Windows XP quietly turned 10 years old Wednesday, a milestone for the still-popular operating system that powers nearly half the world’s PCs.
Microsoft did not celebrate the anniversary, eschewing any congratulatory blog post or press release.
On Aug. 24, 2001, Microsoft shifted Windows XP’s status to RTM, for “release to manufacturing,” a term it uses to mark the end of development and the move to duplication and release to computer makers. XP reached retail in October 2001.
One analyst questioned whether it was really the right anniversary to celebrate.
“The Windows XP that people loved wasn’t [the original 2001] XP, it was XP SP2,” said Michael Cherry, an analyst with Kirkland, Wash.-based Directions on Microsoft, a research firm that covers only Microsoft.
Windows XP SP2, or “Service Pack 2,” shipped three years later, in August 2004.
That edition, which Microsoft itself acknowledged was out of the ordinary for one of its service packs, added new functionality and dramatically boosted XP’s security. Among the security-oriented changes were a revamped firewall that was switched on by default, a new Security Center that monitored bundled and third-party firewall and anti-virus defenses, and the introduction of DEP, or “data execution prevention,” Microsoft’s first anti-exploit technology.
“Windows XP is old,” said Cherry. “Ten years in this business is a lifetime.”
That’s exactly what Microsoft has been saying of late.
Last month, Microsoft told customers it was “time to move on” from XP, noting that it had less than three years left in its support lifespan. Even earlier this year, executives on the Internet Explorer (IE) team called XP the “lowest common denominator” as they explained why the OS wouldn’t run the new IE9, or any future browsers.
Cherry concurred, more or less.
“I’ve been telling [clients] to move to Windows 7,” he said, adding that the newer operating system, which Microsoft launched in October 2009, was suitably stable to replace the long-running XP.
Windows XP turned 10 on Wednesday, making it official: It’s an old OS.
Windows 7 is the safe bet, said Cherry, even though Windows 8 — which analysts believe will debut between April and October 2013 — is looming.
If Windows 8 is solid, then moving to it from Windows 7 — rather than from the aged XP — will be a relative breeze, since Microsoft has assured customers that any PC able to run 7 will also handle 8.
And if Windows 8 stumbles, then Windows 7 becomes the safety net that XP served for Windows Vista, the 2007 edition that most users rejected.
Cherry has expressed concern about Windows 8 before, and repeated those worries today.
“It looks like they’re changing a lot in Windows 8,” he said, pointing to the hints that Microsoft gave earlier this summer as well as the tidbits it’s been disclosing on the “Building Windows 8” for the last week.vTo Cherry, a large number of changes in Windows 8 increases the chance that something may go wrong, either during development — in which case, the upgrade could be delayed — or after it ships, repeating the debacle of Vista when many customers complained about device driver compatibility.
According to metrics firm Net Applications, Windows 7 has been accumulating usage share at the expense of XP and Vista. At the end of July, Windows 7 accounted for 29.7 per cent of all operating systems, while XP had a 49.8 per cent share, the first time it had dropped under the 50 per cent bar.
Microsoft plans to support Windows XP — specifically SP3 — until April 2014.