Tech Support > Microsoft Windows > End of XP home this year, what are your plans
End of XP home this year, what are your plans
Posted by P. Thompson on January 8th, 2006



"For consumer products, security updates will be available through the end
of the mainstream phase. For Windows XP Home Edition, there will be no
security updates after 12/31/06." Regarding paid support for problems
unrelated to security patches, I was told that "Users who want to continue
to receive support after the Microsoft assisted and paid support offerings
have ended may visit the Retired Product Support Options Web site."

A question for those unfortunate souls running XP home, especially folks
who just bought a PC this holiday season:

What are your plans for the end of support for XP home?

XP "professional"
Vista
Linux


---
The notion that the church, the press, and the universities should
serve the state is essentially a Communist notion ... In a free society
these institutions must be wholly free -- which is to say that their
function is to serve as checks upon the state.
-- Alan Barth

Posted by BC on January 8th, 2006


Win98

-BC

Posted by DL on January 8th, 2006


http://www.microsoft.com/windows/lif...vicepacks.mspx

"P. Thompson" <no-spam@new.rr.com> wrote in message
news:Pine.LNX.4.63.0601080915090.17438@localhost.l ocaldomain...
>
> "For consumer products, security updates will be available through the end
> of the mainstream phase. For Windows XP Home Edition, there will be no
> security updates after 12/31/06." Regarding paid support for problems
> unrelated to security patches, I was told that "Users who want to continue
> to receive support after the Microsoft assisted and paid support offerings
> have ended may visit the Retired Product Support Options Web site."
>
> A question for those unfortunate souls running XP home, especially folks
> who just bought a PC this holiday season:
>
> What are your plans for the end of support for XP home?
>
> XP "professional"
> Vista
> Linux
>
>
> ---
> The notion that the church, the press, and the universities should
> serve the state is essentially a Communist notion ... In a free society
> these institutions must be wholly free -- which is to say that their
> function is to serve as checks upon the state.
> -- Alan Barth
>



Posted by Foxhole on January 8th, 2006


It seems you don't know what you are talking about.

Foxhole

"P. Thompson" wrote:

>
> "For consumer products, security updates will be available through the end
> of the mainstream phase. For Windows XP Home Edition, there will be no
> security updates after 12/31/06." Regarding paid support for problems
> unrelated to security patches, I was told that "Users who want to continue
> to receive support after the Microsoft assisted and paid support offerings
> have ended may visit the Retired Product Support Options Web site."
>
> A question for those unfortunate souls running XP home, especially folks
> who just bought a PC this holiday season:
>
> What are your plans for the end of support for XP home?
>
> XP "professional"
> Vista
> Linux
>
>
> ---
> The notion that the church, the press, and the universities should
> serve the state is essentially a Communist notion ... In a free society
> these institutions must be wholly free -- which is to say that their
> function is to serve as checks upon the state.
> -- Alan Barth
>
>

Posted by Frank Saunders, MS-MVP OE on January 8th, 2006


"P. Thompson" <no-spam@new.rr.com> wrote in message
news:Pine.LNX.4.63.0601080915090.17438@localhost.l ocaldomain
> "For consumer products, security updates will be available through
> the end of the mainstream phase. For Windows XP Home Edition, there
> will be no security updates after 12/31/06." Regarding paid support
> for problems unrelated to security patches, I was told that "Users
> who want to continue to receive support after the Microsoft assisted
> and paid support offerings have ended may visit the Retired Product
> Support Options Web site."
> A question for those unfortunate souls running XP home, especially
> folks who just bought a PC this holiday season:
>
> What are your plans for the end of support for XP home?


I wonder how this lie got started. SP3 for WinXP Home is scheduled for the
second half of '07. Of course MS does expect you to have SP2 installed by
now if not by the end of the year.

--
Frank Saunders, MS-MVP OE
Please respond in Newsgroup only. Do not send email
http://www.fjsmjs.com
Protect your PC
http://www.microsoft.com./athome/sec...t/default.aspx
http://defendingyourmachine.blogspot.com/


Posted by Winux P on January 8th, 2006



Preacher of doom...

"P. Thompson" <no-spam@new.rr.com> wrote in message
news:Pine.LNX.4.63.0601080915090.17438@localhost.l ocaldomain...
:
: "For consumer products, security updates will be available through the end
: of the mainstream phase. For Windows XP Home Edition, there will be no
: security updates after 12/31/06." Regarding paid support for problems
: unrelated to security patches, I was told that "Users who want to continue
: to receive support after the Microsoft assisted and paid support offerings
: have ended may visit the Retired Product Support Options Web site."
:
Have you read
http://www.microsoft.com/windows/lif...vicepacks.mspx

as of yet and dare I say understood it?

