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Microsoft Responds to 'Save XP' Petition 440

DaMassive writes "Computerworld Australia is running a story with a response from Microsoft to Infoworld's SAVE XP petition Web site, which has gathered over 75,000 signatures so far. Apparently Microsoft is aware of the petition, but says it is "listening first and foremost to feedback we hear from partners and customers about what makes sense based on their needs, that's what informed our decision to extend the availability of XP initially, and what will continue to guide us" — a somewhat strange response given that the vast majority of people signing the petition ARE Microsoft customers! The Save XP movement has attracted the attention of the software giant, despite its claims that Vista has sold more than 100 million copies and its adoption rate is in line with the company's expectations. "We're seeing positive indicators that we're already starting to move from the early adoption phase into the mainstream and that more and more businesses are beginning their planning and deployment of Windows Vista," the company said. Nevertheless vendors such as Dell, Hewlett-Packard, Lenovo, Fujitsu, and more recently NEC, all offer the opportunity to downgrade to XP Pro."
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Microsoft Responds to 'Save XP' Petition

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  • OH GOD (Score:5, Funny)

    by barkeyrogers ( 953147 ) on Wednesday February 06, 2008 @08:41PM (#22328450)
    So what they are basically saying is, directx 10 costs $300 and youll never ever have it without ruining your computer
    • Re:OH GOD (Score:4, Interesting)

      by CastrTroy ( 595695 ) on Wednesday February 06, 2008 @08:43PM (#22328468)
      I thought there was some efforts by third parties to get directX 10 running on Windows XP. Does anybody know if any progress has been made on that front?
      • by mrxak ( 727974 )
        I know I can play Halo 2 on XP using a third-party tool that basically tricks Halo 2 into thinking it's on Vista. I'd link to the site, but I just checked and it's been taken over by advertiser domain squatters.
        • Re:OH GOD (Score:5, Informative)

          by vux984 ( 928602 ) on Wednesday February 06, 2008 @09:56PM (#22329244)
          I know I can play Halo 2 on XP using a third-party tool that basically tricks Halo 2 into thinking it's on Vista. I'd link to the site, but I just checked and it's been taken over by advertiser domain squatters.

          That's because Halo 2 doesn't actually need directx10. It has a 'is this vista check', and it might use a couple of minor new directx 10 direct3d calls (which can easily be captured and reimplemented in direct3d 9).

          The real features of directX10 like Video memory virtualization and gpu multitasking (which allows Vista to have multiple direct3d accelerated applications (including the desktop) all running at the same time in (possibibly overlapping windows).

          -That- is (amongst other reasons) why Vista has a new driver model, which in turns needs kernel support. -That- is why it hasn't been backported to XP. -That- is why its not likely to ever get backported to XP.

          DirectX10 itself is a MAJOR milestone for windows, for the windows desktop, a step that brings it to parity with what linux and osx can do, in fact.

          You aren't going to get a proper Compiz or Aqua class desktop for XP because XP simply can't do this stuff. Vista/DirectX10 can. But, this isn't really important 'for games' and games requiring directx10 is mostly marketing puff using minor features that can be easily redirected via a directx9 wrapper.

          This is unfortunately because it undermines just how major directX10 really is, leaving gamers with the impression that its just a cheap tactic to sell Vista. (Which, to the extent of its use by current games; requiring directX10 IS a cheap tactic to sell vista.) But directX10 is quite a bit more than what these games are using. And this cheap tactic is masking that.
          • Re:OH GOD (Score:5, Informative)

            by milsoRgen ( 1016505 ) on Wednesday February 06, 2008 @10:09PM (#22329358) Homepage

            -That- is (amongst other reasons) why Vista has a new driver model, which in turns needs kernel support. -That- is why it hasn't been backported to XP. -That- is why its not likely to ever get backported to XP.

            That is not correct, maximum pc had talked with a Microsoft developer that said there is no technical reason directx10 cannot be used with WinXP. The real reason is that Microsoft wants to use it as a dividing point separating Vista from XP.
            • Re:OH GOD (Score:5, Informative)

              by vux984 ( 928602 ) on Wednesday February 06, 2008 @10:27PM (#22329484)
              That is not correct, maximum pc had talked with a Microsoft developer that said there is no technical reason directx10 cannot be used with WinXP. The real reason is that Microsoft wants to use it as a dividing point separating Vista from XP.

              Right, they'd just have to update the kernel, and require a bunch of manufacturers to release new drivers to support the new features. Another not-insignificant issue is the DRM stuff, which is part of directx10, and again needs kernel and driver support. Nobody wants to deal with the mess that would be. For all our MS and DRM bashing, given what the situation is it makes technical sense to use it as a dividing point, even if those technical hurdles could be overcome.

              That said, there is nothing stopping MS from backporting just the new directx10 direct3d api for shaders etc back to XP and calling it directx9.2 or even really muddy the waters and call it "directx10 xp edition", and letting the games have feature parity on both platforms.

