Greywolf1 wrote on 2024-12-16, 19:01:
64bit isn’t retro in my eyes it hasn’t become redundant yet the way 8/16/32 bit have to be classed as retro.
It’s retiring my old work horse and fork out £1500 for something new and joining the windows 11 slaves from all the rumours I’ve heard.
a) Why £1500 ?
b) Why necessarily something new ?
c) Why Windows 11 ?
I have not bought a new laptop since 2010 .
I have bought and/or helped select Dell refurbished unit multiple times for my mother-in-law, my wife and myself several times since then.
These days, for example, in Canada, a Dell i5-8265U equipped notebook with 8GB of RAM (upgradeable to 16GB, but single channel in all cases) is less than 300 CAN$. That's about £165 and it's not even a special/rebated price.
That runs Windows 10 officially and probably runs Windows 7 unofficially (I don't have one at hand to try), but even if it does not, it's just an example. It does support Windows 11, officially, though, if you ever want that.
Anyway, my point is not whether a 64-bit OS should be considered retro or not, but that using a 15-year-old laptop as a daily driver and considering upgrading it in that context when there are newer option that are faster, less energy hungry, newer and inexpensive alternatives might not be the best path forward.
Finally, if Windows 11 support is something you know you will never care about, you will soon be able to choose from a crapton of "obsoleted" hardware that is much newer than your laptop at bargain basement prices due to Windows 10 going EOL in a few months. In fact, you probably have some options on that front even now.