Posted on 03/23/2017 6:12:51 PM PDT by dayglored
Mark your calendar: Microsoft's promise to cut off Win7 and 8.1 support for the latest PCs will cause howls of pain next month
Events of the past week have drawn into sharp focus the likely result of next month's patching cycle. If you have a Windows 7 or 8.1 PC that you bought, built, or upgraded in the past year or so, it would behoove you to understand exactly what Microsoft plans.
Many people -- I'll raise my hand here -- thought that Skylake-based computers would continue to receive Windows 7 and 8.1 patches until the respective end-of-life. We are wrong.
Let's start with the basics. Intel introduced its so-called 6th Generation Skylake processor in August 2015. It slowly replaced the older Broadwell series, all of which will continue to work with Win7 and 8.1. Skylake now is slowly being replaced by 7th Generation Kaby Lake processors, which will not get Win7 or 8.1 support from Microsoft. To date, Intel has released 50 or so different Skylake processors. There are also dozens of Kaby Lake processors, which were introduced in August 2016.
On the AMD side there's a distinction made between the older Opteron series, the APU series (which includes Kaveri, Carrizo, and Bristol Ridge processors, named Athlon, Sempron, A4, A6, and E4) and the brand-new Ryzen processors, which are only now appearing on store shelves. Most observers say that 7th Generation AMD chips start with the Bristol Ridge APUs, which appeared in May, 2016. There's no change at all between the core architecture of the Carrizo and Bristol Ridge chips.
As I'll explain later, the distinction between 6th Generation Carrizo and 7th Generation Bristol Ridge is pivotal. To see if you have a Bristol Ridge chip, as opposed to a Carrizo chip, use Speccy to find your APU model number, then look up your APU model number for Bristol Ridge desktop processors or portable processors.
The whole Windows 7/8.1 support mess started in January of last year, when Windows honcho Terry Myerson declared that "as new silicon generations are introduced, they will require the latest Windows platform at that time for support." At first, Myerson promised:
Through July 17, 2017, Skylake devices on the supported list will also be supported with Windows 7 and 8.1. During the 18-month support period, these systems should be upgraded to Windows 10 to continue receiving support after the period ends. After July 2017, the most critical Windows 7 and Windows 8.1 security updates will be addressed for these configurations, and will be released if the update does not risk the reliability or compatibility of the Windows 7/8.1 platform on other devices.
Screams from enterprise customers reached all the way to the hallowed halls of Redmond. The promised demise of Win7 on Skylake machines changed later in January, then in March 2016, and in August 2016 they changed again. As of August, Microsoft exec Shad Larsen promised:
This policy change primarily applies to our commercial customers who are currently managing deployments with Windows 7 and Windows 8.1, and does not apply to customers running Windows 10 ... future silicon platforms, including Intel's upcoming 7th Gen Intel Core (Kaby Lake) processor family and AMD's 7th generation processors (e.g. Bristol Ridge) will only be supported on Windows 10, and all future silicon releases will require the latest release of Windows 10....
6th Gen Intel Core devices on Windows 7 and Windows 8.1 will be supported with all applicable security updates until the end of support for Windows 7 and Windows 8.1.... This change is made possible through the strong partnership with our OEM partners and Intel who will be performing security update validation testing and upgrade testing for 6th Gen Intel Core systems running Windows 7 and Windows 8.1 through the end of support dates.
On the same day, Microsoft updated a list of Skylake systems supported on Windows 7 and Windows 8.1 that includes links to manufacturer's websites, listing specific model numbers that the manufacturer commits to support with Windows 7 and 8.1 updates. The 12 deputized manufacturers and the links provided by Microsoft are:
Sites like Dell's are just as confused as I was. Dell says, "Microsoft originally indicated Skylake support would end in 2017. Microsoft has now extended Skylake support for Windows 7 through January 14, 2020 and for Windows 8.1 through January 10, 2023."