              But as I've said, MS wanted to use DirectX to lure people to Vista. Although I've heard rumours that they might now release a direct9 update for XP to add the direct3d features and appease gamers.

              • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

                by Cyberax ( 705495 )
                Sure, you'll need new drivers for DX10, there's nothing unusual. You also needed new drivers for DX9, DX8, DX7 and so on.

                And of course, I think most of people will gladly agree to leave DRM parts of DX10 unported.

                You don't need new driver architecture for DX10, it can work well enough with the old one. You just won't get hot-swap support and other goodies.

                Oh, and using multiple D3D applications simultaneously was supported since DX2 (via DirectDraw Clipper object). Vista allows to make _composite_ applicati
                • Re:OH GOD (Score:4, Interesting)

                  by vux984 ( 928602 ) on Thursday February 07, 2008 @02:31AM (#22330858)
                  You also needed new drivers for DX9, DX8, DX7 and so on.

                  Not quite the same ballpark. In terms of MS Office dx7-dx8-dx9 is Office 2000 to Office XP to Office 2003. DX10 is Office 2007 with docx and ribbons.

                  Oh, and using multiple D3D applications simultaneously was supported since DX2 (via DirectDraw Clipper object). Vista allows to make _composite_ applications, i.e. a D3D surface which is in turn mapped into another surface.

                  I'm sorry. I meant simultaneously hardware accelerated d3d. You know, so if one program has a spinning rendered textured and shaded cube at 120fps in one window, and you switch to another program in another overlapping window with its own rendered texture mapped shaded spinning regular polyhedron, the cube in the first one doesn't drop to a framerate you can count on your fingers... its 2008. They should both be able to spin at full speed. While a movie is playing in a 3rd window, on a desktop with 3d shadow effects if that's what the user wants.

                  These things don't even begin to get near where I'm talking about:
                  http://msdn2.microsoft.com/en-us/library/aa919937.aspx [microsoft.com]

                  You don't need new driver architecture for DX10, it can work well enough with the old one. You just won't get hot-swap support and other goodies.

                  Only someone in marketing would suggest that. "Hey, lets take all the revolutionary big features out of DirectX10, backport it to windows 98; and claim we've got directX10 working on Windows 98" Because, hey, you could do that. You could even show some program that checks for directx10 and makes a couple directx10 api calls to prove your programming mojo.

                  But, sorry, that isn't directx10.

                  In fact, there are projects to make DX10 emulation using OpenGL features.

                  See above. That isn't dx10 emulation. That's adding support for some dx10 api's using dx9/ogl. That's great if you want to run Halo on XP or something, but try something actually impressive... get AeroGlass running on XP, while playing a DVD movie in one window and WoW in another. Then click the start menu without having the other two windows choke up.
                  • Re:OH GOD (Score:5, Interesting)

                    by Cyberax ( 705495 ) on Thursday February 07, 2008 @03:05AM (#22330986)

                    Not quite the same ballpark. In terms of MS Office dx7-dx8-dx9 is Office 2000 to Office XP to Office 2003. DX10 is Office 2007 with docx and ribbons.


                    So? DX5/6/7 came out roughly every 1.5 years and driver developers somehow managed to write good drivers. And now they have several years to port DX10.

                     

                    I'm sorry. I meant simultaneously hardware accelerated d3d. You know, so if one program has a spinning rendered textured and shaded cube at 120fps in one window, and you switch to another program in another overlapping window with its own rendered texture mapped shaded spinning regular polyhedron, the cube in the first one doesn't drop to a framerate you can count on your fingers... its 2008. They should both be able to spin at full speed. While a movie is playing in a 3rd window, on a desktop with 3d shadow effects if that's what the user wants.


                    That was supported since late 90-s. You can create several accelerated graphical contexts and they will work along nicely. Try to run several 3D-graphical applications on XP - it just works. Now, XP heavily balances CPU/GPU power in favor of the foreground application (which makes sense), but it's a purely tuning matter. If you don't believe me - look at Linux, Compiz can work along nicely with 3D applications.

                     

                    These things don't even begin to get near where I'm talking about:
                    http://msdn2.microsoft.com/en-us/library/aa919937.aspx [microsoft.com]


                    Yep. DirectDraw Clippers were available SINCE DIRECTDRAW 2.0 IN 1996 - the earliest version of DirectX (DirectDraw 1.0 was known as Game SDK). I know, I myself wrote applications for science graphics rendering with several graphical contexts.
                     

                    Only someone in marketing would suggest that. "Hey, lets take all the revolutionary big features out of DirectX10, backport it to windows 98; and claim we've got directX10 working on Windows 98" Because, hey, you could do that. You could even show some program that checks for directx10 and makes a couple directx10 api calls to prove your programming mojo.

                    But, sorry, that isn't directx10.


                    Sorry, but what is DirectDraw/Direct3D? I somehow thought that it was a 3D API. 3D applications don't care about hotswapable graphic cards, they only care about that 'several API calls'. That API calls can certainly be ported to Windows XP, there's no great technical barriers.

