Future CPUs will only support Windows 10
Future CPUs will only support Windows 10
http://me.pcmag.com/windows-10/5390/new ... windows-10
You know, PCs are becoming more like smartphones, and vice versa; there were things secureboot, and now Windows-only CPUs! I think, OS hobbyists would have to find alternative computers in the future, say, Raspberry Pi.
EDIT: [...]
You know, PCs are becoming more like smartphones, and vice versa; there were things secureboot, and now Windows-only CPUs! I think, OS hobbyists would have to find alternative computers in the future, say, Raspberry Pi.
EDIT: [...]
Last edited by Muazzam on Thu Jan 21, 2016 6:08 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Future CPUs will only support Windows 10 (no troll*)
You've got it backwards. Windows 10 will be the only version of Windows to officially support new CPUs.
Nope.Muazzam wrote:Windows-only CPUs!
Re: Future CPUs will only support Windows 10 (no troll*)
PCs are, and will remain, more open than the Raspberry Pi.Muazzam wrote: I think, OS hobbyists would have to find alternative computers in the future, say, Raspberry Pi.
If you really want to clarify that you will edit the OP to reflect your misunderstanding of what you posted about. Otherwise it may very well look like another trolling thread.After many threads I started that could be regarded as "troll," I thought it'd better to clarify that.
Re: Future CPUs will only support Windows 10 (no troll*)
Both situations are possible.Octocontrabass wrote:You've got it backwards. Windows 10 will be the only version of Windows to officially support new CPUs.
Nope.Muazzam wrote:Windows-only CPUs!
Re: Future CPUs will only support Windows 10 (no troll*)
Maybe. But I've seen many PCs that don't support disabling Secureboot. And being able to disable Secureboot is no longer mandatory for Windows computers.iansjack wrote:PCs are, and will remain, more open than the Raspberry Pi.
Re: Future CPUs will only support Windows 10
It certainly does look like a trolling thread now.
Re: Future CPUs will only support Windows 10 (no troll*)
Locking with firmware is way more feasible than locking with the CPU.Muazzam wrote:Maybe. But I've seen many PCs that don't support disabling Secureboot. And being able to disable Secureboot is no longer mandatory for Windows computers.
Re: Future CPUs will only support Windows 10
I think, the article talks about older Windows versions going to be unsupported. Intel won't make their desktop and server CPUs "Windows-only", because they need the server market, where Windows doesn't seem to be widespread.they will only run Windows 10; you can't downgrade to Windows 7 or 8.1
This subject has been discussed a lot in many places over the Internet. It's nothing more than a basement for trolling.
"If you don't fail at least 90 percent of the time, you're not aiming high enough."
- Alan Kay
- Alan Kay
Re: Future CPUs will only support Windows 10
Hi,
a) Future CPUs will be backward compatible and will run all OSs (that the computer's firmware supports - e.g. you're not going to be able to boot MS-DOS if the system is "UEFI only").
b) The other stuff inside the same chip as the CPU (mostly GPU) will work on any OS that provides drivers for it.
c) Microsoft have said "for newer CPUs/chips, that other stuff (mostly GPU) won't be officially supported". This doesn't mean it won't work ("unofficially supported"). Mostly it only means that device driver developers can stop providing drivers for older versions of Windows if they want to (and blame Microsoft when people complain instead of taking all the blame themselves).
d) Alternative OSs will be unaffected, and will continue to have no drivers for recently released hardware (the same as it's been for the last 20+ years).
e.1) For secure-boot, it's unlikely that (for laptop/desktop/server) computer manufacturers will remove the option for disabling secure boot (even though Windows 10's logo doesn't force them to provide it); partly because it's already in the firmware and they're not saving any $$ by bothering to remove it, and partly because it reduces the target market slightly and costs them $$ instead.
e.2) The main thing to worry about with secure-boot is something I'd call "boiling the frog" - increase the restrictions a little ("Hey, we forced manufacturer's to provide an option to disable it!"), let people get used to it, increase the restrictions a bit more ("Hey, manufacturer's can still provide an option to disable it!"), let people get used to that, increase the restrictions a bit more...
f) Systems using other CPUs (ARM, MIPS, etc) will continue to be far worse (because there's all the same problems; but far fewer standards that an OS relies on, like PCI and firmware).
