a thinly-veiled publicity stunt, Infoworld is in search of sign-ups for a web based petition to “help save XP” by sparing it the fate of “being discontinued on June 30,
buy win 7 x86 key, 2008.” are a couple of problems here. First,
genuine microsoft office 2010 Home And Business, Windows XP is not being “discontinued” on June 30. Instead, as of that date — unless the software maker issues another reprieve like it did in September 2007 — Microsoft will no longer make XP available to OEMs for preloading and/or via retail sales. still will be able to get XP preloaded on new machines from white-box vendors/system builders through January 31, 2009. And Vista Business and Ultimate customers with volume-license contracts can still get XP via their “downgrade” rights (as far as I can tell from attempts to decipher Microsoft’s fairly convoluted documentation around this issue). point worth mentioning: Microsoft isn’t pulling the plug on XP support this year. Mainstream (free) support for XP from Microsoft ends in April 2009. Extended support (free for security fixes and paid for other help) ends in 2014. is advocating for Microsoft to continue to offer XP indefinitely. Fat chance. Why would Microsoft give customers more incentives not to upgrade to Vista — beyond the ones it has inadvertently provided by delivering a first-generation product that had driver and application compatibility issues; performance problems; and reliability glitches? Microsoft watchers have predicted Microsoft might extend again the preload deadlines for XP,
genuine win 7 pro, but I think that’s even wishful thinking. motto (which won’t be appreciated by Reverend Ken Hutcherson): Vista’s here. SP 1 is near. Get used to it… Whatever you think of Infoworld’s post,
microsoft office 2010 pro plus sale, you have to love the XP countdown clock,
microsoft office 2010 pro plus generator!