                     

                    See above. That isn't dx10 emulation. That's adding support for some dx10 api's using dx9/ogl.


                    Nope. New DX10 features are already present as OpenGL extensions. So these projects just build DX10 API on top of OpenGL. It's not emulation, it's translation.

                     

                    That's great if you want to run Halo on XP or something, but try something actually impressive... get AeroGlass running on XP, while playing a DVD movie in one window and WoW in another. Then click the start menu without having the other two windows choke up.


                    Not a problem. I can run Compiz while playing Quake 3 and running a DVD player in Linux. All with current OpenGL.
                    • Re:OH GOD (Score:4, Informative)

                      by JasterBobaMereel ( 1102861 ) on Thursday February 07, 2008 @06:40AM (#22331914)
                      So a 3d accelerated desktop, with DVD in a window, and a 3D accelerated program in another

                      BeOS (1991) - Yes
                      XP(2001) - No
                      Mac OSX (2002) - Yes
                      Compiz (2006) - Yes
                      Vista(2007) - Yes

                      MS Innovating ... or playing catchup as usual ....

                      Note most game consoles (and game PC's) do not need to do this as they run full-screen.....So it's not a gaming feature...

                  • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

                    by ZorbaTHut ( 126196 )

                    I'm sorry. I meant simultaneously hardware accelerated d3d. You know, so if one program has a spinning rendered textured and shaded cube at 120fps in one window, and you switch to another program in another overlapping window with its own rendered texture mapped shaded spinning regular polyhedron, the cube in the first one doesn't drop to a framerate you can count on your fingers... its 2008. They should both be able to spin at full speed. While a movie is playing in a 3rd window, on a desktop with 3d shado

              • Vista (Score:4, Funny)

                by Presto Vivace ( 882157 ) <ammarshall@vivaldi.net> on Thursday February 07, 2008 @01:29PM (#22337044) Homepage Journal
                The New Coke of technology product launches.
            • Re:OH GOD (Score:5, Interesting)

              by ACMENEWSLLC ( 940904 ) on Wednesday February 06, 2008 @11:30PM (#22329916) Homepage
              There is talk on the Wine page about adding support of DirectX 10 *soon* and that it might be an option to run Wine in Windows XP to provide DirectX 10 support.

              I wonder if they are overly optimistic, or if they have truely looked into DX10 and think they can pull it off?
              • Comment removed (Score:4, Informative)

                by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Wednesday February 06, 2008 @11:54PM (#22330086)
                Comment removed based on user account deletion
                • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

                  by paganizer ( 566360 )
                  Looks pretty interesting; Something I would want to have a good 10 hours of sleep and a free day before taking a crack at it.
                  I read over the site cursorily and didn't see the answer to the BIG question; is there a DirectX 10 for win2k?
                  Give us that, and someone at Microsoft release the we-finished-it-but-decided-not-to-release-it 64-bit CPU patch for Win2k, and Life will be pretty darn awesome.
          • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

            by petermgreen ( 876956 )
            As you imply but don't explicitly state directx 10 isn't really about games, immersive games have always been written to monopolise the system and I don't see that changing any time soon. Sure some of them can run in a window but it doesn't tend to be very practical.

            it is about the 3D desktop but most 3D desktops so far have been either highly buggy or underwhelming so that is a feature there is little demand for.
          • Re:OH GOD (Score:5, Informative)

            by n dot l ( 1099033 ) on Thursday February 07, 2008 @03:42AM (#22331140)

            That's because Halo 2 doesn't actually need directx10. It has a 'is this vista check', and it might use a couple of minor new directx 10 direct3d calls (which can easily be captured and reimplemented in direct3d 9).

            Correct. A lot of the rest, well, not so much. And I appologize in advance for tearing into you over this, but I do 3D graphics programming for a living and it just pisses me off to no end how MS's marketing statements have somehow morphed into technical truths when they are clearly not true at all.

            In a nut shell, DX10's rendering features can be (and are, under OpenGL) implemented under the old driver model. Vista's shiny 3D desktop and ridiculous DRM (which are separate from Direct3D 10), however, cannot. Microsoft consistently choses to confuse the two, but they are distinct technologies that shouldn't probably don't rely on each other to any significant degree. Details follow.

            The real features of directX10 like Video memory virtualization and gpu multitasking (which allows Vista to have multiple direct3d accelerated applications (including the desktop) all running at the same time in (possibibly overlapping windows).

            This is all possible on XP with both OpenGL and Direct3D 9. Seriously, get a couple of 3D programs that run in windowed mode and drag them around your monitor. Overlap them. It works fine on XP. Managing the GPU resources is simply done inside the driver. All Vista's model does is move some functionality that used to be common to all drivers up into the kernel, because refactoring things this way allowed them to remove some of the overhead from most D3D API entry points - overhead that exists in D3D 9 (which is obviously not crippled or useless because of it).

