DeepHour wrote:
The 'support' refers to Microsoft's commitment to supplying updates for the system, and also to the commitment of third-party companies to maintaining support for a particular operating system in the development of their products, eg browsers.
Windows 95 and 98 cannot run the modern internet, and browsers like Firefox, Chrome and even Windows Explorer would not run on them. Even on Windows XP most websites won't now run properly or at all, and I suspect Windows 7 is now entering on a similar path of decline.
I'm still on Win7, no great trouble with the Web yet, but I gather the writing's on the wall. One of the main browsers is dropping support for it. Of course it's always possible to stick to the last browser version that does support it, which will keep working for a while longer, but not forever. And naturally security will get worse and worse. Still, I've often been very late in accepting Firefox updates, and no functionality issues yet, though maybe I've just been lucky. As for security, as long as you keep your data backed up elsewhere, do a regular 3rd-party full system restore, and take a few other precautions I doubt there's much to worry about. Online banking has a ton of tedious security steps.
I suppose I'll get a 2nd-hand Win10 computer fairly soon and whack it into submission. As far as I'm concerned Win7 and the kind of hardware it runs on will probably turn out to be the peak of no-nonsense functionality, and in some ways XP and even Win2000 was more straightforward. But I guess it depends what the user wants to do. I don't like the learning curves of new versions or the expense. Wouldn't be so bad if I was interested in new features, but it goes against the grain when I have to "upgrade" just to keep doing what I was doing quite happily before. No wonder we've got global warming with all that unnecessary waste. Still, old computers still work OK offline with old programs, though when bits of hardware fail it can be hard to replace them.