Gartner just laid down the boom and said PC sales are going to completely tank by almost 12%. Of course, news like this makes computer and computer component manufacturers completely freak out.
The computer market at this point is saturated. Proof of this is not hard to find because said honestly, how many people do you know that do not have a computer these days? Probably not that many, if any at all.
What does the predicted (keyword there) sales drop mean to you?
First, for current generation hardware, prices are down.
This is why I am urging people to get while the getting is good and upgrade to a new computer box if what you have is old. Dell has slashed prices as have more or less all other OEMs, and the prices at NewEgg, TigerDirect and other computer hardware retailers have gone down also.
Second, for future hardware, prices will most likely go up.
If people buy less and less PC hardware, the price of said hardware will inevitably go up just to make ends meet as far as the manufacturer is concerned. And while it’s true certain hardware does incrementally increase in price over time, the next few years could see a sharper increase than usual.
Third, even with the upcoming Windows 7 release, this does mean more people will be staying with XP longer.
Because of the sales drop looming, people are being urged to stick with their older hardware. That being the case, an older OS obviously runs better on older hardware, and that screams "stay with XP" for many.
If the sales drop prediction becomes true, the demand for modern computing to work with older OSes will become greater.
My recommendations?
As said above, buy/upgrade now. Go for that quad-core CPU and new motherboard, the 4GB of RAM and the 500GB/1TB hard drive and so on. The prices are really good at present.
Acquire a legal copy of XP. If you don’t have a "recovery CD" from your OEM box with XP on it, buy a license. I did so a few years ago and don’t regret it. And if you don’t feel like spending the cash on that..
Learn Linux. Part of where Linux shines is whenever the computer industry is in trouble sales-wise. Why? Because when the corporate machine fails, the community kicks in to pick up the slack.
What would you recommend for long-haul computing with older hardware?
Your current hardware will eventually become old. What are you doing now to prepare for that? Let us know.

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