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Intel Software IT Technology

Intel To Remove Old Drivers and BIOS Updates From Its Site (zdnet.com) 130

By Friday this week, Intel plans to remove old drivers and BIOS updates from its official website. From a report: "This download, BIOS Update [BLH6710H.86A] 0163, will no longer be available after November 22, 2019 and will not be supported with any additional functional, security, or other updates," reads a message posted to the download page of one of the impacted components. "Intel recommends that users of BIOS Update [BLH6710H.86A] 0163 uninstall and/or discontinue use as soon as possible," the message continues. The downloads are drivers and BIOS updates for Intel desktop components and motherboards the company released in the 90s and early-to-mid 2000s. Downloads for hundreds of components are believed to have been impacted, from motherboards to NIC cards and graphics cards. Most of the drivers are for Windows versions like 98, ME, XP, and older Windows Server editions -- old Windows OS versions that have themselves reached end-of-life (EOL) All components and motherboards reached (EOL) years ago, and Intel stopped delivering firmware updates as a result. Its website was merely hosting the older files for convenience.
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Intel To Remove Old Drivers and BIOS Updates From Its Site

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  • by Z00L00K ( 682162 ) on Monday November 18, 2019 @12:54PM (#59426678) Homepage Journal

    Since anyone that's having a retro computer that's chasing drivers for their old hardware will now have to download the drivers from questionable sites where they may be infected by various kinds of malware.

    • Is your version of Linux supported this long? No. Did you bitch about that?
      • by caseih ( 160668 ) on Monday November 18, 2019 @03:39PM (#59427520)

        Actually Linux is happily running (up to date even) on my 10 year old machine that Intel no longer supports, and which is affected by this ditching of all firmware. I'll never run Windows of any kind on it, and its running fine as is. But if I want to add bigger drives to it, I'll probably need the latest (obsolete) revision of the firmware. In the past I'd just download it if I needed it. Now I'll have to archive it somewhere in case I do need it.

        What I don't get is why remove the old drivers? Doesn't make sense to me. It's one thing to warn users the drivers are unsupported and the hardware is obsolete. But to pull them outright? That's bizarre.

        I've been buying Intel for quite a few years now. But this irritates me. Hope AMD doesn't follow suit.

        • by Junta ( 36770 )

          On the firmware, why would you not update it now if you think you may one day?

          As to a justification, I would not be surprised if someone went through and decided that hosting materials to enable users to keep using platforms no longer receiving security updates somehow endorses the behavior and it would be 'safer' if they made the user clearly aware of what they are getting into. I don't think it's a very good reason, but I struggle to think of other good justifications for investing the effort of cleaning

          • Old dumpster sourced machines/components often don't have the latest firmware. So being able to download it from a known-good source is quite important.
          • by jabuzz ( 182671 )

            I just dusted down my old D510 mini ITX server that I retired a couple of years ago to install CentOS 8 on for reasons I won't go into here two weeks ago. Everything on that board is supported by CentOS 8, I did a BIOS upgrade as I installed the new OS (it was previously running CentOS 5, replaced with a new machine running CentOS 7). I noticed that nasty warning as I downloaded the BIOS update and thought WTF, why do that.

        • What I don't get is why remove the old drivers? Doesn't make sense to me. It's one thing to warn users the drivers are unsupported and the hardware is obsolete. But to pull them outright? That's bizarre.

          Maintaining a website is a non-zero cost. Databases of drivers, storage, hardware, backup, not breaking links and ensuring those pages are accessible in the future, as I've pointed out elsewhere most content is dynamically generated these days so changing the template needs to be tested against your site of legacy stuff too.

          Things that have zero cost tend to fall through the gaps in most organisations. The only time someone questions anything is when someone has to put effort into doing something they don't

    • Removing drivers for products still in use, only 5 to 7 years old, is a really dumb move on Intel's part. It makes no sense. But, it fits in with their other boneheaded decisions of the past couple of years, like not fully testing stacked 10nm wafers such that they had to go back to the drawing board and are now at least two years behind AMD in product design, if not performance.
    • by aliquis ( 678370 )

      - Why you have such an old crap computer?
      - It's A RETRO COMPUTER!

    • by Mononymous ( 6156676 ) on Monday November 18, 2019 @02:27PM (#59427160)

      Up until a couple of years ago you could download freaking System 7 (the Mac OS released in 1991) from Apple's official website.
      I haven't used an Apple product since the //e, but for a long time I was impressed with that gesture.

