Not that many people will care, but techie geeks may care to note that today is the final day of Windows 2000 support (oh, and XP SP2 aswell - you now need to have SP3 installed to keep getting updates for XP). From tomorrow, 13 July, it will officially become an obsolete product with no more security updates issued. Whilst at the moment most new hardware and (non-Microsoft) software continues to support Windows 2000, it is inevitable that before long this support will be withdrawn and it will be as useful in a modern computing environment as Windows 95.
2000 arguably represented the biggest step forward from a previous version which Windows has ever made, it was the first version to combine the performance and ease of use from the Windows 9x versions with the rock-solid stability from Windows NT. In my view, this is the point at which the 'consumer' and 'professional' versions of Windows *should* have merged.
Almost all of the technical advancements attributed to XP were actually introduced in 2000 first.
Sadly, what should have been the most significant version of Windows ever turned out to lead a somewhat short and uneventful mainstream life, with a marketing decision made to sell it only as a corporate operating system landing consumers with the dreaded Windows ME, and a severe lack of drivers at launch leaving it incompatible with a lot of hardware for several months after release.
Then, just 18 months after release it was replaced with Windows XP, which (in RTM form at least) was essentially the same operating system but marketed differently and with a new fisher price interface which drew people in.
A few years after XP's tenure started, Microsoft did the same thing with 2000/XP as they did with 95/98 and made 2000 incompatible with significant new Microsoft software and updates, even though there was no technical reason to do so - forcibly sending it to an early grave even though it was technically just as capable as XP.
Incidentally, Microsoft's support life-cycle policy for Internet Explorer commits them to supporting not only the latest version, but also the version which originally came with all currently supported operating systems. This means that until now, the ancient IE 5.01 (!) was technically still a supported browser receiving monthly security updates, despite being incapable of opening almost all modern websites.
So, goodbye to the simpler times of a Windows 95-derived interface then.
