• bleistift2@sopuli.xyz
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    22 hours ago

    They can’t totally remove the old APIs because every app that uses them would break.

    For every other company I would buy that argument. But for one that forces customers to throw away millions of computers which can’t run Win 11… no.

    • Eheran@lemmy.world
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      8 hours ago

      People having to buy new hardware for new software is and has been normal forever.

      People losing access to their software because the OS changes how it deals with something did happen, but that is not something anyone wants.

    • danA
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      22 hours ago

      Windows 11 can still run old apps. My wife just installed Zoo Tycoon, a game released in 2001, on her laptop and it works perfectly. She didn’t even have to manually enable any compatibility options. Even some apps from the Windows 95 era still work.

      Practically all Microsoft Office versions from Office 95 onwards still work too. Backwards compatibility is very important for businesses, since it can cost a lot of money to upgrade to newer software.

      16-bit Windows 3.0 apps used to work, but only in 32-bit versions of Windows, so they’re no longer supported in Windows 11 (as it’s only available for 64-bit). You can run them on 32-bit versions of Windows 10 though, as long as you install NTVDM.