It's probably because, true or not, not the best argument. Other than the fact Microsoft ended support Windows XP is fine. It does the job. It's not the latest and greatest, but right to the end it was better than acceptable or tolerable, it was downright decent.
A hardware refresh at work gave me a 7 box, but I've still got my old XP box in a corner somehwere, heavily firewalled ofc now that support has ended, I remote desktop into it 5-10 times a month now for the few straglers I haven't migrated off, and its fine.
Yeah legacy does have support costs, but as I said, you're not building openbsd from source nor would you be if they were on a trendy vcs. That's why they mirror libressl on github, this is a case where they know outsiders might care. And one vcs or another you're going to the mailing list to submit a patch to them, so until you're in it, don't really matter.
It's probably because, true or not, not the best argument. Other than the fact Microsoft ended support Windows XP is fine. It does the job. It's not the latest and greatest, but right to the end it was better than acceptable or tolerable, it was downright decent.
A hardware refresh at work gave me a 7 box, but I've still got my old XP box in a corner somehwere, heavily firewalled ofc now that support has ended, I remote desktop into it 5-10 times a month now for the few straglers I haven't migrated off, and its fine.
Yeah legacy does have support costs, but as I said, you're not building openbsd from source nor would you be if they were on a trendy vcs. That's why they mirror libressl on github, this is a case where they know outsiders might care. And one vcs or another you're going to the mailing list to submit a patch to them, so until you're in it, don't really matter.