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Microsoft Desperately Wants You to Stop Using Windows XP

Microsoft's 12-year-old operating system still runs on approximately 30% of Internet-connected PCs, but the company wants to kill it ...

Microsoft's 12-year-old operating system still runs on approximately 30% of Internet-connected PCs, but the company wants to kill it off by offering upgraders $100 towards a new computer or tablet plus free tech support and data transfers

Windows XP is the operating system that refuses to die. The software is now 12 years old—a dinosaur in the fast-moving technology sector—but runs nearly 30 percent of all Internet-connected desktop PCs, according to analytics firm Net Market Share. Microsoft is planning to end support for the OS on April 8, and it’s going to increasingly dramatic measures to convince reluctant customers to upgrade.

Earlier this month the company offered XP users a $50 gift card if they purchased a new PC on the Microsoft online store. Now the company is sweetening the pot by offering a $100 discount on Surface Pro 2 tablets and a range of laptop and desktop computers. Microsoft is also throwing in 90 days of free technical support and free data transfer to help people move their data over to a new machine. The promotion runs through June 15.

It’s not clear how effective the promotion will be in killing off Windows XP since the people keeping the OS alive aren’t just tech novices who need a website to tell them if they’re running XP or not. The operating system is popular in schools because many districts buy refurbished computers that come installed with the software. Ten percent of federal government computers still use the software, according to The Washington Post. Forrester Research estimates that six percent of corporate computers will still be on XP come April, and small businesses in particular are likely to ignore Microsoft’s pleas to upgrade. The oddest Windows XP diehards are ATMs—95 percent of the banking machines run on the ancient software. All these groups will be more susceptible to viruses and malware once Microsoft stops providing security updates for the software next month.

The Microsoft Windows XP log-in screen is displayed on a lap

Microsoft may take further steps after they officially pull the plug on XP, such as a free or low-cost version of Windows 8.1 that is rumored to be in the works. Ultimately, though, the company may find itself in the same predicament in five years’ time. The four-year-old Windows 7 is the most popular OS in the world right now, with a market share of nearly 50 percent.

Source : time

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