Neowin noticed that Microsoft has updated a help document about what it means if youâre using an unsupported version of Windows (spoiler alert: if youâre online at all, itâs a huge security risk), which currently means PCs running Windows 8.1 (or 8) and Windows 7, or earlier.
Itâs worth noting, however, that this will also be the case for Windows 10 devices in a yearâs time if their owners donât take any action, as the end of support rolls around for that OS in October 2025.
Microsoftâs article takes the form of a short discussion followed by a FAQ, and the main update applied to the document pertains to the options for staying supported with Windows, with a new choice added here: âRecommended: New PC with Windows 11.â
So, this is Microsoftâs primary recommendation if your unsupported PC isnât up to scratch, hardware-wise, for Windows 11 â get a new computer.
Given that, itâd be nice to see Microsoft working towards a solution in respect of somewhat newer PCs, which goes somewhere down the path of tackling some of the alarming stats weâve heard about the number of Windows 10 machines heading to landfill in the future. This is a potential environmental disaster that could see hundreds of millions of PCs lumped unceremoniously on the scrapheap.
And ever since those concerns have been raised, we havenât heard anything from Microsoft as to how they might be mitigated. What Windows 10 users (who canât, or wonât, upgrade) can do is pay for extended support beyond October 2025 â but that could turn out to be an expensive way to go, particularly beyond the first year if Microsoftâs previous pricing in these schemes is anything to go by.
Logically, then, Microsoft needs to be looking at a way of keeping Windows 10 alive â for those totally blocked by Windows 11âs more demanding requirements on the security front and elsewhere â which works out to be way more cost-friendly for users, in an effort to save what might be a much heavier price to pay for the planet. In short, âbuy a new PCâ will soon not be the answer we need frontloaded here, and pushing folks to make a purchase of a new computer is already a very dubious first port of call given what weâre facing down the road.
I just installed Mint to an external SSD this weekend to try and get my grandma to try it out. I really donât want her scared into thinking she needs to go out and waste a few hundred on a new laptop.
Did the same for my parents earlier this year. I downloaded a Windows 10 theme for Mint so it felt and looked more Windowsy for them.
Itâs been great for them. One piece of advice, make sure you sit down with your grandma after installing it and have her do everything she normally does on Windows.
Make sure all the shortcuts and bookmarks are in the same spots and called the same things.
I think it might be worth developing some kind of Linux installer on place that is capable of removing Windows and replace it with some Linux flavor. Just one USB, some space in your disk and Linux is installed without data loss
The problem with this is primarily that windows uses NTFS as itâs filesystem. Being proprietary, NTFS has never played well with Linux and installing it to an NTFS partition is regarded as a genuinely terrible idea. Converting partitions safely is nearly impossible to do in place.