            The D3D10 feature set could be implemented in XP without rewriting the kernel. There might be more overhead when calling rendering functions, but it probably wouldn't be worse than calling D3D9 functions (and D3D9's API is a lot chattier than D3D10's). There is no D3D10 feature that requires the Vista kernel rewrite.

            If you don't believe me then go put a GeForce 8 series card in a XP machine, install the latest driver, and then download GLEW [sourceforge.net]. Get it to dump out a list of available OpenGL extensions (visualinfo.exe in the bin directory, assuming you downloaded the Win32 binaries). Note these extensions in particular: GL_EXT_geometry_shader4, GL_EXT_texture_array, GL_NV_transform_feedback, as well as a few others I don't care to list. Those are all the OpenGL equivalents to the new D3D10 feature set. If NVIDIA can expose D3D10 generation features through OpenGL on an XP driver running on the old XP kernel, Microsoft can do the same thing through Direct3D 10. They simply choose not to.

            The only thing the old driver model can't actually do is share graphics resources among multiple processes, something that pretty much no 3D graphics application would ever really do in the first place (because launching processes and getting them to talk to each other is really expensive on Windows), and something which is not required for useful D3D 10 support. Read on to find out why they stuck in a useless feature.

            You aren't going to get a proper Compiz or Aqua class desktop for XP because XP simply can't do this stuff. Vista/DirectX10 can.

            The shiny 3D desktop thing in Vista is the only thing that really requires the new driver model, as it is what actually makes use of the ability to share D3D resources among multiple processes (it basically shares any 3D app's render surface into its own texture set). And note that the shiny desktop doesn't even use D3D10. It just uses D3D9 plus the extensions to D3D9 that are only available under the new driver model - extensions which only serve to notify applications that their device will (almost) never be lost (mundane window/D3D device setup thing, has nothing to do with actually rendering) and expose th

          • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

            by TheRaven64 ( 641858 )

            The real features of directX10 like Video memory virtualization and gpu multitasking

            ...were dropped from the final release because nVidia couldn't implement them in time and might be resurfacing in DirectX 10.1. Please don't confuse the planned virtualisation features in DirectX 10 with the ability to have multiple applications running 3D accelerated. You've been able to create multiple accelerated 3D contexts for over a decade (much longer on SGI hardware) and the windowing system doesn't have to do much beyond set clipping regions for each one to have them displayed on the same screen

      • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

        by Anonymous Coward
        Not gonna happen anytime soon. The games that were hacked are ones that ask for a DX10 interface but only use DX9 features.

        DX10 depends on the different video architecture in Vista to work correctly. Look up the Wikipedia article.
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      Except for the part where Vista Home Premium costs around $200, and $100 if you get it OEM when building a new computer (or not, newegg really doesn't care). And it doesn't ruin your computer, but thanks for trolling.
      • Re:OH GOD (Score:5, Funny)

        by causality ( 777677 ) on Wednesday February 06, 2008 @09:42PM (#22329122)

        Except for the part where Vista Home Premium costs around $200, and $100 if you get it OEM when building a new computer (or not, newegg really doesn't care). And it doesn't ruin your computer, but thanks for trolling.

        To quote a Monty Python episode ... "You're no fun anymore!"
    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      by Jugalator ( 259273 )
      DirectX 10 isn't all of what Vista offers, but speaking of that, I'm one of those who have played DX10 games on Vista and a Geforce 8800GTS w/ 640 MB RAM, and all I can say is that I agree with this [anandtech.com]. Yes, still. Even after new driver releases and even games. I thought that part would mature over time, but no. DirectX 10 games really do seem to cut about half the performance in bad cases.
    • Re:OH GOD (Score:4, Insightful)

      by Gerzel ( 240421 ) <brollyferret@UUU ... inus threevowels> on Wednesday February 06, 2008 @10:10PM (#22329360) Journal
      No. I think what they are basically saying is that:
      "We at M$ will never admit openly that Vista was a vast failure and are still hoping that our market share will eventually force users to adopt the new system and pay us 300 bucks."
  • Give 'em time (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Fleet Admiral ( 1020072 ) on Wednesday February 06, 2008 @08:43PM (#22328470)
    They will push Vista as hard as they can, as soon as they can. Its nice to appear friendly to the XP clients in the meantime, but in the end they want to make sure every computer now comes equipped with their latest VistaWare.
  • Customers. (Score:2, Insightful)

    by gnutoo ( 1154137 )

    The MAFIAA are their customers. You are what they sell.

  • Downgrade??? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Z80xxc! ( 1111479 ) on Wednesday February 06, 2008 @08:45PM (#22328494)

    "We're seeing positive indicators that we're already starting to move from the early adoption phase into the mainstream and that more and more businesses are beginning their planning and deployment of Windows Vista," the company said. Nevertheless vendors such as Dell, Hewlett-Packard, Lenovo, Fujitsu, and more recently NEC, all offer the opportunity to downgrade to XP Pro."

    I'm sorry, did I see the word downgrade there? I'd consider Vista to XP an upgrade myself. Anyhow, kudos to the OEM's for providing XP as an option. It would be nice if more of them also offered linux as an option when selecting the OS. At least Dell does. (Thanks.)

