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Im still using Windows 7 & 10 @The Question
No. Here's why:Im still using Windows 7 & 10 @The Question
Do you think its still a good choice?
What I do with Windows 7 is just operate all the software/computer offline. For some reason W7 never required an Internet connection to use most conventional software. Nor to even activate it it. Back then a person either phoned or just entered a serial number and that wss it. So I don't try to surf the Internet at all with it. It's always in offline mode.No. Here's why:
Microsoft Windows remains the most heavily-targeted OS family for malware and viruses. Windows 7/10* are no longer patched against those attacks. *10 may still be if you're on ESR, but -- generally speaking -- that may or may not be sufficient.
Moreover, even when it isn't compromised by third-party bad actors, it's just a subpar product compromised by Microsoft themselves, and that's getting worse all the time. Adobe is just as predatory and user-hostile as Microsoft is, last I heard.
Unless you're in a profession which absolutely locks you into a piece of software, odds are high and getting higher than you don't have to stay locked inside Microsoft's corral to do basically anything you want to do on a computer.
Yeah, if it does what you want it to do, offline, then it sounds like you're set.What I do with Windows 7 is just operate all the software/computer offline. For some reason W7 never required an Internet connection to use most conventional software. Nor to even activate it it. Back then a person either phoned or just entered a serial number and that wss it. So I don't try to surf the Internet at all with it. It's always in offline mode.
So I suppose with that method it can never get hacked if it's never online? Guess it's best to kerp it that way, eh?
