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Should You Give Up XP for Windows 7?

By Harry Mccracken, PC World
September 29, 2009 12:21 PM ET
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The vast majority of PC users still haven't adopted Vista. Eight years after its release -- and months after Microsoft officially discontinued it -- Windows XP is more beloved than ever.

Windows 7 alluring, but XP is the migration X factor

So will Windows 7 convince XP loyalists to switch? Instead of guessing, we decided to ask them. In August, we conducted an online survey of more than 8,000 people who told us that XP was their primary OS. The top three reasons they haven't upgraded to Vista: They're comfortable with XP, Vista lacks features that might justify an upgrade, and they're concerned about driver and compatibility issues.

Vistaphobia ran high among respondents who had tried Windows Vista (62% said that their opinion of the OS was somewhat or very negative) and among those who merely knew about it (81% were somewhat or very negative). But most respondents said that were keeping an open mind about Windows 7.

In fact, the 26% of respondents who said they had already used Windows 7 were quite enthusiastic about it: 73% said that their opinion of Win 7 was somewhat or very positive, and only 11% said that it was very or somewhat negative. Also, 56% said that they intended to move to Win 7 immediately or eventually. Among respondents who had read about Win 7 but hadn't used it, 56% said that their opinion of Win 7 was somewhat or very positive, and only 12% said that it was somewhat or very negative.

Still, a meaningful minority of respondents have no interest in upgrading: 40% said that they intended to stick with XP indefinitely. Which brings up another interesting question: When will it become impractical to keep using XP and spurning its successors?

Supposedly, that date has already come and gone: Microsoft formally discontinued Windows XP on June 30, 2008, and it ended mainstream support on April 14, 2009. But the company has continued to permit PC builders to offer downgrade discs that let XP fans install the OS over Vista. It says that manufacturers can ship Windows 7 machines with XP downgrades for 18 months after Win 7's release or until it ships the first Service Pack for the new OS--whichever comes first. In other words, XP downgrades may be available until April 22, 2011 (assuming that Microsoft doesn't extend the deadline further; it has already granted XP so many stays of execution that refusing to grant any more would be a bit surprising.)

XP's final death knell is scheduled to sound on April 8, 2014. On that date, Microsoft says it will no longer take support calls and issue security fixes. This doesn't mean that no one will run XP on April 9 and beyond -- it just means that they'll be on their own. XP holdouts, you've been warned.

For more information about Windows 7, sign up for PC World's Windows News and Tips newsletter.

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