From pcworld.com:
"Yet another end is nigh for Windows 7. After months of buildup—Microsoft
killed standalone software sales of the operating system in October
2013, and Windows 7 consumer PCs stopped being manufactured in October 2014—the
venerable OS is finally exiting “mainstream support” on January 13,
2015. And for months now, the Web has been flooded with a wave of
confused or downright fearmongering headlines and articles implying that Windows 7 is following Windows XP into the graveyard.
It's not.
The confusion here stems from Microsoft's maddeningly obtuse naming
conventions. Leaving mainstream support only means that Windows 7 won't
be receiving any new features or product tweaks, such as the impressing-sounding DirectX 12 gaming technology slated to launch with Windows 10. You won't be able to call Microsoft for free help if you run into an issue with Windows 7 either.
Once a Windows desktop operating system leaves mainstream support, it
enters the extended support phase—the very same support phase that
Windows XP found itself in from early 2009 until its death earlier this
year.
You'll still receive those oh-so-critical security patches during
extended support, meaning that while Windows 7 won't be in active
development beyond next January, it won't be tossed to the wolves of the
Web, either. Hotfixes
will still be provided, too, assuming they're security related.
(Business can sign up for an extended hotfix support plan if your
company wants hotfix support for non-security issues.) And those
security updates will be coming for a long time, too: Extended support
for Windows 7 lasts until January 14, 2020. Heck, commercial PCs with
Windows 7 Professional will even continue to be sold for the foreseeable future."
Read more here
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