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Windows XP

Exclusive Hands-On With OLPC’s XO Running Windows XP

August 6th, 2008 by Joanna Stern

Windows Microsoft officially announced that it was going to port over Windows XP to One Laptop Per Child’s XO laptop in May. Along with the announcement they put up a video of how XP performs on the machine that was originally built to support Sugar, the Linux OS that was designed to promote learning by doing.

Come September, XOs with a dual boot Windows XP and Linux Sugar OS will be shipping to developing countries. LAPTOP Magazine headed up to Cambridge to get an exclusive, and the first unbiased glimpse at the tweaked Windows XP running on the OLPC XO.

Back in May we wondered how the XO with its 256 MB of RAM and 1GB SSD would handle Windows XP. Could the bare bones system run smoothly? Would it support features, like mesh networking, that we found so compelling in the original Sugar OS? Could it really boot in 50 seconds like Bohdan in the Microsoft video promised?

We got the answers to all those questions and also learned that using the XO with Windows XP is a completely different experience than using the original Sugar interface. Sure, that much is obvious, but we are prefacing this mini-review by saying that the following is not a column on which operating system we prefer, it is a look at the performance of XP on the current XO hardware.

Updated Editor’s Note: It has been brought to our attention that the XO we saw yesterday at OLPC’s offices was not the final release of the XP software. In fact, OLPC showed us a prototype XO that should significantly differ from the final release to Microsoft manufacturing (RTM) version.

Michael Gartenberg of Jupiter Research has actually had the RTM version of the XO with XP for a few weeks and is reporting that his experience has NOT been the same as ours. The XO with XP that we saw did not have the correct commercial BIOS slated to ship in Phase-1 devices nor the final 2GB SD card. Gartenberg reports that his system boots in less than a minute. OLPC and Microsoft have told us that application boot time is much quicker.

We are planning to see the final RTM version from Microsoft in the next few weeks. We will then do a second review and update our impressions.

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Kicking XP to the Curb. Almost.

June 30th, 2008 by Joanna Stern

Goodbyes are always tough. And today we say goodbye to a dear old friend, Microsoft Windows XP. Kind of. Today is the last day to buy Windows XP from retail channels, but many notebook vendors with the help of Microsoft will still offer Windows XP on select systems. Mostly thanks to the ill-received successor, Windows Vista, Microsoft has agreed to keep XP running in certain situations.

Earlier we put together a full FAQ on the future of Windows XP. The key takeaways: Windows XP will still be available from PC vendors as a “downgrade” option from Vista Business and Ultimate as well as on mini-notebooks. Because Vista is just too chunky to run on a mini-notebook, like we saw with the HP 2133 Mini-Note, XP will continue to be sold on what Microsoft calls ULCPCs (ultra-low-cost PCS) until June 30, 2010.

Mini-notebook lovers can only hope that Microsoft replaces Vista with a less chunky operating system by 2010. Something tells me Windows 7 won’t be the answer. Maybe by then we won’t need an OS, and we can simply live in a Linux system or even in the Cloud.

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