That isn't quite true. Microsoft has said that Dell will extend support for its listed Skylake systems through end-of-life for Win7 and 8.1.
Here are the conclusions that I draw from Microsoft's statements:
I don't know what Microsoft intends to do with AMD chips. The way the announcements stand, AMD Bristol Ridge PCs won't have Win7 or 8.1 support, and there's no magic list of manufacturers or machines that are exempt from the ruling.
So if you're running a recent-vintage PC and using Windows 7 or 8.1, what happens if you run afoul of the patch police? It's all well and good if Win7 is "no longer supported" on your PC, but what does that mean in real terms? Will your PC halt and catch fire?
Thanks to several reports that I talked about yesterday, including the tales of woe from folks who installed a Monthly Rollup Preview, I'm willing to bet that the blockade will unfold like this:
Step 1: April 10 rolls around, and about noon, Microsoft pushes its usual Patch Tuesday updates out the automatic update chute.
Step 2: Those gullible (or trusting) enough to have Win7 or 8.1 Automatic Update turned on will get the April Monthly Rollup (that is, the "April 2017 Security Monthly Quality Rollup"), which will install the next time the machine's rebooted.
Step 3: The Monthly Rollup installs itself and makes changes to Windows Update Agent, effectively preventing Windows Update from running again on this machine. The installer displays this message: IDG
The machine won't be destroyed, if this scenario plays out the way I think it will. Your PC will just have Windows Update disabled. (Which some people view as a feature, not a problem, but I digress.) We're still poking and prodding on the AskWoody Lounge to see what, exactly, gets disabled. None of this is documented anywhere, of course.
It's important to note that machines connected to a corporate Update Server (WSUS, SCCM, or the like) will only get the Monthly Rollup if it's pushed out by the admin. Even if Windows Update gets clobbered, it's unlikely that domain-managed PCs will suffer any ill effect, as they don't use Windows Update the same way most of us do. I have no idea how Microsoft intends to block Win7 updates on recent PCs attached to an update-managed domain.
This scenario brings up an obvious question: Will your machine get update-kneecapped? I don't know. There's no program I know of that you can run (short of a Monthly Rollup Preview, which I never recommend) that will definitively say, "If you install the Monthly Rollup in April, Windows Update will get disabled."
At this point, there's no warning either. No "Click here to install the Monthly Rollup and disable Windows Update going forward" safety net. All you get is a loud thud and that Unsupported hardware notice.
Will Microsoft go ahead with this latest push to get well-heeled customers, with the latest hardware, to change to Windows 10? Microsoft's under no obligation to support Windows 7 and 8.1 on any hardware that appears at a future date. I think. But this approach, if it unfolds in this manner, is sure to rankle more-advanced users who have paid for both Windows 7 and for a shiny new CPU.
We should know a lot more on April 10.
Whatever I have works; that's all that matters to me.
And I'm most assuredly NOT going to pay for it!
That's correct. Both the article and all my comments are very clear on that fact.
Why? Did you find a statement to the contrary?
And the situation for Skylake CPUs is mixed. According to Microsoft, selected manufacturers will continue support for Win7/8.1 on Skylake CPUs, but all others are out of luck. The article has some pretty clear details and links to more info.
I’d certainly set a restore point as soon as possible so I could roll back any future updates if they trash my system. In fact, I just interrupted typing this to set one so I wouldn’t get caught flat footed.
I’ll do that tomorrow; thanks for the advice!
“I may have that, I don’t know.
Whatever I have works; that’s all that matters to me.”
==
Windows is high maintenance, baby!
A nice thing about using Linux, when it comes to a bug or security issue - it’s fixed very quickly & the update is ready to be installed. Windows is like a huge ship that needs a lot of room to turn around, Linux is more like a tugboat - things get fixed much swifter.
But I use both Win 7 and Linux in “dual boot”, which means when the PC starts up, I can choose to use use either one. Both have their pluses & minuses.
