skintt wrote on 2023-09-16, 15:06:
I suppose my thinking with the 2005 era graphics card was to guarantee XP compatibilty but I hadn't appreciated just how long lived XP really was.
I think I have a GTX 650 knocking about somewhere in the loft so maybe it's time for an expidition to try and dig it out 😁
Thanks for your advice, it's much appreciated!
Oh yes. End of support for Windows XP was in April 2014, but... it's important to situate that in its full historical context. XP's successor, Vista, was late, so XP had a very unusual run of over 5 years as the newest version of Windows. Which means that people, software/driver developers, etc had gotten comfortable with it in a way that no one had with any prior version of Windows. And while XP's hardware requirements were steepish for 2001, by 2006, you could get a perfectly competent XP machine for like $400.
Vista comes along, and... well, even though it was no worse than any other new version of Windows had been at launch (but XP, which was quite mediocre pre-SP1, had grown up to be the most robust/stable/compatible/etc version of Windows ever by that point), it gets very poorly received. So... other than a few enthusiasts and home users buying store Vista systems, the world sticks to XP. Vista gives way to 7, which had fewer bugs but more importantly 2.5 years of better hardware and Vista/7-friendly drivers, and people start finally starting to inch away from XP. And I do say inching... I am sure many companies were issuing XP machines in 2010. You start to see growing adoption of 7 starting in 2011 or so, and even then, some business users stuck to 32-bit 7 not 64-bit...
Ivy Bridge (2012, so around two years before the drop-dead end of support date) is the last Intel platform generally thought to have full XP support, so... that tells you something. No one would have launched any new product in 2011, hardware or software, without XP support. Maybe products launched in 2013-4 started not to offer XP support, and even then, it depends on what that product might be.
And this, BTW, is how platforms stagnate. In 1996-7, lots of (most?) hardware/software on the market required the 1-2 year old Windows 95. But meanwhile, in 2011, everything needed to support a decade-old OS. By the time developers started to drop XP, 7 was already 4-5 years old and half-replaced by the disastrous 8.
And yes, I would encourage you to dig out the GTX 650. Speaking from experience, what you may view as a 'meh' Windows 10 machine sitting in your closet may actually turn out to be a very reasonable vintage XP system for $0 or close enough, but you just had never looked at it that way before. (Sadly, I don't think most people have anything 98SE-capable sitting in their closets that the same logic would apply to. Those machines would have been deemed meh XP systems in 2007-8, and I don't know if many people keep unused computers in their closets for 15 years.)