    • This is why it's important to document the checksums of drivers.
    • by DarkOx ( 621550 )

      No malware targets RETRO computing. There is zero value in it. The machines are not useful for cryto mining, they are comparatively useless for spaming and other botnet type operations. They are not where people do most of their business ie keep their finances, personal photos, school works, etc they are going to pay a ransomware scam to get back..

      I think malware is probably about the least of your worries if you retro-computing is a hobby.

      • by Mashiki ( 184564 )

        No malware targets RETRO computing. There is zero value in it.

        You're thinking crypto, I'm thinking botnet. It doesn't matter how slow something is, as long as you've got enough of something to do the trick.

    • Is this not a job for https://archive.org/ [archive.org] ?? This would preserve the drivers and firmware so that retro enthusiasts are not forced to delve into shady www.igotthedriversyousodesperatelyneedplusmalware.whatever.

    • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

      Everyone knows the first place you go for stuff like that is Vogons.

      I expect that they'll have all the drivers up and hosted within a few days. (You can really find drivers for really esoteric hardware there as well).

      Retrocomputing is fairly mainstream now with people building 386 to Pentium PCs and having pretty much everything archived.

      About the dodgiest things would be finding copies of MS-DOS or Windows, but short of ancient viruses, no one really infects them. First they're usually 16-bit binaries whic

    • Users To Remove Intel's Products From Its Vendor List

    • Exactly. I can understand no updates etc. but still make the old drivers available.
  • Tough but fair (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Gregory Eschbacher ( 2878609 ) on Monday November 18, 2019 @12:58PM (#59426702)

    My guess is that (over time), the Intel driver sites become overwhelmed with the number of drivers and files available that it can make it tougher to find what you want. Imagine 15, 30, 45 years from now: Would they still host the files? Files that are downloaded a small handful of times per year, but continue to bog down the experience of the finding the useful current drivers? Are you going to have an "Select your Operating System?" combo box with 40 versions of Windows?

    My feeling is that they should segregate the older drivers onto a separate site that is more static, and allow for the currently supported devices to more easily found.

    • Hopefully the Internet Archive folks have cached these files 100x over. This is one of those things that the Wayback Machine was meant for
    • by sjames ( 1099 )

      Easy fix, divide them based on decade, or just stick the lot into "legacy".

    • by Waffle Iron ( 339739 ) on Monday November 18, 2019 @01:44PM (#59426928)

      My guess is that (over time), the Intel driver sites become overwhelmed with the number of drivers and files available that it can make it tougher to find what you want.

      If only there were some kind of high-speed logic machine that could aid in the process of searching through large amounts of textual data.

      I would bet that a making components for such a machine might be a lucrative endeavor.

      • If only there were some kind of high-speed logic machine that could aid in the process of searching through large amounts of textual data.

        I foresee the world having use for maybe five or six such machines.

  • by fustakrakich ( 1673220 ) on Monday November 18, 2019 @01:02PM (#59426720) Journal

    We shouldn't allow this stuff to be locked away. No support? No copyright/patents!

    • by sjames ( 1099 )

      This! They can't argue that they would lose economic value since they don't even care to make them available.

    • The patents are already expired on most of this old junk. Anything else?
      • Yeah there is. The copyrights on the drivers are not expired. Those have to go too. If you had read the post, you would have seen that I said that. All government granted privileges have to be terminated.

    • No support? No copyright/patents!

      What's the bet that Copyright and Patents apply very much to current in-support products.

  • by unique_parrot ( 1964434 ) on Monday November 18, 2019 @01:07PM (#59426744)
    ...HP did the same thing with windows xp drivers. Why can't they just put them on their ftp site, under the directory "obsolete"?
  • Plan ahead (Score:4, Insightful)

    by MpVpRb ( 1423381 ) on Monday November 18, 2019 @01:11PM (#59426766)

    Anyone who intends to keep a piece of digital hardware for a very long time should archive multiple copies of all software, drivers, bios updates etc
    It's not just Intel, and it's not new

    • Given how many companies only allow "live" updates, this is no longer possible.

      I stopped upgrading a lot of stuff because the new versions don't let me archive anything. Hell if I'm going to let them pull the rug out from under my feet.

  • They need to buy more storage if they really need to free up a few kilobyte files.

  • Wow! (Score:5, Insightful)

    by NoMoreACs ( 6161580 ) on Monday November 18, 2019 @01:32PM (#59426874)

    I understand why this is needed.