: A question for those unfortunate souls running XP home, especially folks
: who just bought a PC this holiday season:

Actually I believe those souls are most propably happy with their purchase
decisions, and the folks that did buy a PC this holiday season will be using
the system for at least the next few years with, that's correct Windows XP
Home Edition with updates from here until a long time.

: What are your plans for the end of support for XP home?

That's quite far off by then the folks that bought a PC this holiday season
will be buying one on that far off holiday season again.

:
: XP "professional" - Why? Is everyone with Home going to join a domain all
the sudden?
: Vista - Doesn't have it's act together as of yet
: Linux - Doesn't have it's act together as of yet as much I'd love it too.
:
:
: ---
: The notion that the church, the press, and the universities should
: serve the state is essentially a Communist notion ... In a free society
: these institutions must be wholly free -- which is to say that their
: function is to serve as checks upon the state.
: -- Alan Barth

- All institutions are machines, none of which bestow or defend freedom.


Posted by cquirke (MVP Windows shell/user) on January 9th, 2006


On Sun, 8 Jan 2006 10:31:47 -0600, "Frank Saunders, MS-MVP OE"
>"P. Thompson" <no-spam@new.rr.com> wrote in message


>> "For consumer products, security updates will be available through
>> the end of the mainstream phase. For Windows XP Home Edition, there
>> will be no security updates after 12/31/06." ... "Users
>> who want to continue to receive support after the Microsoft assisted
>> and paid support offerings have ended may visit the Retired Product
>> Support Options Web site."


>I wonder how this lie got started. SP3 for WinXP Home is scheduled for the
>second half of '07. Of course MS does expect you to have SP2 installed by
>now if not by the end of the year.


You know how those old code viruses sit dormant for months, so that
they pervade every "full system backup" and infect as many existing
code files as possible, then the fuse burns down to hatch a killer
payload? Well, that's the same sort of thing that is happening here.

XP's Product Activation made it difficult to re-use XPon multiple PCs,
and the standard solution was to use a "regimental condom", i.e. a
single stolen volume license key and appropriate file set that
bypassed the Product Activation thing.

All the whole world's warez "Johns" used the same "regimental condom",
creating a nice single point of failure. When Service Packs came out,
they refused to install on this particular product key, but the warez
johns didn't mind; they just stayed without the Service Packs.

Now the trap is sprung, if the original "Service Pack 0" version of XP
is considered "too old" to support or patch, and next this will apply
to SP1. "Of course MS does expect you to have SP2 installed by now if
not by the end of the year." - except these warez johns won't be able
to do that, so what are they going to do?

Pay what they should have paid in the first place, is the expectation,
and it's not an unreasonable one.

Normally there's no differentation between Home and Pro in these
matters, i.e. both would be "retired" at the same time, based on how
long ago the next SP level up was released. Then again, it's only
recently that XP is old enough to be "too old", so we don't really
know whether XP Home will be treated as an NT (because that's what it
is) or a Win9x (because that's the market and price band it is in).



>---------- ----- ---- --- -- - - - -

Don't pay malware vendors - boycott Sony
>---------- ----- ---- --- -- - - - -

Posted by Alias on January 9th, 2006


cquirke (MVP Windows shell/user) wrote:

> On Sun, 8 Jan 2006 10:31:47 -0600, "Frank Saunders, MS-MVP OE"
>
>>"P. Thompson" <no-spam@new.rr.com> wrote in message

>
>
>>>"For consumer products, security updates will be available through
>>>the end of the mainstream phase. For Windows XP Home Edition, there
>>>will be no security updates after 12/31/06." ... "Users
>>>who want to continue to receive support after the Microsoft assisted
>>>and paid support offerings have ended may visit the Retired Product
>>>Support Options Web site."

>
>
>>I wonder how this lie got started. SP3 for WinXP Home is scheduled for the
>>second half of '07. Of course MS does expect you to have SP2 installed by
>>now if not by the end of the year.