Cheers,
Brendan
a) Future CPUs will be backward compatible and will run all OSs (that the computer's firmware supports - e.g. you're not going to be able to boot MS-DOS if the system is "UEFI only").
b) The other stuff inside the same chip as the CPU (mostly GPU) will work on any OS that provides drivers for it.
c) Microsoft have said "for newer CPUs/chips, that other stuff (mostly GPU) won't be officially supported". This doesn't mean it won't work ("unofficially supported"). Mostly it only means that device driver developers can stop providing drivers for older versions of Windows if they want to (and blame Microsoft when people complain instead of taking all the blame themselves).
d) Alternative OSs will be unaffected, and will continue to have no drivers for recently released hardware (the same as it's been for the last 20+ years).
e.1) For secure-boot, it's unlikely that (for laptop/desktop/server) computer manufacturers will remove the option for disabling secure boot (even though Windows 10's logo doesn't force them to provide it); partly because it's already in the firmware and they're not saving any $$ by bothering to remove it, and partly because it reduces the target market slightly and costs them $$ instead.
e.2) The main thing to worry about with secure-boot is something I'd call "boiling the frog" - increase the restrictions a little ("Hey, we forced manufacturer's to provide an option to disable it!"), let people get used to it, increase the restrictions a bit more ("Hey, manufacturer's can still provide an option to disable it!"), let people get used to that, increase the restrictions a bit more...
f) Systems using other CPUs (ARM, MIPS, etc) will continue to be far worse (because there's all the same problems; but far fewer standards that an OS relies on, like PCI and firmware).
Cheers,
Brendan
For all things; perfection is, and will always remain, impossible to achieve in practice. However; by striving for perfection we create things that are as perfect as practically possible. Let the pursuit of perfection be our guide.
Re: Future CPUs will only support Windows 10
press ctrl+leftRoman wrote:It's nothing more than a basement for trolling.
Re: Future CPUs will only support Windows 10
You're right that backward capability is not going away soon. I just shared what I read on a website.Brendan wrote:Hi,
a) Future CPUs will be backward compatible and will run all OSs (that the computer's firmware supports - e.g. you're not going to be able to boot MS-DOS if the system is "UEFI only").
b) The other stuff inside the same chip as the CPU (mostly GPU) will work on any OS that provides drivers for it.
c) Microsoft have said "for newer CPUs/chips, that other stuff (mostly GPU) won't be officially supported". This doesn't mean it won't work ("unofficially supported"). Mostly it only means that device driver developers can stop providing drivers for older versions of Windows if they want to (and blame Microsoft when people complain instead of taking all the blame themselves).
d) Alternative OSs will be unaffected, and will continue to have no drivers for recently released hardware (the same as it's been for the last 20+ years).
e.1) For secure-boot, it's unlikely that (for laptop/desktop/server) computer manufacturers will remove the option for disabling secure boot (even though Windows 10's logo doesn't force them to provide it); partly because it's already in the firmware and they're not saving any $$ by bothering to remove it, and partly because it reduces the target market slightly and costs them $$ instead.
e.2) The main thing to worry about with secure-boot is something I'd call "boiling the frog" - increase the restrictions a little ("Hey, we forced manufacturer's to provide an option to disable it!"), let people get used to it, increase the restrictions a bit more ("Hey, manufacturer's can still provide an option to disable it!"), let people get used to that, increase the restrictions a bit more...
f) Systems using other CPUs (ARM, MIPS, etc) will continue to be far worse (because there's all the same problems; but far fewer standards that an OS relies on, like PCI and firmware).
Cheers,
Brendan
But, also, the thing that you've mentioned in e.2 is worth worrying about. I think, '80s was the golden era for the people that wanted to know what was really going behind their computers. Maybe, the open-source hardware trend starts again in the future. Just like the software.
Re: Future CPUs will only support Windows 10
Leaving my browser just because of a person posting nonsense?Muazzam wrote:press ctrl+leftRoman wrote:It's nothing more than a basement for trolling.
"If you don't fail at least 90 percent of the time, you're not aiming high enough."
- Alan Kay
- Alan Kay
Re: Future CPUs will only support Windows 10
not the browser but this "nonsense" thread! (why did you delete my post, mods? And not the user's that called me "nonsense"?)Roman wrote:Leaving my browser just because of a person posting nonsense?Muazzam wrote:press ctrl+leftRoman wrote:It's nothing more than a basement for trolling.
EDIT: a word or two removed.
Last edited by Muazzam on Fri Jan 22, 2016 5:01 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Future CPUs will only support Windows 10
Your posts are troll-bait, your threads devolve into you egging people on for arguments over dumb crap, and your signature is intentionally inflammatory and gets more and more so by the week.
Please stop posting here.
Please stop posting here.
Re: Future CPUs will only support Windows 10
Your post makes it abundantly clear that you realize why the uncensored version of it was deleted. I'm not sure that this latest version is any better.Muazzam wrote: not the browser but this fu***** nonsense thread! (why did you delete my post, mods?
I have to agree that the majority of your posts are offensive or flame-bait. Your signature is pathetic and goes a long way to explain the popularity of idiots like Donald Trump.
Grow up.