Users Who Think XP Is Good Enough Need to See Infection Rates


Recommended Posts

You don't know me so don't call me a liar. Never had a virus, never re-foramted/re-installed. In 10 years witched Hard-disks twice ,one failed, one updraded to a bigger 80GB ( the max size). In both cases restored from image.

The laptop is on 24/7.

I am sure I started with computers and computers security way before you , and many others on Neowin, were born, as I am a computer professional for 43 years (1968).

That's wonderful. I'm sure that post took a lot of pride and self-importance to write, but that's not what I asked for.

Thanks for first saying that I don't know you, and then deciding that you know you're older than me. That's totally not hypocritical at all.

If you could post a screenshot of your CMD box after running that command that would be awesome.

i was going to post one, but I don't have any XP machines with installs THAT old. The oldest install I Have is only 2 years old

Posted above.

You don't know me so don't call me a liar. Never had a virus, never re-foramted/re-installed. In 10 years witched Hard-disks twice ,one failed, one updraded to a bigger 80GB ( the max size). In both cases restored from image.

The laptop is on 24/7.

I am sure I started with computers and computers security way before you , and many others on Neowin, were born, as I am a computer professional for 43 years (1968).

I have Windows 7 and I was installed in 2002 to.

post-48603-0-74419700-1305310129.png

Incorrect BIOS clocks on first install are a great thing ;)

No. Not a single chance. Please stop lying, if you really wanted to bluff, you could have at least said something a bit more believable like 5 years.

The disk/registry fragmentation and corruption would be insane on such an old system. I know this because I had a laptop (old old Dell Inspiron) which I put a clean install of Windows XP SP3 on and had it in the kitchen to do super light web browsing from time to time for weather and news. After 2 years, with no new programs installed (seriously, just a Firefox/Windows Media Player Machine, no FLash installed even) the computer was irritatingly slow and there was a ton of hard drive grinding.

I don't believe you for one second.

Actually, alexalex, I'd like you to try this for me, so I can at least try to believe your 10 year claim, if not your "never any malware exploit" claim.

Run this from the "Run" box.

cmd /k systeminfo | @find "Original Install Date:"

Screenshot the output including the command line. Don't just paste the text into a post.

Where do you people get off being so high and ****ing mighty?

My work laptop has been running XP for two years, I can't say there's any noticeable slowdown compared to when it was new, indeed the only thing which ever makes it chug is Outlook and we all know what a steaming heap of turd that can be. My parents ran XP until last year, the install was over five years old and had never had any infection, neither did it exhibit any sluggishness.

Get this into your head - your experience is not representative of everyone else's. Quite how you can be so unbelievably arrogant as to think that it is, I'm unsure.

If you could post a screenshot of your CMD box after running that command that would be awesome.

i was going to post one, but I don't have any XP machines with installs THAT old. The oldest install I Have is only 2 years old

Well naturally I'm not him but;

HV35a.png

(Taken via RDP to the box by the way, if you're wondering about the resolution + fonts)

Why is that so hard to believe? You think just because he is runing windows XP he will be hit with an exploit? Every OS has exploits.

I can also say in the 7 years I ran XP I never had a SINGLE exploit run on my computer. I Have 2 Machines in my home running XP and they have never had a SINGLE exploit run.

When you say 7 years, does that mean 7 years from today? That would put it in line with the Sasser breakout. So when you installed XP fresh, you weren't hit with Sasser 10 seconds after connecting to the internet? That's definitely something. :blink:

For the record, I'm not being sarcastic nor am I mocking you, it's just that I didn't hear of anybody that wasn't slammed with Sasser (or Blaster) after installing a fresh copy of XP back in early-mid 2004.

While there is nothing wrong with XP, the fact is. If you really still want to use XP, why not move along to a better kernel 5.2.3790 in XP PRO X64?

It's technically not XP. It's Server 2003 with an XP interface.

XP is as secure a Win7 using the right tools. In 10 years using the same laptop and XP I haven't got a single exploit nor did I had to reformat/re-install XP.

10 years is long, but I can take you word for it as I have two pc's that have XP on them, one a little over 5 years and one that I still use regularly, that I did my last install on in 2007.

I just flat out never have anything ever go wrong with my XP boxes as regards exploits and viruses, or my Linux Box either for that matter!

That is the single-most full of s*** comment I've ever heard.

Get real.

Once again comments like this typify the childish attitude of a LARGE portion of the community!

This is my AMD Athlone that I still regularly use in my Office and workshop!

post-23703-0-77199400-1305312461.jpg

When you say 7 years, does that mean 7 years from today? That would put it in line with the Sasser breakout. So when you installed XP fresh, you weren't hit with Sasser 10 seconds after connecting to the internet? That's definitely something. :blink:

For the record, I'm not being sarcastic nor am I mocking you, it's just that I didn't hear of anybody that wasn't slammed with Sasser (or Blaster) after installing a fresh copy of XP back in early-mid 2004.

