Comment by dmicah
2 days ago
Eventually Microsoft will stop providing security updates to their old OS, compelling users to upgrade if they want to stay on Windows
2 days ago
Eventually Microsoft will stop providing security updates to their old OS, compelling users to upgrade if they want to stay on Windows
Which is fine. No one expects them to support everything forever.
A 2025 Linux kernel with all recent features is able to boot on a system from 2006.
Likewise the Windows 11 (which is just a rebranded Windows 10, just look at the full build number which should start with 10.x) kernel could boot systems from ~2017 onwards. Maybe with some kernel features disabled which most (if not all) Windows 10 users would not miss anyway, but it could still boot without any issues. Those running a Rufus-patched Windows 11 are living proof of this.
This never was a technical issue, or one which could cost them money, but a cold blooded business decision which generated thousands upon thousands of kilos of e-waste.
And for what?
>A 2025 Linux kernel with all recent features is able to boot on a system from 2006.
Because no one on the kernel team likes deleting code, specifically because someone will try to install it on their old ass work laptop from a decade ago.
Microsoft choosing not to support that old ass laptop is a company choice. There are costs involved with maintaining the support structure. Whereas Linux is primarily funded by enterprises who use it on servers, which may not be updated hardware wise in a longer period of time.
If Linus Torvalds or Miguel De Icaza introduce copilot, I swear I’m going to go all in on BSD.