Why Firefox 4 isn't abandoning Windows XP

Discussion in 'other software & services' started by Thankful, Mar 18, 2011.

Thread Status:
Not open for further replies.
  1. Thankful

    Thankful Savings Monitor

  2. Someheresomethere

    Someheresomethere Registered Member

    Xp. Must. Die.
     
  3. dw426

    dw426 Registered Member

    Mozilla might have a point, but, the flip side of that is that the longer that support is given for it, the longer it will take XP to finally go away. There can't be anymore "Alright, we'll support you until this point" and keep changing it.
     
  4. firzen771

    firzen771 Registered Member

    agreed, people need stop living in the past
     
  5. Daveski17

    Daveski17 Registered Member

    I admit that XP is long in the tooth & has security problems. But like I have stated on other threads, this is more to do with economics in many ways. Many colleges, schools, hospitals & businesses in my country have computers that just don't have the RAM to run Win 7. In the present economic climate they will run those computers into the ground rather than upgrade their hardware. At the end of the day, Linux or perhaps at least having Firefox 4 as their respective default browsers is a much cheaper way of keeping their ageing computers going.
     
  6. Kerodo

    Kerodo Registered Member

    Eventually, everyone must buy...
     
  7. J_L

    J_L Registered Member

    Agreed.

    I'm surprised that Mozilla decided to support Windows 2000 as well, is there any hardware acceleration there?
     
  8. Daveski17

    Daveski17 Registered Member

    Too true.
     
  9. davidlynch

    davidlynch Registered Member

    the business model of sell a 'new' OS every few years will end, surely.

    no problem if ms won't give ie9 to XP users: today we can use Firefox or a Google browser, tomorrow a Google OS.
     
  10. dw426

    dw426 Registered Member

    Good luck with Google OS going far, but good point regarding IE9.
     
  11. acuariano

    acuariano Registered Member

    just don't forget the monthly patch,service packs plus more vulnerabilities.
     
  12. Boost

    Boost Registered Member

    ROFL,

    With this economy,companies aren't upgrading their PC's as a first priority.
     
  13. ABee

    ABee Registered Member

    http://technolog.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2011/03/18/6294661-why-firefox-4-isnt-abandoning-windows-xp

    Wrong. It's four years old.
    XP wasn't superceded until January of 2007, when Vista was released to the general public.
    Until that time, it was Microsoft's most current OS.

    There's nothing at all wrong with supporting a four year-old OS.

    I really couldn't care whether Firefox 4 is supported by XP or not.
    It's supported in Ubuntu Linux, and the moment XP becomes a no longer viable OS for me is the same moment I begin using Ubuntu full time, rather than 'getting current' with Windows.
     
  14. dw426

    dw426 Registered Member

    Eh...the date of its "replacement" doesn't factor in to its age. It was released Oct 25th 2001, it's still being used, that makes it 10 years old now.
     
  15. Daveski17

    Daveski17 Registered Member

    Well ... according to Wikipedia:

    Release date RTM: August 24, 2001
    Retail: October 25, 2001 (info)
    Current version 5.1 (Build 2600: Service Pack 3) (April 21, 2008; 2 years ago) (info)
    Source model Closed source, Shared source[1]
    License Microsoft-EULA
    Kernel type Hybrid
    Update method Windows Update
    Platform support IA-32, x86-64, Itanium
    Preceded by Windows Me, Windows 2000
    Succeeded by Windows Vista
     
  16. Eice

    Eice Registered Member

    What kind of logic is that?

    Do you give people your son's age instead of your own when people ask you how old you are? I hope you weren't being serious. It's fine not wanting to upgrade, that's your choice, but people need to stop justifying their actions with such nonsense.
     
  17. Eice

    Eice Registered Member

    I just came back from my parents' house after summer vacation, and while I was there I upgraded every computer in the house to Windows 7 SP1, including a 7-year-old HP and 9-year-old Asus. Both run just fine, albeit without Aero Glass.

    Economics is a factor, but it's not about having to buy new hardware.
     
  18. vasa1

    vasa1 Registered Member

    Yup! If everyone buys whatever a company sells whenever the company desires, it will be very good for that company's stock price.

    Looking forward to Win8.
     
  19. elapsed

    elapsed Registered Member

    Yet upgrading their browser is? Not exactly. That's why IE6 still has 12% market share.

    If you want to use old technology then that's fine. But don't expect to build a brick house on a straw foundation.

    Agreed.
     
  20. J_L

    J_L Registered Member

    Wrong, that's how old Vista is.
     
  21. ABee

    ABee Registered Member

    I was being serious, and we're not talking about children, we're talking about an OS.

    Yes, XP was first released in 2001. SP2 for XP, which some contend was closer to upgrading to a different OS than simply adding a 'service pack', was released in 2004.

    The fact remains that until Vista was released, XP was Microsoft's most current OS. So perhaps it's ten years 'old', yet at the same time it's only four years 'superceded'.

    My contention is that it's supercession date is a much more relevant figure here than it's inception date.
     
  22. The Hammer

    The Hammer Registered Member

    I've read that a lot of that market share was in China.
     
  23. Konata Izumi

    Konata Izumi Registered Member

    Agreed :) :thumb:
    and your linux path... I'm going that way too :D


    btw I think Mozilla should abandon XP when XP itself was abandoned by Microsoft... I heard it will be next year :D
     
  24. Daveski17

    Daveski17 Registered Member

    I don't exactly understand this analogy. I have not used an XP machine recently that has IE 6. They have all had IE 8 on them. Let's face it, Firefox 4 is a freeware alternative for XP.

    With hardware, using old technology may be the only economically viable option. The UK government has recently made massive funding cuts in education & health care.

    I'm sure Micro$oft want people to buy their new operating systems regularly (You don't work for MS do you elapsed? ;)).

    My local library's computers all run XP. The machines themselves are not capable of running Win 7. In the present economic climate are they going to buy new computers with the RAM capability to run Win 7 & IE 9? Or are they going to soldier on with perfectly good computers with XP & IE 8 (&/or maybe Firefox 4)?


    *Hmmm ... thinks .... *

    What d'ya reckon?
     
    Last edited: Mar 19, 2011
  25. Eice

    Eice Registered Member

    Do you have any valid arguments as to why that should be the case?
     
Thread Status:
Not open for further replies.
  1. This site uses cookies to help personalise content, tailor your experience and to keep you logged in if you register.
    By continuing to use this site, you are consenting to our use of cookies.
    Dismiss Notice