

In the same way USB controllers, the sound card and networking WILL have issues (probably be unusable with the onboard controllers on newer machines.)ģ) If you do decide to settle on a slightly older machine for XP, try and find one that was built for Windows 7 (no problems with xHCI) or for Windows 8 ( without a BIOS update) as these will use the old EHCI standard (or have compatibility modes that disable xHCI in their BIOS as long as it hasn't been updated) instead of the newer xHCI standard for USB contollers.

Although basics functions of the display adapter should work with generic drivers, any advanced features will not work unless you get an old external dedicated graphics card with XP drivers. Simply not worth doing!ġ) It is highly recommended to choose computers up to and including the Optiplex 780 (and equivalent ~2010) as the BIOS has legacy compatibility modes for the HDDs which makes installing XP much simpler.Ģ) Although the method below will get you a working install of Windows XP, device drivers are still hard to come by. The exact procedure will vary by exact hardware used, so nothing written up below.But SSD dies within 6 months or so since XP doesn't have the tools to "trim" SSD cells (memory storage locations).

Presumably anything newer will present these problems, too.Īlso, using SSD drives with XP requires lengthy workarounds and thus generally "not a good idea". XP will not install properly or at all on Skylake (6 Gen) Intel processors, due to drivers.

It seems however that new AMD machines may be easier to get a working install of Windows XP on as there are a few USB drivers available (these may also apply if you have an AMD, VIA, TI or Renesas controller on an Intel machine (unlikely)): Note that all information on this page pertains to Intel machines only and documentation on AMD machines (although that option has not been tested) can be found at the link below.
