Vista had 1.74 percent market share, and the three old OS X versions had a combined 1.17 percent. Last month, XP still had over 11 percent market share, according to Net Applications. Many XP users thus choose to use third-party browsers like Chrome. IE9 is only available for Windows Vista and Windows 7, while IE10 and IE11 are only for Windows 7 and Windows 8. Windows XP users cannot upgrade to newer versions of Microsoft’s browser: IE8 is the latest version they can install. The company was already going out of its way to support XP a year longer than Microsoft, but two years is really bending over backwards. Google’s extensions are a little ridiculous. Keep in mind that Microsoft retired Mainstream Support for Windows XP on April 14, 2009, and then pulled Extended Support for the operating system on April 8, 2014. The company then pushed the date back until December 2015. In October 2013, Google originally announced it would retire Chrome support for Windows XP in April 2015. Google rightly explained that “such older platforms are missing critical security updates,” “have a greater potential to be infected by viruses and malware,” and “are no longer actively supported by Microsoft and Apple.” If you want to receive the latest Chrome versions and features, the company thus advises you to move to a newer operating system.
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