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by developer2
3321 days ago
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>> large institutions still have to run the old OS because they have too much investment in computer controlled hardware with no forward migration. Now they are locked into an insecure technology stack with no vendor to take responsibility Any company that locks themselves into a specific operating system, and then declines investing to upgrade with each new release is entirely at fault. I can imagine the executives at these companies complaining about how their one-time outsourced application made overseas cannot possibly be migrated. Even if built locally, clearly no money was budgeted to maintain the software or infrastructure. These companies get what is coming to them when their only priority is the current quarter's bottom line, with no planning for how the company will manage to keep operations up and running in the next quarter, let alone the years ahead. You specifically mention lock-in due to "computer controlled hardware". The idea that companies build the core of their business on hardware that can be controlled with Windows XP but not Windows 7 or Windows 10 is laughable. How is that even possible? The backwards compatibility Microsoft provides means it's nearly impossible for any application to become unusable within a decade - or even longer. The application will need to be maintained with minor changes to make use of modified APIs, or to transition from 32 to 64 bit architecture, etc. - but the amount of work needed is nowhere near infeasible. It only becomes difficult if you spend many years ignoring required upgrades, and then try to perform a single massive upgrade covering half a dozen missed release cycles all at once. Even hardware ports going out of fashion (example: serial ports) is not the end of the world. Compatibility between the latest operating system and old port standards will always be possible, as those that need such things make it happen. No sympathy for any company still running Windows XP. None whatsoever. It sucks when it's government that is affected, whereby taxpayers' dollars take the hit for the fallout. Still not a shocking, unexpected result. In fact, this is precisely the expected result. |
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