[AccessD] Future of Windows XP

Rocky Smolin rockysmolin at bchacc.com
Thu Aug 22 09:04:00 CDT 2013


Arthur:

I have always had a shortcut to 'Computer' on my desktop.  I'm using W8 on
my new laptop but usually bail out to the W7 desktop.  I sued to hit the
Start button and then click ''Computer or drag 'Computer' to the desktop for
a shortcut.  But can't figure out how to get that done in W8.  Do you know?

I also have a problem on the W8 desktop triggering the icons along the right
side for settings, search, etc.  Seems that when I'm really trying to get
those icons to appear I can't. Then after a few tries they do appear.  Is
there a trick to that?

Thanks

Rocky


-----Original Message-----
From: accessd-bounces at databaseadvisors.com
[mailto:accessd-bounces at databaseadvisors.com] On Behalf Of Arthur Fuller
Sent: Thursday, August 22, 2013 2:53 AM
To: Access Developers discussion and problem solving
Subject: Re: [AccessD] Future of Windows XP

I must confess to the same sin, Charlotte. After a couple of days'
frustration, Icoupld with reading a guide from Packt, I discovered the magic
of the Windows key, and that changed everything. The new laptop I just
recently bought (which came with Win8 installed), with 8GB RAM and 1TB hard
disk, also helped significantly. I spend half my time in Linux, but I must
say that Win8 is a significant leap forward from Win7. Once I learned that
you can drag them tiles into a configuration that suits you, then it was a
game-changer. Now my Start tile-set only remotely resembles the original
setup, and works way more efficiently. I also have a 23" monitor attached to
said laptop, in stretch-mode, and that too is a significant step forward.

Arthur


On Wed, Aug 21, 2013 at 8:12 PM, Charlotte Foust
<charlotte.foust at gmail.com>wrote:

> Darryl,
>
> I've been using Win 8 since March and I love it.  The speed is 
> excellent and my machine (with a registry tweak, IIRC) automatically 
> loads the desktop after the start menu.  I've found Win 8 to be stable 
> too.  The "fuss" is all UI and getting used to not having tidy menus 
> any more.  I also like Office 2013.
>
> Charlotte
>
>
> On Tue, Aug 20, 2013 at 1:05 AM, Darryl Collins < 
> darryl at whittleconsulting.com.au> wrote:
>
> > Hi Brad,
> >
> > Nearly all the corporate I know of and work with are moving from XP 
> > to
> Win
> > 7. I don't  know of any business that is running win 8 or Office 
> > 2013, although there must be some of them out there.
> >
> > Personally I find Win 8 an abomination to use.  Sure it is fast, but 
> > my god, it is a pain in the ar$e.  I haven't used it a lot, but 
> > those I know who have been using it for months still don't love it. 
> > "I am getting used to it" is the most common refrain, rather than "Wow,
Now I love it!".
> >  Urrrrrgh.  Wait for W9 I say....
> >
> > In corporate land they are nearly always 2 life cycles behind the 
> > cutting edge.  This not only maximises their return on the software 
> > costs, but
> also
> > minimises the upgrade risk as the initial bugs and UI issues are
> generally
> > ironed out by the time the upgrade.  The loose rule is 'Never before 
> > SP1 and preferably post SP2' before even considering the upgrade.
> >
> > Whislt some businesses / Corporate I work with are on Office 2007, 
> > most
> of
> > them have gone from XP / Office 2003 straight to Win 7 - Office 2010.
> >  Honestly, you can largely consider Office 2007 as the beta release 
> > for 2010 and most of the IT folks who make the decisions are onto 
> > that.  2010 is pretty good to work with, where as 2007 has plenty of 
> > annoyances, even today.
> >
> > As for XP security, there would be some risk if an exploit is found 
> > that it will not be patched.  Most folks in business will upgrade 
> > when the support runs out.  But I guess that is up the them and 
> > there needs and budgets.
> >
> > Good luck.
> >
> > Win 7 is a nice OS, stable, quiet and fuss free.  Worth considering.  
> > If possible give your old XP machines max RAM, 4GB if they are on less.
> >
> >
> > ________________________________________
> > From: accessd-bounces at databaseadvisors.com < 
> > accessd-bounces at databaseadvisors.com> on behalf of Brad Marks < 
> > BradM at blackforestltd.com>
> > Sent: Tuesday, 20 August 2013 5:07 AM
> > To: Access Developers discussion and problem solving
> > Subject: [AccessD] Future of Windows XP
> >
> > All,
> >
> > I work part time for a small manufacturing firm (about 50 employees) 
> > with a very limited IT budget.
> >
> > Currently there are about 20 older PCs running Windows XP (SP3).  
> > There are two purchased application systems and a number of Access 
> > 2007 applications.
> >
> > It is my understanding that Microsoft is dropping all support 
> > (including security updates) for XP in April of 2014.
> >
> > My background is primarily in application development and database 
> > administration.  In the past, I have relied on fellow employees for 
> > "Operating System issues".
> >
> > I have some dumb questions.
> >
> > How serious is the issue of Microsoft dropping all support for XP 
> > next April?
> >
> > What are most firms migrating to?  Win-7?  Win-8?
> >
> > I would guess that either Win-7 or Win-8 will need more horsepower 
> > than XP and neither will run very well on older PCs.  True?
> >
> > Will Access 2007 applications run Okay with either Win-7 or Win-8?
> >
> > Thanks,
> > Brad
> >
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