It's technically not XP. It's Server 2003 with an XP interface.

it has all of the same features save for 16 Bit support, the only diffrence between xp and server 2003 is a simple one, TRUSTWORTHY COMPUTING INITIATIVE, which stopped cold the development of Server 2003 and had them go through it with a fine tooth comb and each dev sign off their code. So, no, its not technically SERVER 2003, its Windows XP

Wait, so Microsoft's own numbers disprove security in obscurity. Hehe. That explains why neither OS X nor GNU/Linux are seeing increasing malware, despite their year on year growing marketshare.

The fact is though, if you set yourself up as a normal user as opposed to the default root account you get, then XP's security is on par with Windows 7. If anything, XP is actually safer given the fact that (AFAIK) you have to log out and back in as admin to install anything, because it doesn't have the UAC, which allows the user to switch to root privileges at the click of a button, otherwise known as non-authenticated privilege escalation.

10 years is long, but I can take you word for it as I have two pc's that have XP on them, one a little over 5 years and one that I still use regularly, that I did my last install on in 2007.

I just flat out never have anything ever go wrong with my XP boxes as regards exploits and viruses, or my Linux Box either for that matter!

Even though I don't particularly like Windows in general, It has to be said, XP is Microsoft's best, and most stable (is 'stablest' a valid superlative?) OS to date. If I was forced to use Windows, I'd choose XP in a second, even on the most powerful hardware. It's performance, efficiency, and compatibility, both in software and hardware, clinches it for me.

What do you mean by stable?

Ok, in XP if your video card driver crashed, guess what...you rebooted, not in 7

Windows XP has no sandboxing mechanisms for IE 8, 7 Does

Windows XP does not have TRIM support for SSD drives, 7 does.

Are you spotting a trend yet?

Even though I don't particularly like Windows in general, It has to be said, XP is Microsoft's best, and most stable (is 'stablest' a valid superlative?) OS to date. If I was forced to use Windows, I'd choose XP in a second, even on the most powerful hardware. It's performance, efficiency, and compatibility, both in software and hardware, clinches it for me.

I think anyone who`s ever looked at the forums/news even for just a few days would know this :)

XP wasn`t super stable when it first came out, hence BSOD is a common expression! Later service packs helped in that regard as well as in security.

Where`s Frylock when you need him?

What do you mean by stable?

Ok, in XP if your video card driver crashed, guess what...you rebooted, not in 7

Windows XP has no sandboxing mechanisms for IE 8, 7 Does

Windows XP does not have TRIM support for SSD drives, 7 does.

Are you spotting a trend yet?

What precisely do sandboxing of IE and TRIM have to do with stability, pray tell?

For the record, I don't agree with the guy, but your point is a bit contrived ;)

What do you mean by stable?

Ok, in XP if your video card driver crashed, guess what...you rebooted, not in 7

Wait, you are saying that if a driver crashes, such as a video driver, you don't get a BSOD, nor do you have an unstable desktop environment? By stable, I'm referring to the maturity of the code base, and thus, the smaller number of bugs, and better software (including drivers) compatibility.

Windows XP has no sandboxing mechanisms for IE 8, 7 Does

I don't use IE. I use Firefox, and every machine That I have ever installed XP on, or fixed, I have installed Firefox. Only IE users need worry about drive by malware infections.

Windows XP does not have TRIM support for SSD drives, 7 does.

Neither does Vista out of the box. However, there is an intel tool to provide that. Although given that SDD's still aren't used in most desktop PC's yet, I question the usefulness of it.

Are you spotting a trend yet?

The only trend I see here is your distaste for XP. The fact is, there are many reasons to continue using XP on new and existing hardware as per my eariler assertions, but I wont belabour the subject.

Funny thread, I have a server running 2000 at one client and has been since mid 2002. :)

I am also building a dev machine and installed XP on it just today so I can do some dotnet stuff.

When you say 7 years, does that mean 7 years from today? That would put it in line with the Sasser breakout. So when you installed XP fresh, you weren't hit with Sasser 10 seconds after connecting to the internet? That's definitely something. :blink:

For the record, I'm not being sarcastic nor am I mocking you, it's just that I didn't hear of anybody that wasn't slammed with Sasser (or Blaster) after installing a fresh copy of XP back in early-mid 2004.

It's technically not XP. It's Server 2003 with an XP interface.

My mom got blaster back in the day, but I either had the firewall in windows manually turned on or I was behind a WRT54G router. Either way I never got blaster or sasser.

If infection rates are the be-all and end-all of OSes then what is the infection rates of the Chromebooks?