    It would be nice if Microsoft would at least extend the System Builder and OEM licenses for a while longer; there's really no reason not to people like XP, and they get money whether people buy Vista or XP. If they stop offering XP, then people may choose to use Linux or macs, and in the end MS may end up losing money.

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by jkrise ( 535370 )
      kudos to the OEM's for providing XP as an option.

      I don't think the OEMs are doing it out of their interest to the customer. They seem to be offering XP bcos else the customer will take his business elsewhere, never to return.

      If history is any indicator, it is obvious that big OEMs like HP and Dell (even Intel, with their chipsets) are hand-in-glove with Microsoft to make sure customers are forced to pick the latest MS offering of OS for drivers and support. If the end corporate customer rejects Vista, the
    • by Miguel de Icaza ( 660439 ) <trowel.gmail@com> on Wednesday February 06, 2008 @09:03PM (#22328710) Homepage Journal
      Why hang on to the old?
      Everyone should be running the newest of Windows, which is Windows Vista! People who still get by with XP are uncool and stick-in-the-muds. Windows Vista on a Wacom-enabled Tablet PC is the way to go! And Windows Vista to me seems much faster with the new wallpapers! I love Microsoft and everything they do. Products like Vista, silverlight.NET and OOXML powered Office 2007 are brilliant. Going forward vista will be the only way to get the latest version of .NET, moonlight and windows-update. I really have a mancrush on Steve Ballmer, too. I love Microsoft! I want a job at Microsoft!
    • Now what would be ironic is if Major OEMS charge more upgrading to XP than downgrading to Vista.
    • Eh, I hear if you turn off UAC or something it stops bugging you left and right just because you want to turn NumLock on.

      By the time XP no longer receives security updates (2014, or over 6 years from now) I'll probably move on over to Vista, turn off UAC because I don't like repeating myself, and turn off the minimize/close/maximize Aero animations (they make Vista feel sluggish).

      I imagine that will be suitable for another 5 years, at which time we can take a look at Windows 7 or holding out for the next th
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by boarder8925 ( 714555 )

      If they stop offering XP, then people may choose to use Linux or macs, and in the end MS may end up losing money.
      Don't count on it.
    • Re:Downgrade??? (Score:5, Interesting)

      by cyphercell ( 843398 ) on Wednesday February 06, 2008 @09:33PM (#22329028) Homepage Journal
      If they offer XP for too long, Linux and Mac will begin to look significantly better, not to mention projects like Wine and Reactos are being allowed valuable catch up time the longer Vista sits rotting on the vines. Vista like all Microsoft projects is a forced upgrade, if the upgrade does not occur then there is no vendor lock-in, no lock-in, no Microsoft. Microsoft is stuck between a rock and a hard place now and it shows prominently with rumors of Windows 8 looming in the intarwebs.
      • Re:Downgrade??? (Score:5, Insightful)

        by cyphercell ( 843398 ) on Thursday February 07, 2008 @12:19AM (#22330222) Homepage Journal
        In a all the years I've posted to slashdot I have never bitched about a moderation, until now. Seriously, Internet Explorer lost market share because it sat there, unimproved, for years. I'm very certain that Microsoft is looking at XP vs. Vista and saying "we've got to look innovative, Now!", I mean I honestly think that most current Linux distros are way more advanced than XP, Mac is more advanced than XP, and if XP looks better than Vista, what the fuck do you think Microsoft is thinking when they schedule a release date for windows 7 (oops! ok, I get it now) next year. I think that if Microsoft doesn't get something out next year, they *will* lose market share, and more of it the longer this situation stands. XP is good enough, but when you can get something good enough plus real tangible perks (unlike a Vista deployment), it's a no-brainer - CIOs are NOT going to let their budgets dry up.
  • by syousef ( 465911 ) on Wednesday February 06, 2008 @08:46PM (#22328512) Journal
    int isBusinessPartnerOrCustomer(user) {
          if (isBusinessPartner(user))
                return TRUE;
          if (isCustomer(user) && accountSize(customer) > TenMillion) /* Thin the herd */
                return TRUE;
          return FALSE;
    }
    • by Mantaar ( 1139339 ) on Wednesday February 06, 2008 @09:13PM (#22328842) Homepage

      OP.java:4: cannot find symbol
      symbol : variable customer
      location: class org.slashdot.it
      if (isCustomer(user) && accountSize(customer) > TenMillion) /* Thin the herd */
      ^
      1 error
  • by NeverVotedBush ( 1041088 ) on Wednesday February 06, 2008 @08:47PM (#22328516)
    Because what I want to do today is get my work done.
  • by QuantumG ( 50515 ) <qg@biodome.org> on Wednesday February 06, 2008 @08:47PM (#22328518) Homepage Journal
    NAH NAH NAH NAH I can't hear you NAN NAN NAN NAN
  • Funny,,, (Score:5, Funny)

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday February 06, 2008 @08:47PM (#22328520)
    I've always read XP as an emoticon.
  • Wow. (Score:5, Funny)

    by greenguy ( 162630 ) <estebandido.gmail@com> on Wednesday February 06, 2008 @08:49PM (#22328550) Homepage Journal
    I never thought there would be a day when XP would be considered a step up from the current state of affairs.