As far as I'm concerned, Windows is a NO MAINTENANCE thing and always has been that. I turn on my laptop and just do whatever I want or need to do on it. If THAT is "high maintenance", then I'm the president of the world! LOL
If I had to "fix" something, it would stay BROKEN; so I have no idea what you're talking about.
For probably 95 percent of FR users this won’t affect them. Just more scare tactics by Linux advocates.
or from attractive women who claim they want to meet you.
= = =
Nancy Pelosi keeps e-mailing me. You mean I should not answer?
They're willing to lose a lot of customers, in order to get all the rest on Windows 10.
There are many vibrant conspiracy theories speculations about why this might be the case.
Personally I think it's just the advertising that is so prominent in Windows 10. And getting worse.
Microsoft has "monetized" the Windows desktop.
“As far as I’m concerned, Windows is a NO MAINTENANCE thing and always has been that. I turn on my laptop and just do whatever I want or need to do on it. If THAT is “high maintenance”, then I’m the president of the world! LOL
If I had to “fix” something, it would stay BROKEN; so I have no idea what you’re talking about.”
==
All I can suggest then is that you practice safe computing.
By the way, if you’re going to make a restore point as a backup plan, you should probably make 2 or 3 of them for extra backup, since sometimes a restore point just doesn’t work. It helps to have more than one to try instead if the first one doesn’t work.
Whats a restore point? and how do you set it...I have vista
No, Sir, I disagree.
This issue will affect most anyone who purchased a new computer in the last year or so, and anyone who purchases one in the future, with a modern CPU and the hope of running Windows 7 or 8.1 on it. Microsoft promised security/bug-fix support until 2020 for Windows 7 and 2023 for Windows 8.1. Windows 7 is still far and away the favorite flavor of Windows in use, and is holding its own rather better than expected against the slow climb of Windows 10.
So I would wager that probably more like a third of FR users either are already affected, or will be within the coming year or later. FReepers are Conservatives, not Luddites. :-)
Posting this information on how our fellow FReepers can do what they want: Run their chosen operating system -- Windows 7 -- on their new computer, seems entirely reasonable and potentially helpful.
BTW, I'm not a Linux advocate; I use it just like I use Win7 and Win10 and MacOS and Unix. I even caution people who want to switch from Windows to Linux that it ain't for everybody, and there's a learning curve. Geez, I run the Windows Ping List -- the Linux (Tech) Ping List is run by ShadowAce. Here's what I am, if you're interested.
MSFT’s pronouncements sound like government speak.
I am running Win 7 Pro and have had updates turned off for over a year with no downside. Gee, that was easy*.
As far as I’m concerned, Win 7 is my last OS.
On the other hand, maybe I’ve just been lucky.
* Disclaimer: I am using a good anti-virus program that updates itself at least daily, run weekly scans with the av program and Malwarebytes, use Ad Block Plus and Ghostery with my browser and am really careful where I go on the Internet.
A basic question for a non-techie:
I’m running Win 7 on a Dell desktop. How do I find out whether I’m affected by the upcoming MS update. I’ve seen the machine list on the Dell link above and need to now which machine I’m using (without unplugging everything and pulling it out from behind my desk). Is machine and chip information available via the control panel and if so, how do I access it?
I don't do banking on my laptop, pay bills, play games,nor go to weird sites; unless others find this site, Drudge, etc. to be "weird". I try to be as careful as I can be.
Yeah, we’re specifically ordering “Hybrid” Kaby Lake computers from HP for my hardware refresh this year. Basically, it’s guaranteed support for Windows 7.
Sorry, I don’t remember how to do it with Vista, but since this issue doesn’t appear to reach back that far, I’m not sure that I would worry. Haven’t they already cut support for Vista machines?
Thanks for the link to the various Linux versions. I’ve bookmarked it, as I’m pretty sure Linux is in my future.
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