Edit:

My point to that is that Microsoft shouldn't push infection rates as a big reason to use Microsoft Windows 7. Then again, Microsoft has a long history of demonizing their former products because old Microsoft products are often the biggest "competition" that prevents future sales.

You don't know me so don't call me a liar. Never had a virus, never re-foramted/re-installed. In 10 years witched Hard-disks twice ,one failed, one updraded to a bigger 80GB ( the max size). In both cases restored from image.

The laptop is on 24/7.

I am sure I started with computers and computers security way before you , and many others on Neowin, were born, as I am a computer professional for 43 years (1968).

You haven't had XP installed for 10 years... Not even 9 years yet...

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • That is the natural course for regulations. First to protect the consumer. Then to protect the business/industry from upstart competition. There are countless examples across history.
    • I have never been a huge fan of libre, it feels really good but exactly when you need an advance feature for data wrangling it falls short every time or has bugs. I am all for euro office if they can deliver a good and usable alternative to MS office with backing of govt function.
    • Go on, I'll bite. How does windows (nice comment on an 'article' which doesn't actually involve it ) lock users out of their data then? Been using it since 3.1 back in 92 and not once have I been locked out of my data? Perhaps you mean Bitlocker? In which case the average user (who doesn't mess about) will have been forced to use a MSA, and in which case the recovery key would have been saved to said account..... If the user did happen to bodge around and not use an MSA then Bitlocker wouldn't have become live (as it cannot without a safe place to store the key) I want to point out Bitlocker and MSA are not connected and you can of course force it on without a safe place to store the key, but you do that with your eyes open. So your standard consumer who knows no better sets up an MSA, gets bitlocker and a recovery key stored off box, with a route to reset their password. All of this notwithstanding the fact, if your data is important, you back it up, no ifs, no buts, no-ones responsibility other than your own. Important data lives in at least two locations, one of which is offline and recovery is tested, otherwise that data wasn't really that important. Disks, fail, laptops get lost, phones end up down the toilet, tablets get stolen, if your only copy of data is on a single device you're doing it wrong.
    • Clearly that feature isn't for us. It's for the ad spam marketers so they can more directly target us about going to places we might want to go again...but without understanding context clues. Like for the flight someone took for a friend's funeral. We want to be reminded of that every time we open an app, a browser, or email, right? Right, Siri?
    • Is your Apple Watch supported? Check the watchOS 27 compatibility list by Aditya Tiwari Apple kicked off WWDC 2026 with a ton of announcements, mostly centered around Apple Intelligence improvements, the Siri AI, and Liquid Glass updates. However, there is a lot of other stuff that couldn't catch the limelight. Let's talk about watchOS 27 and which models are supported by the newest operating system. According to the Cupertino giant, watchOS 27 will be supported on the following Apple Watch models when it arrives later this year: Apple Watch Ultra 3 Apple Watch Series 11 Apple Watch SE 3 Apple Watch Series 10 Apple Watch Ultra 2 It's a stark contrast with last year's watchOS 26 update, which had almost a dozen Apple Watch models in its list of supported devices. Apple supported models all the way back to Apple Watch Series 6. That said, if you own one of the five models, you'll need an iPhone 11 (or later) with iOS 27 to install the latest update. Yes, Apple has shown some extra love to the iPhone 11, and it old horse supports the iOS 27 update. watchOS 27 beta 1 is now available for developers and interested power users through the Apple Developer Program. So, if you're among those who like to play with fire, you can download it to your supported Apple Watch. Otherwise, the public beta for watchOS 27 will be available next month. The freshly baked Apple Watch update comes with Siri AI - an advanced, fully conversational version of Siri powered by Apple Intelligence due for later this year. A new dynamic app grid features icons for five Siri-suggested apps. You can use a new tap gesture to open a widget in the Smart Stack, and a new Find My app finally clears the mess of Find Devices, Find Items, and Find People on Apple Watch. Workout Buddy can run without an iPhone nearby and offers new insights based on data, including your progress for pace, distance, and workout duration. Apple improved its motion tracking algorithms to measure the distance of indoor treadmill runs and walks more precisely. Speaking of other changes, the music playback on watchOS 27 starts faster and you can create custom passes for any membership or card that uses a QR code or barcode, then easily access them in the Wallet app or pin in the Smart Stack.
  • Recent Achievements

    • Very Popular
      Captain_Eric earned a badge
      Very Popular
    • One Month Later
      amusc earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • One Month Later
      DJC50PLUS earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Week One Done
      DJC50PLUS earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Proficient
      Eric Biran went up a rank
      Proficient
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      498
    2. 2
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      228
    3. 3
      ATLien_0
      85
    4. 4
      Steven P.
      76
    5. 5
      +Edouard
      75
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!