My husband had the same problem.  He was "married" to XP and hated to part
with it.  After he got a windows 7 machine all I heard was that it wasn't as
good as XP.  I rolled my eyes and called my grandson who calmed him down.
Now he uses his computer and I don't hear anything about XP.  It takes time,
patience and realizing that computer companies don't make money on the tried
and true system that was never broke. 

-----Original Message-----
From: JAWS-Users-List [mailto:[email protected]] On
Behalf Of Carolyn Arnold
Sent: Friday, June 12, 2015 8:37 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [JAWS-Users] Clinging to XP.

The problem with clinging to XP is that if I continue to do so, eventually I
will not be able to get on the Internet. I keep getting warnings, but I
cannot update Internet Explorer with this system.

GIFT (God is forever true),

Carolyn

----- Original Message -----
From: "Lisle, Ted (CHFS DMS)" <[email protected]>
To: <[email protected]>
Sent: Friday, June 12, 2015 7:54 AM
Subject: Re: [JAWS-Users] Windows 10, Here's what Microsoft should have done
instead


Doesn't sound like something I'd break my neck to acquire.  That's why so
many folks are still desperately clinging to XP like a drowning man holding
a rope.  That's why my builder and I agreed to go with Windows 7 as late as
December, 2013.  When it ain't broke, don't fix it!

Ted

-----Original Message-----
From: JAWS-Users-List [mailto:[email protected]] On
Behalf Of Trish
Sent: Thursday, June 11, 2015 10:27 AM
To: Jaws-users-list
Subject: Windows 10, Here's what Microsoft should have done instead




Windows 10,  Here's what Microsoft should have done instead

  a.. By David Cardinal  on June 9 2015 from the
  b.. Extreme Tech Staff
  c.. 'Document source Link:
  d..
  e.. 
http://www.extremetech.com/computing/207780-windows-10-heres-what-microsoft-
should-have-done-instead?mailing_id=1276983&mailing=ExtremeTech&mailingID=F9
8C71CE61AECF34AC8B64A964276FEA
  f..
.

.         Windows 10 is a well-meaning effort by Microsoft to mollify 
Windows 8 haters and coax Windows 7 loyalists to upgrade - all while 
stubbornly sticking to its goal of a single OS for every possible platform. 
And by framing the problem that way, Microsoft has given itself a nearly 
impossible task.

.         To the company's credit, each new build lurches closer to being 
usable, although with new bugs every time, it is difficult to evaluate how 
smooth the final release version will be. Best case: It may earn the 
grudging acceptance of Windows 7 users who refuse to move to Windows 8. And 
part of that acceptance will come not from sudden enthusiasm for a new way 
of interacting with the desktop, but from a desire to take advantage of the 
clear core benefits Windows 10 provides in performance, security, 
administration, and memory usage over Windows 7 and even Windows 8.

.         So why is it so hard to convince users to move to a brand-new, 
free, feature-packed, more efficient OS?

. 
http://www.extremetech.com/computing/205320-microsoft-windows-10-will-be-the
-last-version-of-windows

.

.         Apple does it all the time. Simply put, because Microsoft didn't 
build Windows 8 or Windows 10 for Windows users. It built them to further 
its own business strategy of using the power of the once-ubiquitous Windows 
platform to extend its dominance into the rapidly growing mobile space. The 
result is an OS whose features are now flipping and flopping with each new 
build - as Microsoft tries to fix problems of its own creation.

.         Imagine how good a desktop OS Windows 10 could have been

.         What if instead, after realizing what a terrible mistake Windows 8

was, Microsoft had made the truly brave decision to come clean and change 
its strategy? If Windows 10 had been designed from the beginning to be the 
best possible desktop OS, and the thousands of developer years spent trying 
to make it everything to everyone were instead spent providing services and 
applications for the mobile OS platforms people actually want? If in tandem 
Microsoft was willing to let go of its sub-3% market share in mobile, it 
could also have spent the cash it used to buy Nokia to build out its 
cross-platform services offerings instead. We could have had a really 
excellent desktop OS - worth paying for -

. 
http://www.extremetech.com/computing/201601-microsoft-desperately-wants-you-
to-move-to-windows-10

.

.         and great integration with the leading mobile platforms.

.         Certainly Microsoft has woken up to providing competitive versions

of its applications on Android and iOS. But imagine how much further along 
it would have been if it had put real work into the effort starting years 
ago. Perhaps we wouldn't have to use third-party utilities to sync our 
information between Google and Outlook, for example. Or OneNote might have 
supported syncing on Android during the first several years it was 
available, instead of only recently. Pick any Microsoft desktop technology 
you access from your iOS or Android device and you can come up with a list 
of features that would make it much more useful.

.