    Then again, these days, Nixon would be considered a step up from the current state of affairs, so...
    • by xs650 ( 741277 )
      "I never thought there would be a day when XP would be considered a step up from the current state of affairs.

      Then again, these days, Nixon would be considered a step up from the current state of affairs, so..."

      30+ years ago when things turned to crap, I used to say "sometime these will be the good old days". It was kind of funny then.

    • Re:Wow. (Score:5, Interesting)

      by Jugalator ( 259273 ) on Wednesday February 06, 2008 @09:18PM (#22328898) Journal
      IMO, Windows XP was never really that bad, and I've always considered it a step up from Windows 2000. Most people annoyed about XP was due to the crappy skin, but that's remedied in some time less than a minute by switching to the classic skin (and saving system resources in the process). After having done that, I can only note that XP has better stability than 2000 (ya, rly! I've had registry crashes on 2000 on a magnitude I've never seen on XP; actually XP with good drivers quite rarely crash for being a consumer OS), much improved hardware support, driver rollback support, fast user switching, networking over FireWire & Bluetooth, etc.

      And since XP is getting pretty old, the recommended specs to run it fairly well is still just about 256-512 MB RAM or so on a 300+ MHz CPU.
  • customer = serf; (Score:4, Interesting)

    by Scrameustache ( 459504 ) on Wednesday February 06, 2008 @08:56PM (#22328620) Homepage Journal

    "listening first and foremost to feedback we hear from partners and customers about what makes sense based on their needs, that's what informed our decision to extend the availability of XP initially, and what will continue to guide us" -- a somewhat strange response given that the vast majority of people signing the petition ARE Microsoft customers!
    Serfdom is the socio-economic status of peasants under feudalism, and specifically relates to Manorialism. It was a condition of bondage or modified slavery seen primarily during the Middle Ages in Europe. Serfdom was the enforced labour of serfs on the fields of landowners, in return for protection and the right to work on their leased fields.

    Instead of plowing a field, we're moving bits and bytes.

    Microsoft listens to the lords and barons, not to the serfs (barring a massive uprising and the occasional symbolic act of obligatory good faith).
    • "listening first and foremost to feedback we hear from partners and customers about what makes sense based on their needs, that's what informed our decision to extend the availability of XP initially, and what will continue to guide us" -- a somewhat strange response given that the vast majority of people signing the petition ARE Microsoft customers!

      Serfdom is the socio-economic status of peasants under feudalism, and specifically relates to Manorialism. It was a condition of bondage or modified slavery seen primarily during the Middle Ages in Europe. Serfdom was the enforced labour of serfs on the fields of landowners, in return for protection and the right to work on their leased fields.

      Instead of plowing a field, we're moving bits and bytes.

      Microsoft listens to the lords and barons, not to the serfs (barring a massive uprising and the occasional symbolic act of obligatory good faith).

      The topic is "Microsoft petition", the reply is in the form of a metaphor.

      Reply "I don't get it" instead of downmoding, sheesh.

  • by Futurepower(R) ( 558542 ) on Wednesday February 06, 2008 @09:01PM (#22328672) Homepage
    Quote from the article: ... a Microsoft spokesperson in the US told Computerworld: "We're aware of it, but are listening first and foremost to feedback we hear from partners and customers about what makes sense based on their needs. That's what informed our decision to extend the availability of XP initially, and what will continue to guide us."

    So much of what comes from Microsoft seems depersonalized, as though employees just go through the motions, realizing that nothing they do will change the basic nature of the fundamental failures in the company.

    Incompetence hangs in the air like the cold stench of death. [dilbert.com]
    • by jo42 ( 227475 )
      Microsoft can't say that they are going to extend XP support based on a petition. This would be an admission that Vista is a pile of poop. They have to save face and spout brain-dead corporate marketing nonsense. Welcome to the modern, corporate, world.
  • Funny. (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Trogre ( 513942 ) on Wednesday February 06, 2008 @09:07PM (#22328752) Homepage
    How many of us back in 2001 [slashdot.org] could have imagined the day when we would be fighting to save Windows XP?

    It is a strange world.

    • Re:Funny. (Score:4, Insightful)

      by Petrushka ( 815171 ) on Wednesday February 06, 2008 @10:37PM (#22329548)

      How many of us back in 2001 could have imagined the day when we would be fighting to save Windows XP?

      To be fair, back in 2001 WinXP was a steaming pile of donkey poo, perhaps almost as bad as Vista is now. With service packs it improved. In a not entirely dissimilar fashion, think back to the difference between Win98 and Win98SE. Basically, for Microsoft new OS releases are downgrades; only the service packs are upgrades. They're very consistent about this.

