How easy is it to get XP on a new laptop these days? I've heard that Microsoft is absolutely going to stop offering XP (or that may have just been supporting or something). Is it something you need to have installed after you buy the laptop?
Buffistechnology 3: "Press Some Buttons, See What Happens."
Got a question about technology? Ask it here. Discussion of hardware, software, TiVos, multi-region DVDs, Windows, Macs, LINUX, hand-helds, iPods, anything tech related. Better than any helpdesk!
In the U.S. MS makes it hard to get with computers above a certain size or power. But a lot of distributors still have license/disc sets from before June when it was till completeluy available. And outside the U.S. terms may be different.
Is buying a laptop online a good idea? Who do the Tech-istas recommend?
I thought Microsoft had made another 6-month extension of XP's life.
Part of the issue is these cheap netbooks generally don't have the power for Vista, right? So MS will lose even more sales to Linux if they don't let XP be an option for these laptops.
My concern would be with SATA drivers, do recent version of XP have SATA support on install?
That said, my cheap laptop has Vista and has worked just fine even with 1GB of memory.
I know Dell will still give you the option to downgrade to XP - I imagine most of the other big names are too, at least for now.
Hivemind, I'm using Google maps. I don't want directions, i just want to plot multiple points on the map. Can I do that without the annoying purple lines?
Yeah -- create a new map, right click on it and select "Add a placemark".
i just want to plot multiple points on the map.
Lemme guess - you're marking the places where you've buried your retirement money?
XP has had support for SATA for years.