NEWS CATEGORIES:



NEWS ARCHIVE >>
SOFTPEDIA REVIEWS >>
MEET THE EDITORS >>
Home > News > Microsoft > Windows

Windows


XP Not Dead, and Still an Alternative to Vista

Microsoft quietly supports Vista to XP downgrades

By Marius Oiaga, Technology News Editor

24th of September 2007, 15:44 GMT

Adjust text size:


Windows Vista
Enlarge picture
Windows XP is by no means dead, and the fact of the matter is that the operating system released at the end of 2001 is still positioned as a valid alternative to Windows Vista. On the Microsoft's official webpage reserved for obsolete products, Windows XP is nowhere to be found. In fact, the latest version of the company's operating system considered obsolete is Windows 3.0 Standard Edition. But Windows XP will continue to be available via retail and original equipment manufacturers until the end of January 2008, and then to system builders until February 2009. Before
Windows Vista even hit the shelves in January 2007, the company announced that it was expanding support for some versions of XP, to match that of Windows XP Professional, meaning 2014.

In this context, it is not surprising that both home and corporate users are willing to ride Windows XP for everything it's got. While some have announced drastic measures such as waiting for Windows 7 (Seven), Vista's successor in 2010, others are simply waiting for the first service pack for the operating system, due in 2008. And preparations for Vista deployment are late to say the least. This is the main reason why corporate clients choose to exercise their downgrade rights with Windows Vista and stick with XP.

Although in Microsoft's vision Windows XP is at least expired if not obsolete, the Redmond company has simplified the Vista to XP downgrade process. In order to exercise downgrade rights, users first have to acquire the operating system, and in such a case, even if they run XP instead, the clients' trajectory will still evolve to the Vista destination point. But while Microsoft has traditionally made it easy for Software Assurance customers buying Vista through volume license to downgrade, the process has also been streamlined for OEMs offering the Business and Ultimate editions of the platform.

PC makers such as Fujitsu, HP, Dell, Acer and Lenovo have started including new machines with Vista preinstalled CDs with Windows XP Professional at almost no extra cost. Downgrading a Vista computer to XP also no longer requires any additional activation, if the original installation of the operating system was pre-activated, which is general OEM practice.

TAGS:

Windows Vista | Windows XP | downgrade
Read by 2,237 user(s) | Add comment | Link to this article TWEET THIS


Article rating:
Fair (2.8/5) 9 vote(s)    

Subscribe to news | Print article | Send to friend

© Copyright 2001-2010 Softpedia
Contact:

 

 

SEARCH THE NEWS ARCHIVE :




Today's News
| Yesterday's News | News Archive


MORE RELATED ARTICLES:


Unbelievable Turn of Events: Windows Vista SP1 Will Install Windows XP

BREAKING! Windows XP SP3 Available for Download!

Windows Vista Bites the Dust - Windows XP Did It!

XP SP3 Completely Asphyxiated under Vista SP1

Windows XP Embedded SP2 Free Download Available

McAfee Goes into Every Kiosk for XP Embedded - Vista Ignored

Is DirectX 10 in Windows Vista Worth It?

Microsoft Is Willing to Stick Windows Vista on Anything

Forget about 60 Million - Vista on 50% of Computers = Failure!

User opinions:

No user comments yet.
Be the first to express your opinion using the form below!

Share your opinion:

Your Name:
Your Email Address:
(will not be used for commercial purposes)
Solve this to prove you're not a bot: =
Your review/opinion:

 




Windows tabGames tabDrivers tabMac tabLinux tabScripts tabMobile tabHandheld tabGadgets tabNews tab

SUBMIT PROGRAM   |   ADVERTISE   |   GET HELP   |   SEND US FEEDBACK   |   RSS FEEDS   |   ENTER NEWS SITE   |   ENGLISH BOARD   |   ROMANIAN FORUM