by CIO Staff

Microsoft Windows XP SP1 to Soon Lose Support

News
Oct 06, 20062 mins
Small and Medium BusinessWindows

Microsoft is recommending that all customers still running Windows XP SP1 immediately upgrade to Windows XP SP2, as the company’s support for SP1 will end next week.

The Microsoft Support Lifecycle Policy for Windows XP SP1 ends on Tuesday, according to the company’s website.

Microsoft initially planned to end support for Windows XP SP1 on Sept. 17, 2006, two years after Windows XP SP2 was released. However, earlier this year, Microsoft shifted the final support date for XP SP1 to Oct. 10.

Microsoft typically provides 12 months of support for service packs, but will extend that support period for products that it thinks customers need extra help and time to install.

For typical consumer products, Microsoft provides five years of mainstream support. Business customers and developers typically get 10 years of support—five of mainstream support and five of what is called “extended” support.

Microsoft expects to release the next major upgrade to the Windows client OS, Windows Vista, to business customers next month, and to consumers in January 2007. Though the release has been delayed several times, the general consensus among analysts is that Microsoft will hit its latest release target for Vista.

-Elizabeth Montalbano, IDG News Service (New York Bureau)

Related Links:

  • Microsoft Windows Vista May Ship on Schedule

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