


Even applications that work can be blocked by installers that refuse to let you install the software. It amazes me how often it is the installers that determine what platforms any given piece of software will support. It might be more of a bureaucratic decision than a development one, though we’d need more information to know for sure.Ī final factor could be the installers.

I understand that, but I was curious about the specifics because I’m currently drawing blanks as to what specifically chrome needs from windows 10/11 on top of what windows 7/8 has. It is not just new APIs either but deprecated APIs that you no longer need to support. I am not sure what Windows 7 lacks that browsers may start using but it seems there is always something devs wants to use if give them a different minimum version. The same thing happened when they dropped Windows 2000. When browsers dropped support for Windows XP, they started to use API calls that XP did not have.
