Myfordman":2v7xgvzh said:
So what am I missing by sticking to XP?
For machine CNC work, you're missing nothing. We still supply refurb computers with Dos6, win98 and XP for wood and metal CNC and metal milling machines. It's what old software runs happily on and does a specific task perfectly, supports legacy ports natively, so no need to update, indeed updating could mean spending hundreds on new versions of the software unessisarily.
I have pentium 2, 3 and 4 computers kept back from our recycling programme for the purpose.
If you want to 'bag' the free copy of win 10, run the update before August, revert back straight away to previous system whether 7 or 8 then you can do a clean install of Win 10 at any time in the future for the life of the motherboard in that computer.
There is no great need to go from 7 to 10, but I think 8 to 10 is a massive improvement in usability.
Like others on here I upgrade machines on a daily basis as part of my work. I also have the job of sorting the large amount of Win10 upgrades that fail to a greater or lesser degree.
My advice, if you're not computer savvy, your needs are simple, and the computer does what you want it to now, don't do the upgrade.
Phil
PS. I really like Win 10 as a pure install, far quicker than Win7, and just as stable. The real annoyance is the constant update re-writes happening of late, taking 10-15 minutes after the computer restarts.