Microsoft has said it will continue to sell Windows XP Home beyond its scheduled June 30 kill-date for the emerging class of “ultra-low-cost PCs,” or ULCPCs. The operating system has been granted a reprieve until mid-2010, but only for the diminutive laptops such as the Asus Eee PC and Intel Classmate PC which lack the hardware necessary to run Windows Vista adequately.
The cut-off date for XP licences in mainstream boxes remains the end of June 2008. Free live support and warranty-based technical support will dry up next April. After that, customers need to pay for phone support until April 2014, when Microsoft washes its hands completely dry. XP security fixes will continue to be available for free.
Computer makers can sell XP Home on ULCPC machines through June 30 2010, or one year after the scheduled launch of the next version of Windows. Exactly what lack of specs Microsoft is using to determine if a computer is an ULCPC remains unclear. Microsoft was first wary of allowing anything less than Vista pre-installed on these tiny laptop computers.
Is this the real reason for a change of heart: “But when initial units started shipping with Linux, there was a rapid change of heart.”?
Comments