Windows XP just can’t get to its end-of-life fast enough

What does an electronic safe and a undersea fiber optic cable-laying ship have in common? Both are still using Windows XP as their underlying operating system. As Microsoft releases Windows 10 this week and we start getting those annoying upgrade messages, it might be amusing to note exactly how hard it is to rid XP from the entire world. Killing off kudzu is probably easier.

The ship is the Rene Descartes and is laying the latest high-speed fiber on behalf of Google and a consortium of telecoms between Japan and Oregon. It promises to carry traffic at 60 Tbps when it is lit up next year. The ship uses Windows XP to drive its very sensitive GPS systems to lay the cable very precisely on the seabed. In shallower waters, the cable is buried by robotic shovels so that commercial fishing boats and sea life don’t accidentally cut the cord. My guess is that these systems were designed a long time ago when XP was the current OS and it isn’t easy to update them. The French mathematician Descartes would agree, after all he once said: “It is only prudent never to place complete confidence in that by which we have even once been deceived.” Also, with all the dough at stake does anyone want to try to mess with a newer OS?

Okay, you can see why XP is used there. But how about a Brinks safe? Most of the safes that I have seen are room-plus sized things that have very heavy doors and very little to do with computers. Brinks also sells a model called the CompuSafe Galileo, which runs software that keeps track of the money that is inserted into it over the course of the day. The notion is that having this software can make it easier for businesses to manage their cash deposits and make sure that no one has their hand in the till, so to speak. Think of this as the industrial-sized version of your banking smartphone app, where you don’t have to actually deposit a check and wait for it to clear but still get credit to your account. The Brinks safe (pictured below) does the same, and can free up time that a business would normally spend on counting the cash and reconciling it with its bank deposits.

However, the safe also runs Windows XP and what is worse, sports a USB port on the outside. At the DefCon conference this week, security researchers showed how they could reboot the safe and take control of its systems, and mess with its underlying Microsoft Access database to open its door and steal the money inside. Yes, you are reading this correctly. All it took was 100 lines of code to make this happen.

And while most of you know the Italian astronomer Galileo, you might not recall one of his more pity quotes: “I do not feel obliged to believe that the same God who has endowed us with sense, reason, and intellect has intended us to forgo their use.” Great words to live by, as Brinks struggles to remove those USB drives and make XP really operate in Safe Mode.

4 thoughts on “Windows XP just can’t get to its end-of-life fast enough

  1. David, why stop there? What about all the ATMs and Point-of-Sale computers still running XP? Are we wise to trust them? How long before many of them get hacked, draining bank accounts of trusting people. BTW, I have not used an ATM in I don’t know how many years. I march into the bank and get in line to do my banking business.

  2. Dude, I just retired a Windows XP machine. I am STILL using a 2003 era machine that boots with DOS and then runs my SMTP/POP e mail, firewall, DNS, list server, FTP server, etc. I do not plan on replacing it any time soon and I have been using that software since 1993. I also use a DOS based contact management system called Telemagic I’ve had since 1986 within Windows 7.

    You might like my Horse Sense #125 article “Lessons Learned from Ancient PCs” http://www.ih-online.com/hs125.html and my comments about why Windows 10 may not improve productivity in http://www.ih-online.com/hs127.html

    If something does the job, then it is OK. If you have something later and greater and it doesn’t improve the job you are doing, then there isn’t all that big an incentive to change, even if the underlying software is “unsupported” by the manufacturer.

    There are a lot of “embedded” systems out there and changing to a new OS is very hard, like ATMs and Kiosks that run XP. Also, do you want to change one out that expects to be contacting the mothership and its friends all the time like Windows 10 or one that is really quiet on your network, like Windows XP?

    To fix the USB port problem, all you need to do is epoxy it closed.

  3. Wonderful piece, David. I intend to use your Galileo quote in a future article. You’re still a good writer, and still brilliant. Hope all is well in your life, and your gorgeous Maya is doing fine. She’s still 8, right?
    FYI, Anjali is now president of a science tour company, and I’m still here in the Catskill mountains, and still flying my plane!!
    Best, Bob

  4. If the machine is not connected to the network and is fully patched it should not be a problem. Windows XP is the most stable system Microsoft has developed and I held onto mine for at least five years longer than I should have because of this.

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