this post was submitted on 16 Nov 2023
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That link, which it seems you haven't read, is from Microsoft directly, stating their EoL date, so no, that won't change.
You truly don't know what you speak of (the italicized part). It's 32 years old.
That's not changing the goalpost.
You said you have Windows 10, so you can avoid Windowd 11 and it's issues that it has that we have all been discussing in this thread.
All I did was respond with that you won't have Windows 10 forever, so you won't be able to avoid Windows 11, which you acknowledged...
Yes, I'm glad companies never change their minds about their policies. When they set a date they always keep to it and have never gone back to it due to consumer demand. Oh except they do that a fair bit. Guess we'll just have to see what Microsoft actually does when it comes time.
32 years is indeed young lol. Maybe you are young yourself so it seems older? There are companies that are hundreds of years old that have gone bankrupt in the last few decades, why would Linux be any different? Again, it may work for now but who knows in the future. But 32 years is nothing. There are older Unix-based systems like Itron and QNX still around and commonly used, but not sure they'll last.
And to your last point, I can just keep Windows 10 past 2025... It's not like lack of support forces me up. Do you not realize how many people still use unsupported versions? Check out the XP life cycle: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Windows_XP#Support_lifecycle
95% of ATM's were still using it for example 5 years after mainstream support ended.
So I wasn't going to bother replying, thinking you were either just trolling, or a bot, but my curiosity got the best of me, so I am replying with just one question...
Are you actually aware of the genesis, history, and current status of the ownership of Linux?