Okay, it wasn't that sudden: Microsoft announced as long ago as 2012 that, as of April of
2014, it was going to end all support of its creaky but still serviceable
Windows XP operating system, so it's not like it happened without warning. And strictly speaking, computers
running Windows XP didn't die on April 8, 2014: they just became instantly vulnerable to malware, hackers,
and others who had been kept somewhat at bay by security upgrades from
Microsoft. As it turns out, this
includes well-intentioned network managers such as the ones at my university,
who now sniff out any PCs on their network still running Windows XP and simply
snip them off the network. But the
whole episode has occasioned some thoughts on planned obsolescence, and how
different computer technology is from other kinds of technology.
As it turns out, I have a dog in this fight: an old Dell laptop in my research lab
that runs a number of applications I use in my research, and its operating
system is Windows XP. The
applications all run with expensive hardware I have accumulated over the years
as funding intermittently became available. One such item is a high-speed camera that cost about $15K
new when I bought it a decade ago with a combination of grant and department
money. Another is a $10K
spectrometer that I happened into after I met my department chair in the hall
one day, and he asked me if I knew of a good way I could help him spend ten
thousand dollars real fast. The
software for these items will not run on anything other than Windows XP, and
the laptop is so old I don't think I can upgrade the operating system to
Windows 8 in any case. I have a
little grant right now, but I've obligated most of the money toward other items
and there's nothing left for software or hardware upgrades. So what's an impoverished
researcher to do?
I wasn't the only person caught with my operating
system down on April 8, by the way.
One estimate (www.netmarketshare.com) says that about a quarter of all
PCs are still running Windows XP here over a month after the drop-dead date, so
I'm sure there are millions of computers out there in the same slowly sinking
boat that my laptop is in.
In a lot of ways, the end of XP support resembles the
old Y2K scare that those of us old enough to be computer-savvy in 2000 can
recall. Because programmers
dealing with the limited memory in mid-20th-century computers didn't always
take into account the possibility that their software might still be running on
Jan. 1, 2000, they sometimes wrote dates in a way that would make the software
bomb if you tried to keep them running past Dec. 31, 1999. Fortunately, the turn of the century
was highly predictable, and despite certain fringe elements who predicted a
digital Armageddon, nearly all software had been successfully upgraded by New
Year's Day on 2000, and the big Y2K scare turned out to be a bust.
Similarly, judging from the cricket-filled silence on
the Internet concerning any dire consequences of the end of XP support after
April 8, I think things have not turned out to be as bad as some people thought. Still, I can't connect my PC laptop to
the internet without getting it squelched by IT support now, and if anything
goes wrong with any of the software or hardware it runs, I may find myself up a
creek.
Those involved in the computer and software industries
rarely think in terms of indefinitely lengthy stretches of time, although I
will give Microsoft credit for announcing the end of XP support so far in
advance, and sticking to their commitment. Every design of an engineered product is an act of faith: the designer rarely knows exactly who
will use the design, how they will benefit, or how long the design will be
useful. The business model of
software companies is a constant scramble to issue upgrades and new products,
and in a competitive global economy, it can't very well be otherwise. But in the rare cases that a thing
shows unexpected fruitful longevity, it seems that there is a kind of nobility
or merit attached to that fact that most engineers rarely recognize, having
been trained in the philosophy of "old = bad, new = good" from their
college days.
I recall the story of a mechanical animation stand and
camera that begin its existence back in the 1920s, and was used to make some of
the earliest animated cartoons.
The same stand was still in use in the late 1990s for commercial film
production, because the mechanical standards of 35-mm film had not changed in
all that time.
Animation stands are junk now, rendered that way by the
advent of computer-generated images (CGI). And motion-picture production companies that have switched
to all-digital production find that it costs them a bundle simply to keep a
movie on the shelf, because all the software and memory standards associated
with the huge pile of digital information that goes into the movie are
constantly changing, and it's a full-time job for several people just to make
sure that the movie is still in shape to be played from month to month. It brings to mind the words of the Red
Queen in Lewis Carroll's story Through
the Looking Glass and What Alice
Found There: "Now here,
you see, it takes all the running you can do, to keep in the same place. If you want to get somewhere else, you
must run at least twice as fast as that!"
Those who have the resources to run twice as fast have
long since upgraded their old PCs (or not so old PCs) to Windows 7 or 8 or 13
or whatever the latest version is, and will continue to keep up with the
times. And those of us who haven't,
will just have to deal with the situation any way we can.
Sources: The online journal Computerworld
carried a debate as long ago as December 2012 at http://www.computerworld.com/s/article/9234316/Experts_question_Microsoft_s_decision_to_retire_XP
in which experts differed as to whether Microsoft would really stick to their
announced deadline, as they in fact did.
Some good advice to those who can't afford upgrading from Windows XP
appeared in PC Pro's online edition at
http://www.pcpro.co.uk/features/387022/what-to-do-if-you-re-still-on-windows-xp-should-i-upgrade-from-windows-xp. The statistic about the percentage of
PCs running Windows XP is available at http://www.netmarketshare.com/operating-system-market-share.aspx.
Go to Windows 7 Pro or Ultimate edition, install Windows VPC, then install the Win XP virtual machine. That ought to keep you going until Windows 9 comes out....
ReplyDelete