    Afterall, this will save Intel about a whole 2 GB of space on their Servers.

    Good Job, Intel!

    • It could also be the case that the drivers, themselves contain known vulnerabilities ans Intel doesn't want to be accountable for them or put in manpower to update them. Of course, they could open source them (assuming they aren't already).
  • FTFA:

    The downloads are drivers and BIOS updates for Intel desktop components and motherboards the company released in the 90s and early-to-mid 2000s.

    So, we're talking about support for drivers for hardware 15+ years old. And about those drivers? It was more than just hosting:

    This download, BIOS Update [BLH6710H.86A] 0163, will no longer be available after November 22, 2019 and will not be supported with any additional functional, security, or other updates,

    Intel would still go through those old drivers, from 15+ years ago, and consider if they needed to be updated. Seriously, there's like, what - 15 people using them? Get a grip, folks... Should we next be outraged that 2G phones are no longer supported by a network AT ALL? That my party-line phone can no longer be used? Fifteen plus years is a LONG time for support, and i

    • Re:A disaster? (Score:4, Insightful)

      by Gilgaron ( 575091 ) on Monday November 18, 2019 @02:02PM (#59427014)
      They don't have to be expected to update them to make them available. I just checked and MSI still has driver and BIOS downloads available for a motherboard I built a machine on back in 2001. I would be shocked if any of them were even still in use, as mine fell prey to the capacitor plague long ago. But if some dedicated guy in the recycling center really wanted to get an AthlonXP going for some reason, he can solder new caps in and download those drivers and be all set.
    • by raymorris ( 2726007 ) on Monday November 18, 2019 @02:05PM (#59427028) Journal

      > Intel would still go through those old drivers, from 15+ years ago, and consider if they needed to be updated.

      Or, they could do nothing. Just leavr them alone.
      If you're using a 12-year old driver for an old raid card to get some data off disks, you know you've got an old raid card that needs an old driver. It doesn't need to be constantly updated, just don't delete he file in order to save a whole 4MB on Intel's SAN. Just leave it the fuck alone would be a reasonable option.

      • If you're using a 12 year old RAID card, you can probably still get the drivers. Intel is cleaning out cruft that is more than 15 years old.
    • by DogDude ( 805747 )
      Seriously, there's like, what - 15 people using them?

      There are plenty of people using old hardware. Our company hasn't bought a new computer... ever. I haven't bought a new computer... hmm... in maybe 30 years.
      • Cool - I assume you have copies of the OS and programs used? Why the issue with including drivers with that?
        • by DogDude ( 805747 )
          We have dozens of machines. We don't keep backups of every driver for every machine. That would be a lot to manage.
          • Now imagine if you had thousands of machines, thousands of adapter cards, and dozens of OSes... That's a LOT to manage, eh?
            • by DogDude ( 805747 )
              I imagine it would be. Which is why having drivers available on easily accessible web/FTP sites is very useful.
  • No doubt this is just self preservation. if they are no longer available then no one can come after them because some bug caused a decades old medical diagnostic machine to kill people. Hopefully they are archived by someone other than malware criminals somewhere.

    • Complaints going up the chain of command until some clueless manager decides to go with it; imagined legal scenarios are a common excuse, asking a real lawyer is too much hassle or cost... and asking them to come up with a solution costs more; surely they can state (if not already) that unsupported old products are not to be used anymore and it's use at your risk (they basically have that policy for all software already.)

      IT complaining or developers complaining about maintaining old stuff is a common reason

  • The time-honored technique is for old drivers to simply disappear after a website update.

  • And that's way way back, 486 and transition to Pentium. I do not expect those to be supported any more.

    But neither do I expect the Socket 478 boards to be supported. Those are insecure today, and no way to fix that.

    This is proper culling of old and not very useful support. Sadly, if you're dependent on these, you should already have your software. Keep it. Everything ends.

    • Why would Socket 478 boards be insecure? That's the last pure 32-bit desktop socket from Intel. Predates both the Intel ME and the TPM. Probably about the newest Intel socket I'd consider running if you are really paranoid about backdoors into your hardware*. While some major Linux distributions have dropped 32-bit support, there's still a bunch of current, up to date distributions that'll happily run on 32-bit Pentium 4 from that era. Properly set up and up to date, you're arguably more secure than a

  • Why bother to do this? Are they running low on disk space? Perhaps AMD should send them some samples of their hard drives as a gesture of kindness if they are in such a pinch.

