If it is no longer manufactured and has been superseceded by newer, better technologies, it is obsolete.
It is more prone to failure because things such as harddrives are far more likely to crash when they're older than when they're newer.
I don't refer to my would-be customers as clowns unless they demonstrate such baffling behavior as you have.
You were stupid enough to buy a Dell Inspiron behemoth with a Pentium 4, and that didn't even last you a year IIRC. And now you're all upset that if you want the new OS you need new hardware.
Around the exact same time I made my purchase of a ThinkPad T40 and I still use it constantly to this day with no complaints.
Instead of being all up in arms that you can't install a state-of-the-art operating system on obsolete, deprecated hardware; perhaps you should use your time to make more sound purchasing decisions in the future to waste less of your money.
Windows XP is still supported, feel free to use that. I don't want MS wasting resources on making a far more restricted OS so everyone could theoretically switch (though most won't).
The idea is to take advantage of the new technologies and phase in the new operating system on new PCs. It is not meant to be something you'd put on your mom's Pentium III 800 or your older laptop.
FWIW, it would likely run absolutely fine on your laptop with the specs you've listed. Just don't expect to play lots of intense media applications on it (which is what MS is assuming with their specs).
It is more prone to failure because things such as harddrives are far more likely to crash when they're older than when they're newer.
Originally posted by laurentius
Is it just not possible to make a better OS than Win XP to run on my P-M 2.17 Ghz 1536 MB. Is every software engineer in MS as ****ed up as Asher to refer their to-be customers as "clowns"
Is it just not possible to make a better OS than Win XP to run on my P-M 2.17 Ghz 1536 MB. Is every software engineer in MS as ****ed up as Asher to refer their to-be customers as "clowns"
You were stupid enough to buy a Dell Inspiron behemoth with a Pentium 4, and that didn't even last you a year IIRC. And now you're all upset that if you want the new OS you need new hardware.
Around the exact same time I made my purchase of a ThinkPad T40 and I still use it constantly to this day with no complaints.
Instead of being all up in arms that you can't install a state-of-the-art operating system on obsolete, deprecated hardware; perhaps you should use your time to make more sound purchasing decisions in the future to waste less of your money.
Am I ****ing supposed to take up 3000 eur loan every 3 years to buy a new laptop just to ****ing run the newest ****ty Windows. Thats just pathetic and insulting..
![thumbs-down](https://apolyton.net/core/images/smilies/thumbs-down.gif)
The idea is to take advantage of the new technologies and phase in the new operating system on new PCs. It is not meant to be something you'd put on your mom's Pentium III 800 or your older laptop.
FWIW, it would likely run absolutely fine on your laptop with the specs you've listed. Just don't expect to play lots of intense media applications on it (which is what MS is assuming with their specs).
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