Windows 7 finally support the operating system in ancient CPU

Windows 7 and CPU: In August of 2000, almost 18 years ago, Intel unveiled its latest Pentium 4 processor. The Pentium 4 has many advantages over Pentium III.

The processor had a new set of multimedia instructions (called SSE2), which allow the chip to process the media in parallel, thus speeding up performance.Windows 7

Believe it or not, some people are still running Windows 7 on their PCs Pentium III. However, Windows 7 security updates do not agree.

Adding support for Streaming SIMD Extensions 2 (SSE2) was a big deal at the time. It was a feature released in 2000. By 2004 every mainstream processor supported this feature. Modern PCs still use the technology but in a more sophisticated form since the latest version is SSE 4.2.

SSE2 support became a prerequisite for 2012 when Microsoft announced that it was one of the three compulsory CPU features required for its new operating system. Windows 10 has the same requirements.

But this happened six years ago, which is an eternity in the field of computing. The surprise (?) Came in the March we spent on Windows 7.

The issue started with the monthly 2018 security update for Windows 7 in March. The update KB4088875, includes the following warning in "Known Issues":

There is a crash on computers that do not support Streaming Single Instructions Multiple Data (SIMD) Extensions 2 (SSE2)
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A Stop error occurs on computers that do not support Streaming Single Instructions Multiple Data (SIMD) Extensions 2 (SSE2).

In the pre (June 2018), the text reads:

"Upgrade your systems with a processor that supports SSE2 or virtualization of these machines."
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"Upgrade your machines with a processor that supports SSE2 or virtualize those machines."

It's about of Microsoft's commitment to support its customers using Windows 7? The terms of Microsoft's Business, Developer and Desktop Operations Policy state this situation:

Microsoft is committed to providing products with improved security. Although we are trying to eliminate the vulnerabilities during development, these remain and so we must be ready to respond when they are discovered. Microsoft advises customers to install the latest software versions, security updates, and service packs to stay as secure as possible. […] Older products may not meet today's security requirements. Microsoft may not be able to provide security updates for older products.

That's exactly what happened here. With the March update, cumulative updates to Windows 7 could not be installed on a Pentium III-based system.
Microsoft has not revealed the reason for this incompatibility, but you do not have to imagine that the problem is most likely related to Spectre and Meltdown vulnerabilities that affect all Intel processors.

As it turns out, the huge changes required by the kernel patches for Meltdown / Specter vulnerabilities were exaggerated for the Pentium III family. So these systems stopped being supported by Windows 7.

Is Microsoft responsible for supporting ancient processors? Or is it your responsibility to use 18 for a PC?
Last year, Microsoft stopped supporting updates to a new version of Windows 10 on a very small number of Windows 10 computers but agreed to continue providing security updates until 2023. The company extended security updates because all incidents involved hardware that was almost new.

Asking for hardware support that is 18 is not the same. So if you're one of the very few who still use Pentium III, it's a good idea to remember the words of great George Burns:

I get up every morning and read the column of obituary. If my name is not there, I eat breakfast.

For those trying to extend the life of a 1990 computer, read the above obituary, leave breakfast and go shopping.

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Written by giorgos

George still wonders what he's doing here ...

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