Pure nonsense. Firefox still supports Windows 2000, Opera still supports it as well, and also Windows 98 and Windows ME.A lot of the people here like to sound cool and criticize people who prefer to stay with older software they are comfortable with. I know you guys like to sound smart and cool, and use this as a way, but, realistically, you don't know much of anything. People get comfortable with something, and they don't need to change it if it isn't broken. I personally don't like retraining people because Microsoft found another bad way of presenting things. There really hasn't been any use for a new operating system since Windows 2000, but Microsoft has to keep making them so they can generate more money. They could make tweaks, of course, but, really, the UI changes haven't been good (almost all techs I know go back to the "classic look"), and the OS is a lot slower and consumes much more memory. Most of all, people are comfortable with their old OS, and the new one doesn't do anything it couldn't do without relatively minor internal tweaks.[/citation]
This whole posts of someone that doesn't understand the connection between software and hardware and is scared of any change.
There is no nonsense about it. If you understood the changes coming, you would see why the OS will no longer function properly. Go ahead and keep running CS4 on Windows 2000 with 1 GB of RAM and 4x AGP and let me know how that works for you. You're post is flat out wrong and based on opinion.