.         It's not like there isn't anything to fix in Windows

.         Anyone who thinks Microsoft didn't focus on desktop users as it 
evolved Windows 8 and 10 because its desktop OS has "no need for 
 improvement" hasn't spent enough time wrestling with the inscrutable hex 
error codes from Windows Update, or debugging driver version mismatches, or 
finding information they're sure is somewhere on their disk. While Windows 
10 isn't final, judging by the builds so far, all of those problems are 
still there. Even support for high-resolution displays is still spotty. 
Windows 10 adds some new Zoom options, but there is still no serious 
scalable-font solution that works across the full range of possible 
displays.

.         As a good example of how this alternate direction would have 
worked, let's look at the Control Panel. No one doubts that it is an old, 
crufty system for managing a computer. A desktop-focused OS project would 
have overhauled it completely while preserving its functionality. Instead, 
Microsoft seems determined to replace it in bits and pieces with new 
"touch-friendly" settings that aren't much more intuitive, and that become 
even more frustrating when you need to go back to the old system for pieces 
that are still missing. Windows 10 is supposed to address this problem, but 
we're less than two months from shipment and Settings are still far from 
being either intuitive or finished.

.         Tablet mode and Continuum are also inventions seeking to solve a 
problem Microsoft has invented for itself. For the few of us who actually 
own and use a Surface Tablet mode, it's sort of a good thing. (I love that I

can both taken written notes and run Outlook on my SP3, but with the 
addition of desktop apps to Android, I'm not sure how many others will see 
the need to spend that kind of money for basic productivity.) It's good 
because it is better than Windows 8, where often the touch keyboard wouldn't

pop up when needed, and icons could be hard to finger.

.         It's still only sort of good, though, because it's confusing and 
forces the user to have one more thing to think about. Somehow iPads and 
Android tablets seem to easily survive the addition of a keyboard without 
the need for an entire special OS mode. Like many of the other new features 
in Windows 10, it seems like a "throw it against the wall and hope it 
 sticks" attempt to solve a user pain point - not a from-the-ground-up 
technology architected to support the broad range of devices that can now 
run Windows.

.

.         Windows 10 internals are actually pretty impressive

.         There is a lot to like about Windows 10 - in addition to having 
the best kernel Windows has ever had. Edge (aka Spartan) is promising 
(although it too is only a prototype version, and certainly could have been 
shipped separately). Cortana might be useful, but is so limited and buggy in

the current builds that it is hard to tell. If it doesn't get sorted out by 
July, Microsoft risks taking yet another step backwards in desktop search 
functionality, which would be a shame. Virtual desktops are a nice feature, 
although hardly groundbreaking.

.         The included apps are certainly way ahead of the ones Microsoft 
shipped with Windows 8, but Microsoft has had many excellent desktop apps 
over the years - including the now-dead Windows Media Center, LiveWriter, 
and MovieMaker. It is the company's own fault that it feels the need to 
start over time and again. On the tablet side, if Microsoft is serious about

usability, it should be providing a better touch keyboard - one that 
includes swipe-through typing, for example. I also wish the company had 
finally fixed Windows Update. Mobile users won't put up with the way it 
works now - they are spoiled by seamless OTAs from Apple and even many 
Android vendors.

.         Perhaps the ultimate warning sign about Windows 10 for me is that 
for many, its positioning is summed up as being "no worse than the 
six-year-old Windows 7, while adding support for tablets and phones." That 
sounds pretty silly, but maybe not far from the truth. I run a Windows 7 
desktop for some of my business-critical applications right next to a couple

of Windows 8.1 machines and a couple of Windows 10 machines. I don't really 
feel any less productive when I'm on the Windows 7 machine, and I can't 
imagine that I'll upgrade it to Windows 10 and risk something breaking.

.         Tablets are certainly a different story. I've already put Windows 
10 on almost all my Windows tablets, and suspect most of the small number of

Windows tablet users will also. Unfortunately for Microsoft, Windows tablets

are a relatively small market, and may never become mainstream.

.         Laptops are the most interesting case. While each version of 
Windows adds new power management features, that may not be enough to get 
laptop users to upgrade. For example, Microsoft keeps changing the WiFi 
settings interface, and for many of us, the new version is lame compared to 
the more powerful one that preceded it. Engineering laptops still ship 
primarily with Windows 7, and I don't see anything about Windows 10 changing

that. Mainstream laptops will get dragged along onto Windows 10 because of 
the Microsoft marketing machine, but I don't know how many current laptop 
users will bother to take advantage of the free upgrade. No doubt that is 
part of why Microsoft is inflicting its Windows 10 adware on the already 
confusing Windows Update process.

.         At this point the die is cast, and we'll need to live with 
whatever we get on July 29th - or stay put and hope the little 
Get-Windows-10 nagware goes away.
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