  • Perhaps Intel is worried about liability issues. If they continue to offer BIOS updates that have some sort of vulnerability, they could potentially be sued. Sure, they could have disclaimers, but that still doesn't stop lawsuits. This is likely economics. There is nearly zero gain from offering these, and between the cost of hosting, organizing, managing, troubleshooting issues, and potential litigation; its a no brainer to pull the files.

    How long should they keep them available? As others have stated, you

    • There is nearly zero gain from offering these, and between the cost of hosting, organizing, managing, troubleshooting issues

      The gain is goodwill. I shall think twice about buying Intel stuff in future.

      you can't go to Suzuki and expect to buy parts for a 1986 Samurai

      I don't know Suzuki, but actually I would have expected it. In any case it is a bad analogy because physical parts need manufacturing , significant storage volume, and transport. Tthose old drivers requite no manufacture, no transport and almost zero storage.

      • by caseih ( 160668 )

        Agreed. I would expect to still find parts for an 86 Samurai also.

        I can still buy many parts from John Deere for tractors that were made over 40 years ago, even 60 years ago. But I concede I can't say this for a lot of other brands of equipment.

        For automobiles, there are always-after market parts for old and even antique cars. Even if the original company is long gone and patterns are nowhere to be found, someone can look at what was done and replicate it. A lot harder to do that with proprietary compute

      • "The gain is goodwill."

        Goodwill for all those customers who want to flash the BIOS on 20+ year old hardware. The only people interested in dinking around with that old hardware are super tech nerds who are not customers and likely have zero authority for purchasing beyond their household. And before someone chimes up and says they handle $2M of PC purchasing per year, are you letting your decisions be based on whether a supplier supports their product for decades past EOL? You know that does have a cost and

  • Dear Intel, Apple, and everyone else:

    Please work with archive.org and other non-profits to host stuff like this.

  • by King_TJ ( 85913 ) on Monday November 18, 2019 @04:05PM (#59427606) Journal

    I think you do eventually reach a point where it's ridiculous to keep expecting to be able to download something like a BIOS update for ancient hardware. If you've got some PC from the 1990's, for example? It's honestly at the point where A) it's not likely to keep running much longer before a capacitor or two fails on the main board, or a keyboard controller chips blows, or ?? They may last many years, but not indefinitely. B) It's so slow by modern standards, there aren't many workloads left that would even cost justify continuing to use it vs. something more recent that can do so much more with the same (or less) electricity.

    There's a point where you're either a outlier, trying to preserve obsolete systems for the nostalgia of it, or you're just not being financially smart vs recycling the thing and upgrading. I don't feel like vendors have to keep supporting the people in the nostalgia camp.

    On the flip-side? I see a lot of older drivers and apps removed too soon, in what's clearly just an effort to motivate people to buy new hardware. The cost to keep the "vintage / obsolete" support files around in their own set of folders on an ftp or web site you're maintaining anyway for current stuff is really minimal.

  • by stikves ( 127823 ) on Monday November 18, 2019 @05:00PM (#59427812) Homepage

    It is not about drivers themselves, but being unable to keep up with updates. I think Intel got itself in a pretty bad place for cutting corners in security design for decades to win some performance gains. Now their entire legacy systems are vulnerable, with no end in sight for newer attack types.

    So they would probably "wish all of it to go away". I do not think they have the manpower to fix it anymore. Those BIOS updates and drivers need actual security reviews and endless patches, and this announcement is Intel saying they are throwing the towel.

  • I've gotten rid of all my Intel CPU systems, I haven't had an Intel motherboard in absolutely ages, and I don't even have any Intel NICs any more AFAIK. If I did, I'd only be using them with Linux, so I wouldn't need the Windows drivers.

    I actually do have drivers for every machine I've had for over a decade, so this wouldn't affect me anyway. What kind of fool doesn't download and save all the drivers for all their systems? Corporate customers have many machines, but they normally have many machines which a

  • I live a busy life with little spare free time for projects, but I think I will always have a fond "dream" of building a Frankencomputer with the old parts I have lying around. I used to do that in my 20s. After building it, I would, of course, put on a legacy OS, like Win98SE, and install some old games for laughs.

    As time marches on, drivers disappear, so even if you never connect the legacy machine directly to the modern Internet, the ability to find drivers for things becomes tougher, and will soon

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