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by couchslug ( 175151 )
      Who's "we", Kemosabe?
      I'd like to see MSFT drop XP as fast as possible, cram Vista down users throats, and not listen to anyone asking otherwise.
  • despite its claims that Vista has sold more than 100 million copies
    How many of these copies were pre-installed on computers, and then deleted when the user gave up on Vista and installed Linux instead?
    • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

      by mattgoldey ( 753976 )
      Probably about 5.
    • despite its claims that Vista has sold more than 100 million copies

      How many of these copies were pre-installed on computers, and then deleted when the user gave up on Vista and installed Linux instead?

      ...and how many of those copies are open/select licenses that have had XP installed in place of Vista as is the right of the license holder?
      I've bought open Vista licenses, but I've yet to install it one time.
      Besides, VLK 1.0 is a lot less onerous to deal with than Vista's 2.0! 25 license minimum plus an activation server?!? Fuck that! I got more important things to do than set up servers so that Micro$oft can activate and validate their shit! Are they signing checks with my name on them? I didn't thi

  • Gullible fools... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Spy der Mann ( 805235 ) <spydermann.slash ... com minus distro> on Wednesday February 06, 2008 @09:12PM (#22328812) Homepage Journal
    ... so they think they can make one of the most evil corporations on the planet do a good deed with just a bunch of signatures? (cue evil maniacal laughter [youtube.com])

    Evil corporations cannot change. Well, they could change, but they WON'T. Terefore, they must be defeated. I wonder what would happen if all of the 75,000 people signing for XP would have donated 20 dollars to the ReactOS project [reactos.org]. $1,500,000 bucks doesn't sound any bad at all.

    On the other hand, this democratic exercise can help to open the eyes of the ignorant masses so they can realize that Microsoft won't change.
  • by saleenS281 ( 859657 ) on Wednesday February 06, 2008 @09:12PM (#22328818) Homepage
    I hate to break it to you, but given the absolute 0 work/commitment required for an online petition, no business worth their salt would bother basing critical decisions such as the tens if not hundreds of millions of dollars MS would have to spend to continue supporting XP in the manner demanded. How many of these petitioners have bothered to write a letter, or make a phone call?

    And finally... 75,000. Out of how many copies sold? That's not even 1% of their user base. Why would the EVER even consider such a request? I hate to break it to you vocal majority, but for most of us, Vista is as good, if not superior to XP. This is the same game that was played when XP was released. "OH NOES, 2000 IS SO MUCH BETTER!!!" It wasn't and XP isn't.
    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      by m.ducharme ( 1082683 )
      I can't speak for anyone else out there, but I can say for myself that the problem with Vista isn't that it's so much worse than XP, the problem for me is that it isn't any better. I think that's a problem for a lot of people, actually. Regular users are getting frustrated with changing OSs every five years or so, because they "have to", with no real benefits. There are normal, uninformed users now who've been through probably 4 or 5 different versions of Windows, and their new computers don't run any fast
  • by That's Unpossible! ( 722232 ) on Wednesday February 06, 2008 @09:13PM (#22328830)
    I've read all the same stories 6 years ago.

    Except back then people were bitching about the upgrade from 2000 to XP.

    The end result is Microsoft will fix some of the most annoying things in Vista (or offer alternatives), but 95% of their customers will swallow Vista within the next 2 years, and only the anal-i-will-die-proving-my-point types will still run XP... err excuse me, Windows 2000.
    • by Shados ( 741919 ) on Wednesday February 06, 2008 @09:48PM (#22329168)
      It happens everytime really. The amount of machines I had to downgrade from 2k/XP to Windows ME (ME!!!!!!!) back when I did that kind of work, was rediculous. Its just that there was such a large time period between XP and Vista, that people forgot. Its like how hell froze over when MS released IE7...it had been so long since an IE "upgrade" (I use the term loosely) that a lot of companies that had made web applications had actually STARTED -after- IE6 came out, and had no clue how to handle a transition like that...

      Same old same old.
  • Windows 7? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by eebra82 ( 907996 ) on Wednesday February 06, 2008 @09:31PM (#22329006) Homepage
    I agree with Linus Torvalds on what he said about operating systems. Basically, a regular user who's upgrading the OS should not notice a too big difference, nor should he have to upgrade the computer. The big problem with Vista is that it runs significantly slower than XP. Most of the annoyances are gone now that a year has passed since the release, so after a year of Vista, I am finally pleased (except for the exceptionally steep hardware requirements).

    If only Microsoft can make Windows 7 blazing fast again, I have no doubt it will be a huge success. Imagine the millions of users out there who switch from Vista to Windows 7 to notice that things are running fast like hell now. That's what we need. Linus was right.
  • downgrade? (Score:2, Funny)

    by crhylove ( 205956 )
    I would like to give points to the most disastrous use of the word "downgrade" ever. Going from Vista to XP is the same kind of downgrade as going from a Geo to a Lexus.

