UCyborg wrote on 2025-11-16, 23:01:
Jo22 wrote on 2025-11-16, 22:01:
PS/2: But I agree on one thing: That Windows 10 should never get a kernel extension.
It simply doesn't deserve one. IMHO.
10 is the XP of 2020s! :D
Oh no! That sounds so wrong! 😭
UCyborg wrote on 2025-11-16, 22:40:
Now, are we being oppressed for our favorite old Windows version no longer running current software? Certain group of people certainly seem to think that way. [..]
Personally, I belong to the group of people who just thinks that these upgrades makes the old OS useful.
Because it can run everyday software then. Which in turn used to be a purpose of an OS: run software.
Before Software-As-A-Service model showed up and the OS became an data octopus and advertisement platform.
For example, I do have a Compaq Armada laptop running Windows 98SE.
I mainly use it to run VB6, Delphi and older development software for microcontrollers.
Thanks to the unofficial Service Pack and the extension I now can use USB pendrives
or run some more recent applications, from time to time.
Such as newer compilers, for experimenting on same system.
Or using newer utilities (IrfanView, Audacity etc).
KernelEx can be turned on/off and doesn't harm the 98SE in any way.
It also adds a "compatibility tab", which is handy for running older Windows 95 or NT4 software.
UCyborg wrote on 2025-11-16, 18:12:
I'm allergic to extended kernels. People working on them should do something useful with their lives instead. Leave the OS kernels to the pros.
I understand. It's the "because something can't be what isn't allowed to be".
Which makes it feel like a personal attack on someone's own belief system.
The cult of "period-correctness" is such a phenomenon, I sometimes think.
This results in PC builds that are more period-correct than the PC configurations that actually existed back in the day.
Though I wonder if the hobbyists tinkering with old stuff aren’t secretly the real pros (experts) by now.
The usual employees working at MS have no idea about vintage Windows codebase, maybe.
It's that way in amateur radio, at least: Here, the hobbyists sometimes have a deeper understanding on a given matter than their commercial, professional colleagues.
Because they fix and tinker with stuff, rather than just using it like the professionals who never touch any internals.
The term "amateur" is meant in a non-commercial sense here, it doesn't refer to a poor skill set.
UCyborg wrote on 2025-11-16, 22:40:
They will cite planned obsolescence and changes they don't like in subsequent OS versions and why they should throw old computer away, accompanied by angry emojis and remarks that developers targeting newer OS are the root of all evil.
So the concept of the right to use particular version of the OS against all odds. A concept that must have never been discussed in any sort of legal or human rights context. Some food for thought.
Nah, I'm not like that. Personally, I'm all in for throwing away obsolete Windows 10 PCs.
Or at least, for upgrading them for being Windows 11 ready.
New CPU, maybe mainboard if needed. To make them SSE4.2 and TPM2 compatible. It's about time.
Generally speaking, what's good about older Windowses is its therapheutical value, maybe.
Windows XP feels like home, it's very user-friendly and anti-depressive.
Even Windows 98SE is a joy to use when comming from a modern Windows.
Everything here is so clear, so calm, so logical organized. Just like with Windows 2000.
I can thus totally see why certain people hold on to using vintage OSes privately
or try to avoid modern versions as much as possible - it's a self-defense, like using an adblocker.
Some writers even use DOS for distraction free writing.
That's okay. Each to his own. As long as it doesn't harm others, it's fine. :)
Edited. Link fixed.
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