With Win 8.1 a PC can be booted straight to the desktop; no need to see the garish squares.
Anthony.
Well, you might not think that. However there will be zero patches or security updates for it, and it's highly likely that all the virus and malware authors will have been saving up their exploits for post 14th April so MS doesn't release a patch for them. So on the 15th April you are going to be absolutely open season to anyone and everyone. If you're connected to the internet this is madness and you *will* get hacked...
As a real-world example, with XP, just before SP1 was released which included automatic firewall turned on by default, if you did a clean install of XP on an internet-connected PC, you could expect to be exploited within about 7 minutes from finishing installation at one point...
Wasn't that proved to be an urban myth?if you did a clean install of XP on an internet-connected PC, you could expect to be exploited within about 7 minutes from finishing installation at one point...
I'll have XP still installed (on a separate drive in my PC) after April 2014. This is because I own a film scanner that has no manufacturer supplied drivers for Win 7 or Win 8.Just because Microsoft is going to stop support for XP in April, I don't think it means XP will "die".
I object to a $5 tax for every PC I want to run Win 8 on. It should be fixed by Microsoft
There are 2 people on this thread who have experience of it.Wasn't that proved to be an urban myth.
Wow, sounds like any XP pc connected to the internet will be a part of botnet post April 2014.There are 2 people on this thread who have experience of it.
For the guy with a negative scanner, try installing it in compatibility mode? PS late disclaimer: I work for Microsoft.
The Scanner is a Twain compatible device, Win 8 only supports WIA scanner drivers.OK but it's worth actually trying it off you haven't already. Depends on whether the scanner drivers need kernel access or not - see http://www.techsupportalert.com/content/how-windows7-vista64-support-32bit-applications.htm
except increased speedUnless you're buying a machine with a touchscreen, Windows 8 offers nothing.
That like saying wearing training shoes makes walking on carpet difficult as they are designed to be used on a running track, your logic is seriously flawed mate.If a UI works well for touches, it stands to reason it doesn't work well for a mouse, and vice versa
Unless you're buying a machine with a touchscreen, Windows 8 offers nothing.
Win 7 every time for me.
FYI, Windows XP won't suddenly die. If you have up to date firewall, spyware and most importantly, a good av, you will be fine.
Firewall etc won't help. Look at the number of critical security patches released over the last year for windows, IE etc. You WILL be vulnerable. You've had years to move to a newer OS, now is the time to do so.
FYI, Windows XP won't suddenly die. If you have up to date firewall, spyware and most importantly, a good av, you will be fine.

............. just a way of MS justifying their expensive OS![]()
Your choice. Think you're misguided though. We've supported XP for nearly 13 years, an extra 3 than our normal 10 year support cycle. Take whatever risk you wish with your own machines but please don't encourage others with the assurance that it'll be just fine.
As said ATMs will be on a locked down network and not publicly accessible.Did you know that the large majority of cash machines run on Windows NT 3.51? Do you know how many webservers out there run on Windows Server 2003? They haven't exploded or stopped working. The issue is that MS won't release further patches for XP, so a new exploit could come out that could cripple your machine. By the same token, an exploit could be written for Windows 8 right now and it would still take time for Microsoft to patch it.
My stance is that home users should consider upgrading now when the opportunity arises instead of rushing out and installing a new OS. My feeling is that Windows 7 will become the new XP or Windows 8.2 will as rumours suggest bring back the old features such as start bar and desktop.