    I'd like to go ahead and downgrade my house into a mansion please.
  • by gig ( 78408 ) on Wednesday February 06, 2008 @09:58PM (#22329264)
    The only way to upgrade XP is to wrap a virtualizer around it as a prophylactic. You need to keep the top the same to run the apps and such, but the guts should not be touching the metal.

    A Mac plus Parallels plus the XP you already own keeps all your old stuff working (XP apps on XP) while also opening up new stuff like iLife and Unix and uptime and 64-bit RAM access. XP needs to be frozen in time like a compatibility library, not improved or changed. If you can get by with a non-Mac Unix then that is an excellent solution for running your virtualized XP also.

    Vista is different from XP, but not improved enough to make the switch worthwhile. If Vista had Win64 and a XP-in-a-window then that would be worth considering. No matter how much Microsoft wants to ignore it, the fact is you have to upgrade an old application platform to be compatible with a modern system. Win32 was created to run standalone or hooked onto a LAN where you trust everybody, and in 32-bits. Investing more money and time in that at this point is ridiculous.
  • by Nemilar ( 173603 ) on Wednesday February 06, 2008 @10:03PM (#22329306) Homepage
    I doubt Microsoft really cares if you buy XP with your computer instead of Vista. They way they look at it, it's even good for them - Vista is a Juggernaut that will eventually be standard on modern desktops; people who choose XP instead of Vista are going to have to buy a copy of Vista down the line.

    So from Microsoft's standpoint, people buying XP is great for them - they get paid once for their old OS, and then they get paid again when you buy a boxed copy of Vista down the line.
  • by nevesis ( 970522 ) on Wednesday February 06, 2008 @10:54PM (#22329688)
    Despite its claims that Vista has sold more than 100 million copies and its adoption rate is in line with the company's expectations.

    Vista's sales are high for one reason.

    Every Dell, HP, Lenovo, etc that you purchase with XP is actually sold as a computer with a Vista license and a XP downgrade license.

    Classic Microsoft.
  • Enough already. (Score:5, Interesting)

    by westlake ( 615356 ) on Wednesday February 06, 2008 @11:09PM (#22329794)
    This is becoming tiresome:

    Microsoft posts record performance in its Windows client division.

    In office products. In servers. In console gaming...

    15-20% growth in the first and second quarters of fiscal 2008. The U.S. economy is weak. The tech sector is down. But Microsoft is on a roll.

    The Slashdot response is denial.

    In a crapflood of posts that put a increasingly desperate spin on news that - more realistically viewed - would silence a Twitter.

  • by vikstar ( 615372 ) on Thursday February 07, 2008 @12:31AM (#22330290) Journal
    Slurm Queen: Yes! Which is why we'll market it as New Slurm. Then, when everyone hates it, we'll bring back Slurm Classic, and make billions!
  • Computer tax (Score:3, Insightful)

    by uvajed_ekil ( 914487 ) on Thursday February 07, 2008 @02:00AM (#22330736)
    I didn't so much "buy" one of their 100 million copies of Vista last fall as much as I paid the "MS new laptop computer tax." I would much rather have bought my computer without no OS, Linux or some free OS, or XP Pro (in that order of preference), and I compared prices of those few models available without Vista. In the end I found it to make more sense for me to buy the one I wanted and pay a bit more than I should have to for it.

    I'm sure a LOT of consumers who "buy Vista" do so only because cause their hardware is only available with it pre-installed, and as a result many of them suffer with a crappy, bloated OS or delete it altogether. Vista now occupies only a small partition on this notebook for the very rare cases when I must have real Windows compatibility, which is only true because the manufacturer ahs not seen fit to develop XP drivers for it.

  • by dougnaka ( 631080 ) * on Thursday February 07, 2008 @02:27AM (#22330840) Homepage Journal
    Vista has brought me *back* into the Windows using fold.

    1. Vista's security is a huge step up. It's a *good* thing that it asks you before changing things, don't disable it.
    2. Vista's improved memory management and added features (using extra RAM to cache disk -stolen straight outta Linux), being able to use a flash drive as swap.
    3. Improved stability.
    4. Start menu search rocks.
    5. My absolute favorite, copy->merge. I no longer have to connect my usb disks to my linux box and rsync them, I can just drag the entire folder over on Vista and answer 2 dialogs (one for the folder and one for the files) and I can merge/update my 195GB photo archives, Vista will do this on 2 USB drives in about 15 minutes, my rsync to the USB drives is at least 45 minutes.
    6. Scheduled backups go into zip files in directories, not some custom archival format.
    7. Folder layout and display is neater.
    8. My older laptop (Lenovo T43/1.5gb ram) runs it flawlessly.
    9. Fixing the start menu so it doesn't scroll all over the desktop
    10. Uptime with Hibernate and sleep. I close my laptop and it hibernates. I don't have to reboot with Vista like I did every other day with XP.

    Now if I could get all my key bindings working and have my Vista on one facet of my cube, a VMware OS X on another, and 6 more for terminals and Linux programs I think I'd be happy.

In the long run, every program becomes rococco, and then rubble. -- Alan Perlis

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