Microsoft will end support for the persistently popular Windows XP on Tuesday, and with an estimated 30 percent of businesses and consumers still using the 12-year-old operating system, the move could ...
Microsoft Windows XP is a PC based OS (operating system) which first appeared in October of 2001 as the highly anticipated upgrade from the MS-DOS based Windows 98. The newly redesigned look and feel ...
As of April 14, 2009, free support from Microsoft for Windows XP will be laid to rest. Microsoft has officially stated that security patches and updates will continue for XP after that date.
Change: It’s inevitable in and of itself, and it’s inevitable that some people don’t like it. Ars Technica cites a report from Net Market Share contending that Microsoft’s almost-13-year-old operating ...
Microsoft Corp. yesterday confirmed that it will continue to provide mainstream support for all flavors of Windows XP, including Home and Professional editions, for two years after the release of ...
Return with me to the Glory Days of Windows XP, which apparently some people, somehow, are still using even though support for it ended in...2014. I don’t know whether to be amazed or horrified at how ...
Microsoft will today (April 8) end support for its Windows XP operating system after a 13-year lifecycle. The move means that technical support and security patches will no longer be issued for the ...
The addition of a five-year "extended support" phase to Windows XP will take effect in May 2009. In Microsoft parlance, extended support is the period when all support is fee-based and non-security ...
On April 8, 2014, Microsoft ceased providing support for its Windows XP operating system and Office 2003 office suite. Nelson Gomes, CEO and president of PriorityOne Group, a provider of information ...
Windows XP's end-of-life just got a little closer: there are now two years to go until Microsoft drops support for the ancient operating system. This week also marks the half way point in Windows ...
NEW YORK -- Microsoft will end support for the persistently popular Windows XP today, and the move could put everything from the operations of heavy industry to the identities of everyday people in ...