
https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/windows-11
That was exactly the scenario predicted back then in 2003 about the TCPA (Trusted Computing Platform Alliance).mid wrote:I have reasons to believe Macrosoft has ulterior motives to the TPM requirement...
I don't get why they would do that, as most of my machines are still BIOS based!Schol-R-LEA wrote:and (needless to say) all types of Legacy BIOS systems.
Hahaha, I can totally understand!mid wrote:I'll probably be going back to my C64. At least that I can trust.
Maybe yours, but in general, ever since UEFI was finalized (in 2005 if I'm not mistaken) no machines were manufactured with BIOS, only with UEFI CSM and that was more than 15 years ago. And UEFI CSM was phased out as of 2020 by Intel (big friend of M$), so...nexos wrote:I don't get why they would do that, as most of my machines are still BIOS based!Schol-R-LEA wrote:and (needless to say) all types of Legacy BIOS systems.
I have a Dell Optiplex 380 and HP Pavilion from circa 2010, and neither have any trace of UEFI. AFAIK, UEFI was mainly used on big servers then. I have a Dell Optiplex 780 from circa 2010, and it has UEFI support, but BIOS is the default. I have a Dell PowerEdge T320, same story. I'm sure you can guess what my 2 machines from around 2005 have. In other words, most machines until around 2010 were built with BIOS.bzt wrote:Maybe yours, but in general, ever since UEFI was finalized (in 2005 if I'm not mistaken) no machines were manufactured with BIOS, only with UEFI CSM and that was more than 15 years ago.
Okay, but that's still more than a decade old.nexos wrote:In other words, most machines until around 2010 were built with BIOS.
Yeah, period. The problem appears when you are forced to upgrade, then your only option would be to buy a new machine (or switch to another OS).iansjack wrote:The answer is simple - you don't run Windows 11 on these machines.
Yes, actually there is, Microsoft likes to force users to upgrade. They promised not to do this with Win11, but they have also told us there will be no Win11, so...iansjack wrote:But there's nothing to stop you running older OSs on older machines.
Not exactly. I haven't tried BSD on old machines, but I know that you can still compile the latest Linux kernel for very very old machines, so I guess BSDs work too (at least FreeBSD very likely). There are Linux distros too for old machines, for example Puppy can run on a Pentium Pro, and they still offer 32-bit versions; and it is said that TinyCore only needs a 486DX (although I could not find anything officially confirming that). These are modern Linux distros in the sense that they ship new versions of the kernel and sufficiently new versions of the software.iansjack wrote:And the same is true of Linux, BSD, you name it, although the time scale may be a little different.
Too bad I can't see any progress at all. I'll dare to say that Win98 runs a lot smoother on a Pentium than Win10 on the most cutting-edge PC. I can only imagine this got worse with Win11. "What Andy giveth, Bill taketh away."iansjack wrote:It's called progress.
While I agree that this is part of it, I'd say that the profit motive in this case mostly comes from wanting to narrow the window of systems they will need to support. Even with support fees, tech support can be a major cost center (at least in the eyes of the bean counters), so anything that reduces the number of support calls regarding older or less common hardware is seen as a win by most software companies.bzt wrote:By the way the reason why they do this is simple: they want to force the end users to buy new machines, preferably every year, because that makes more profit to the sector (both to the manufacturers and to M$ selling more OEM licenses). They don't care about electrical waste or about the user's satisfaction for that matter, their one and only motive is profit, just like any other big corp.
True, but I suspect a near majority of people are using old BIOS machines. So, I feel that this is a mistake of Microsofts.iansjack wrote:The answer is simple - you don't run Windows 11 on these machines. It's no different to the Apple world, where you can't run newer OSs on older machines. (And the same is true of Linux, BSD, you name it, although the time scale may be a little different.)
It's called progress. But there's nothing to stop you running older OSs on older machines.
But if Win11 doesn't support older PCs they couldn't do that.bzt wrote:Yes, actually there is, Microsoft likes to force users to upgrade.
Most certainly! I ran Win98 a while ago, and I was shocked at how fast it felt! My Windows XP desktop feels like a super computer compared to my sluggish Win10 laptop!bzt wrote:I'll dare to say that Win98 runs a lot smoother on a Pentium than Win10 on the most cutting-edge PC.
I probably would at least run W2K if it supported modern apps / webpages!iansjack wrote:So, run Windows 98.
I have fond memories of trying to run foobar2000 on W2K, and it didn't work. Stated reason was that advapi32.dll was missing some function. So what is a poor student with enough knowledge to be dangerous to do? Exactly, download another version of advapi32.dll from the Internet. I believe I got a version from Windows XP. Warnings about system files being tampered with were ignored, and then the whole thing ended in a blue screen. Ultimately it lead to me installing Linux on that box, so it did work out in the end.nexos wrote:I probably would at least run W2K if it supported modern apps / webpages!