• jordanlund@lemmy.world
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    8 months ago

    Windows at least makes sense when you understand the reasoning.

    For years websites have been warning people their OS is out of date if it detected they were running Windows 95 or Windows 98.

    They did this by pulling the version and displaying the warning “if version = Windows 9*”

    So it would have been super embarrassing to have a brand new OS trigger out of date warnings. Skip over Windows 9 and go straight to 10, problem solved.

    • zewm@lemmy.zip
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      8 months ago

      That should be up to the websites to fix, not Microsoft.

      This seems like a made up reason.

      • m_f@midwest.social
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        8 months ago

        There’s at least one example you can look at, the Jenkins CI project had code like that (if (name.startsWith("windows 9")) {):

        https://issues.jenkins.io/secure/attachment/18777/PlatformDetail

        Microsoft, for all their faults, do (or at least did) take backwards compatibility very seriously, and the option of “just make devs fix it” would never fly. Here’s a story about how they added special code to Windows 95 to make SimCity’s broken code work on it:

        Windows 95? No problem. Nice new 32 bit API, but it still ran old 16 bit software perfectly. Microsoft obsessed about this, spending a big chunk of change testing every old program they could find with Windows 95. Jon Ross, who wrote the original version of SimCity for Windows 3.x, told me that he accidentally left a bug in SimCity where he read memory that he had just freed. Yep. It worked fine on Windows 3.x, because the memory never went anywhere. Here’s the amazing part: On beta versions of Windows 95, SimCity wasn’t working in testing. Microsoft tracked down the bug and added specific code to Windows 95 that looks for SimCity. If it finds SimCity running, it runs the memory allocator in a special mode that doesn’t free memory right away. That’s the kind of obsession with backward compatibility that made people willing to upgrade to Windows 95.

        • umbrella@lemmy.ml
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          8 months ago

          video drivers do this nowadays.

          its part of the reason your nvidia driver is gigabytes in size (other than the bloat)

          • Dudewitbow@lemmy.zip
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            8 months ago

            part of the reason why Nvidias drivers are larger is because theres a lot of functionality that nvidia throws onto as software rather than hardware. after kepler, nvidia moved the hardware scheduler off the gpu and into the driver. this resulted in lower power consumption, but higher cpu usage (reletive to amd). Its why AMD gpus fare better when paired with a aging cpu than Nvidia does.

            • umbrella@lemmy.ml
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              8 months ago

              this is interesting as fuck.

              where can i read more about his architectural change?

              • Dudewitbow@lemmy.zip
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                8 months ago

                i cant remember the article that mentions the archetectual change, but theres a few videos, one by Hardware Unboxed that goes over the phenomena.

                I first learned of it when a user who was using an i7-3770k “upgraded” from an AMD R9-290 to a Nvidia 1070 for battlefield reasons (idr which one). the user essentially lost FPS because he was being heavily CPU bottlenecked due to the Nvidia GPU/Driver.

                • umbrella@lemmy.ml
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                  8 months ago

                  that explains that effort to improve gpu scheduling in windows 10 a few years ago. turns out they were just compensating for this.

                  ill look this video up, i love this subject but its hard to get information about it like this!

      • gravitas_deficiency@sh.itjust.works
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        8 months ago

        It’s absolutely not a made-up reason.

        It was a way to get around the fact that Microsoft didn’t use proper version numbers for ages, and it became standard (enough) practice such that MS had to account for it if they didn’t want to break legacy support for a shitload of software that enterprises customers care about.

      • deegeese@sopuli.xyz
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        8 months ago

        It’s not websites, it was about local apps.

        There are a bunch of 20 year old apps designed for Windows XP which would complain that Windows 9 is too old.

      • jordanlund@lemmy.world
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        8 months ago

        Can you imagine? “Microsoft demands all websites update their code for new operating system.”

        The alternative being “Why websites think your new computer is old.”

        Microsoft dodged all of that by skipping a version number and the worst question they get asked is “Where did Windows 9 go?”

        They even had tshirts that said “Because 7 8 9”.

      • saigot@lemmy.ca
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        8 months ago

        Say should all you want, when the user has been using an app for 20 years and then an update breaks it they blame Microsoft not the app. Although I think a big part of it was also choosing 10 as a nice round number for their “”“final”“” os.

    • Voyajer@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      How many sites were checking for pre-NT windows versions at all at the time of the release of windows 10?

    • KoalaUnknown@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      Apple’s kind of makes sense too. The removal of the home button was probably the biggest change ever made to the iPhone so they probably wanted a more impactful number/letter. Also, it was the 10th anniversary of the iPhone.