In 2016, Chrome stopped supporting Windows XP, Windows Vista, and other systems.
With the increasing maturity of Windows 10, the elimination speed of old systems should also be improved. In addition to the user's own wishes, the relevant software vendors also take the initiative to cooperate. Google is a good example. The company recently announced that Chrome will stop supporting Microsoft Windows XP, Windows Vista, Apple Mac OS X 2016/10.6/10.7 and other old systems in 10.8.
In terms of Windows XP and Windows Vista, Microsoft has ended its official support (Vista SP2 extended support phase until 2017). Both features and security are very low, and the number of users has been greatly reduced, in particular, Vista, which has never been favored, has fewer users. Google no longer updates Chrome browsers to these old systems. One is to encourage users to upgrade to the new system, and the other is to "reduce the burden" for themselves, so there is no need to worry about a few retired systems. This is a relatively better case for Mac users. After all, the Apple system is free of charge, and upgrading the system is just a technical problem.
For Chrome browsers, not updating means security is not guaranteed, which is the same as Windows XP. Therefore, Windows XP and Windows Vista users can either change their systems or browsers. If the computer configuration is relatively low and it cannot run Windows 7, Windows 8.1, Windows 10, and other systems, you can consider replacing it with the flag fish browser. The kernel is the same as Chrome, which is free, easy to use, fast, and secure, windows XP and Windows Vista users are not supported.