Crazy Needness Planned Obsolescence of Windows 10
Donald Harvey Marks
physician, scientist and 3rd gen vet
Microsoft's decision to end Windows 10 support in October 2025 is the most recent and glaring example of planned obsolescence, specifically focusing on electronic waste, customer inconvenience and needless stress on the poor worldwide. This transition forces a massive hardware turnover because many existing computers lack the TPM 2.0 chips and specific CPU requirements necessary to officially run Windows 11. Many people are trapped. What was Bill Gates thinking?
Experts warn this policy could lead to hundreds of millions of functional devices becoming e-waste, while also creating significant cybersecurity vulnerabilities for those who cannot afford to upgrade. To combat these issues, users are exploring alternatives such as Linux distributions, specialized IoT Enterprise editions, and third-party tools like Rufus to bypass installation restrictions. Simultaneously, international advocacy groups like Euroconsumers are pushing for right-to-repair legislation and mandatory software update durations to protect consumers from artificial product lifespans. Ultimately, this highlights a growing tension between corporate security standards and the environmental and economic impact of forced technological aging.
0 Comments
Comment from personal blog