I have seen videos where XP is infected in zero time online, but those videos are made with windows XP completely unsecured, connected online directly and not through a router, if I am not mistaken. But what about an XP system with an antivirus(even old and not currently updated), a firewall and a router that comes with it's own protection layers. I am playing with an ancient Athlon XP, running ....Windows XP, that I do connect online. It's obviously dead slow, but having connected it for hours, even days, when I connect it's SSD on a Windows 11 system and check it, Win11 finds nothing malicious on it.
Okay, great, and now what? You've got yourself a system that will do what Win 11 does with a shitload of extra risk involved regardless, and much lower performance and functionality. So you've left the system connected and its not infected. What have you proven here? That XP can sit online for a while and not implode? Fan-tas-tic. Its still out of date and full of security holes, easier kernel access, etc etc etc.
One easy example is ransomware protection. GL with that on XP, or getting that through third party app functionality in an unsupported OS.
Its just worse in every possible way, and if that's better in your mind than MS doing 'keylogging' and 'reading your emails'... yeah, to each their own. You're saying its better to
not know who's keylogging you and getting info out of your stash than it is to actually know it (MS), that's straight up crazy talk to me, honestly. Not in the least because you could hold MS accountable, but you can't do that with a criminal you'll never identify.
Just get a present day Linux then and let Windows go, you just can't have your cake and eat it too. What's done is done.
Microsoft doesnt have this. Mac OS exists, Linux exists, and chromeOS exists. And with microsoft dipping below 70% marketshare, its become obvious that they're in the process of losing the majority, let alone the dominant position.
They're still dominant and they will remain so for at least another decade, there is no question about it. The slow bleeding of % isn't really doing anything to their position in enterprise. One big consideration is also the increase in business / IT outside of the West, notably in China etc. where they are hard at work implementing their own OS'es (% Unknown) or at the very least phase out Microsoft services because its a US company. So yeah, quantify what they're really losing here, as far as I am concerned MS is still the dominant party and OSX will never surpass them, nor anything Android based.