Windows XP users, your favorite operating system is a decade old, and if you’re still using it, you’re not cool anymore, at least according to Microsoft. That’s the software giant’s recent take on its ...
This Windows XP right-click feature still works in Windows 11—and it’s great.
Sick of Microsoft's AI push, I switched from Windows 11 to the ancient Windows XP. What could go wrong?
Even though Microsoft retired Windows XP two years ago, an estimated 181 million PCs around the world ran the crippled operating system last month, according to data from a web metrics vendor. Windows ...
This article was originally published 4/5/14 but was updated 4/8/14 with additional information. It’s coming: XPocalypse—the end of Microsoft’s support of Windows XP on April 8. Anyone who still has a ...
Microsoft is no stranger to Windows source code leaks, but a new incident might just provide insights into its history. Bleeping Computer and ZDNet report that a 4chan user has posted what’s believed ...
While Windows 7 marches on... Microsoft's Windows XP operating system is now being used on less than half of PCs around the world. According to the latest figures from Net Applications, Windows XP had ...
Microsoft Corp. has had to create a new build of Windows XP Professional for computer makers because the six-year-old operating system’s continued popularity has nearly exhausted the supply of product ...
Microsoft believes experience should be your guide—or XPerience, anyway. Its forthcoming Windows XP operating system aims to apply a simple design to the desktop landscape. Windows XP, in Home and ...
We have an interesting situation. A department has x PowerEdge servers with applications installed running Windows XP. These applications run perfectly fine under XP, none of the servers require ...
Microsoft is requiring consumers who want to use the latest version of Windows Media Player to upgrade to the new Windows XP operating system--a move that is ...
The backwards compatibility of new operating systems has been a constant thorn in Microsoft's side. With Vista, the compatibility problems at launch were so great it never really stood a chance of ...