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Tech News Want to keep using Windows 7 after 2020? It'll cost you

This has been a article i came across and i thought it would be a good thing to post it and have people aware of this


this is where the article continues

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When Windows 7 reaches its End of Life on January 14 2020, Microsoft will no longer support the aging operating system, which means anyone using Windows 7 could be at risk as there will be no more free security patches.
However, with many people – and businesses – still using Windows 7 (we reported a few days ago that Windows 7 is aactually gaining users), this could leave a lot of people in the lurch, which is why late last year Microsoft announced it would be offering Windows 7 Extended Security Updates for a fee.

It has now been revealed who will be eligible for those extended security updates (ESU), and how much they will cost.
The cost of support

Microsoft has apparently disclosed how much these updates will cost, and they will be made available to Enterprise and Microsoft 365 customers, which can buy the Windows 7 Extended Security Updates on a per device basis.
These updates are aimed at businesses that are unable to move to Window 10 before Windows 7’s End of Life date, and are only meant to offer support while businesses prepare to move.
The pricing is expensive, and the cost rises over the years. So, for support for Windows Enterprise users using Windows 7 for the first year after the End of Life date (January 2020 – January 2021), the cost is $25 (around £20, AU$35).
This rises to $50 per device (around £40, AU$70) for year two (January 2021 – January 2022), and $100 (around £80, AU$140) for year three (January 2022 to January 2023). It appears that at the moment that Microsoft is hoping by 2023, Windows 7 use will be small enough to stop offering the extended security updates.
As this is a per device cost, businesses with numerous PCs running Windows 7 will soon find this very expensive.
If they are using Windows 7 Pro, then those prices are even higher, with $50 (around £40, AU$70) for year one support, $100 (around £80, AU$140) for year two and $200 (around £150, AU$280) for year three.
If you’re a non-business user who wants to keep using Windows 7, then you could theoretically sign up as an Enterprise user, as there’s no minimum purchase necessary for the Windows 7 ESU, but we wouldn’t recommend it.
It’s far cheaper – and easier – to say goodbye to Windows 7 and instead upgrade to Windows 10.



The reason i post it is cause i believe its imporrtant information to have as update. (This article has been posted earlier this year on the web)
 
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SiteWizard

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yeah they want / smelling monney (that is all wat counts for them)...
 
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Nice chance to junp into Linux.
Anyway, this is a known story and supporting legacy deployments is a niche most corporations exploit quite well.
When you run a hospital or an army on Windows XP, and upgrading costs a number with six zeros at the right and a ton of uncertainty, suddenly paying *just* two or three zeros start to make sense.
I used to work on supporting legacy Solaris 8 installations on Sun Fire E10ks, and there was a whole lot of money there. Paying 40k USD for a mezazine board was peanuts for American Airlines against the cost of upgrade.
 

SNOFREC2858

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kind of crazy,these guys tend to eliminate those OS people seem to love and force us to move on..crazy!
 

Silver347

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Even if they end the support for Windows 7 I'll still be using it no matter what,because it is my top #1 OS for everyday use and it's not as bloated with unnecessary apps and somewhat bad overall optimizations.My PC is somewhat old but it does pack a punch to some modern titles when it comes to gaming,production wise I'm a photographer and I work with my professor to design and glance those photos he sents me.Because of Windows 7 Ultimate being fast and stable as it is,it can deliver maximum peformance from your hardware,and with good advanced-user optimizations you can go much further,It's like I'm using Mac.Great OS still even till this very day.
 
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