>
>
> You know how those old code viruses sit dormant for months, so that
> they pervade every "full system backup" and infect as many existing
> code files as possible, then the fuse burns down to hatch a killer
> payload? Well, that's the same sort of thing that is happening here.
>
> XP's Product Activation made it difficult to re-use XPon multiple PCs,
> and the standard solution was to use a "regimental condom", i.e. a
> single stolen volume license key and appropriate file set that
> bypassed the Product Activation thing.
>
> All the whole world's warez "Johns" used the same "regimental condom",
> creating a nice single point of failure. When Service Packs came out,
> they refused to install on this particular product key, but the warez
> johns didn't mind; they just stayed without the Service Packs.
>
> Now the trap is sprung, if the original "Service Pack 0" version of XP
> is considered "too old" to support or patch, and next this will apply
> to SP1. "Of course MS does expect you to have SP2 installed by now if
> not by the end of the year." - except these warez johns won't be able
> to do that, so what are they going to do?
>
> Pay what they should have paid in the first place, is the expectation,
> and it's not an unreasonable one.
>
> Normally there's no differentation between Home and Pro in these
> matters, i.e. both would be "retired" at the same time, based on how
> long ago the next SP level up was released. Then again, it's only
> recently that XP is old enough to be "too old", so we don't really
> know whether XP Home will be treated as an NT (because that's what it
> is) or a Win9x (because that's the market and price band it is in).


Erm, cracked versions of XP accept SP 2 just fine and the subsequent
updates. The only people inconvenienced by the activation and WGA hoops
are paying customers.

--
Alias

Use the Reply to Sender feature of your news reader program to email me.
Utiliza Responder al Remitente para mandarme un mail.

Posted by cquirke (MVP Windows shell/user) on January 9th, 2006


On Mon, 09 Jan 2006 14:24:09 +0100, Alias

>Erm, cracked versions of XP accept SP 2 just fine and the subsequent
>updates. The only people inconvenienced by the activation and WGA hoops
>are paying customers.


Depends on the crack. Ye Olde volume key is challenged as described;
more effective approaches that operate on non-volume keys have the
potential to work better, but I haven't seen those around here.



>---------- ----- ---- --- -- - - - -

Don't pay malware vendors - boycott Sony
>---------- ----- ---- --- -- - - - -

Posted by Foxhole on January 9th, 2006


I think I know where he got this some idiot named Fred Lagna has a
newsletter, who a friend of mine showed me today, is saying that Microsoft
will stop supporting Windows XP at the end of this year.

Foxhole

"Frank Saunders, MS-MVP OE" wrote:

> "P. Thompson" <no-spam@new.rr.com> wrote in message
> news:Pine.LNX.4.63.0601080915090.17438@localhost.l ocaldomain
> > "For consumer products, security updates will be available through
> > the end of the mainstream phase. For Windows XP Home Edition, there
> > will be no security updates after 12/31/06." Regarding paid support
> > for problems unrelated to security patches, I was told that "Users
> > who want to continue to receive support after the Microsoft assisted
> > and paid support offerings have ended may visit the Retired Product
> > Support Options Web site."
> > A question for those unfortunate souls running XP home, especially
> > folks who just bought a PC this holiday season:
> >
> > What are your plans for the end of support for XP home?

>
> I wonder how this lie got started. SP3 for WinXP Home is scheduled for the
> second half of '07. Of course MS does expect you to have SP2 installed by
> now if not by the end of the year.
>
> --
> Frank Saunders, MS-MVP OE
> Please respond in Newsgroup only. Do not send email
> http://www.fjsmjs.com
> Protect your PC
> http://www.microsoft.com./athome/sec...t/default.aspx
> http://defendingyourmachine.blogspot.com/
>
>
>

Posted by Plato on January 9th, 2006


P. Thompson wrote:
>
> What are your plans for the end of support for XP home?


MS-DOS 6.22

Runs D00M just fine. That's all I really need.




--
http://www.bootdisk.com/


Posted by Winux P on January 9th, 2006



Too right Plato, Ultimate DOOM to this day is still my favourate game.

http://www.idsoftware.com/games/doom/doom-ultimate/

If you get the DOOM Collector's Edition Pack (Ultimate DOOM, DOOM II and
Final DOOM with Plutonia and TNT *.wads) it will run on Windows XP. It's
great, DOOM III is a bit scary though, even for an old bloke.

- Winux P

"Plato" <|@|.|> wrote in message
news:43c2b70c$1$30056$bb4e3ad8@newscene.com...
: P. Thompson wrote:
: >
: > What are your plans for the end of support for XP home?
:
: MS-DOS 6.22
:
: Runs D00M just fine. That's all I really need.
:
:
:
:
: --
: http://www.bootdisk.com/
:
:



Similar Posts