some of us do! I get fewer problems at home on W7 than at work on W10/11.

- Printers: the W7 cohort probably overlaps with users of classic HP Laserjets (I know it's not just me!).

- Chrome: Supermium adds W7 support back into the latest(ish) version.

- SSL/TLS: does such an issue exist on W7? It's exactly what pushed my mother (at the age of about 65, and hating having to learn anything new) to upgrade to 11 from XP a year or so ago. I do all my Internet banking on W7, via several different banks as I often move around chasing the best interest rates, and never had a problem with any of them. (Vivaldi, Supermium, Firefox 115ESR.)

- Some software such as Adobe XD: yeah, unfortunately it's not supported. Depends how much it's needed I suppose. I may be forced to "upgrade" sometime this year but I'd really rather not.