The thing about falling behind is that the further you fall behind, the further you fall behind. Scads of people use it regularly and have no problems. W10 is not "an atrocious piece of garbage. Either because you choose to or because you are forced to. Eventually your beloved antique computer with it's beloved antique OS is going to die. But I really don't understand the bullheaded resistance to upgrading after four years.īut W7 is going away. I get that those who live on the cutting edge often end up bleeding to death. I get "if it ain't broke, don't fix it." I get not always having to jump on the latest update the minute it drops. I really don't understand the bullheaded resistance to Windows 10. At some point, app developers will discontinue support for unsupported OS. But as mentioned earlier, the older apps should be fine on a modern 64-bit OS, at least for now. and intend to maintain a "legacy" computing environment. Moving to a supported OS would be recommended at that point, unless you plan to be completely self supported. On the Windows 7 topic, I can understand the desire to retain older apps that still work, but Windows 7 will lose support next year. ![]() Then gradually migrate your workflow to the newer 64-bit apps when you are ready. Many 32-bit DAW applications and plugins will still run fine on 64-bit Windows, so you can install your trusted apps side by side with the new versions and still continue to use the 32-bit DAW apps that you are comfortable with. You could acquire a 64-bit computer to try out newer software on. ![]() It seems that many developers have decided to focus their development resources on the 64-bit model. ![]() I don't see many new versions of applications being released in 32-bit these days.
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