we have plenty of current and new software, but i dunno.
If it's something from Win 7 era on, probably no worries.
If one has from 9x, XP and Vista, that 9x support is what might get you.
Now, if you have nothing but 9x and it has a 16 bit installation stub, but the program itself is 32 bit, not really going to happen easily on a 64 bit version of Windows without using a 3rd party compatibility layer that adds back in 16 bit code on a 64 bit system.
Bare in mind too, the bloat that does allow for legacy programs, also brings about legacy vulnerabilities. So there is a trade off.
i turned off auto-updates natively
Unless your running the Enterprise version of Win 10, or you were able to do the registry edit before the change, natively is only differed is offered on Pro versions. Home version, sorry, just have to take it as it comes.
It is fine to use legacy operating systems if they efficiently run your production equipment.
This is the key thing right here. 100% agree.
I use Adobe Creative Suite, and have a much more streamlined and fast work flow if I stay up to date (let alone leveraging new features).
I'm not totally sold on this depending on what software your talking about with regard to "new features". Sometimes they are just gimmicks. Sound, look kinda cool, but the same tools that have been apart of a program for 20 yrs are still the best tools to use. They just work 100% of the time (depending on your knowledge and skill). It's not trying the gimmick, it works some of the time, but not all the time, then after trying to get the gimmick to work, have to default back to the tool that's been around for 20 yrs. Not all the time, but it seems to happen quite a bit.
I also use the cloud to store working files, and can generally access anything I need from any computer anywhere.
That can be done without using a 3rd party's "cloud". It depends on how sophisticated you want to get and not everyone wants to do that.
I still use on-site backup, but everything is also stored in the cloud, which is quite a bit more secure than a mechanical drive sitting on my shelf (I once had a backup drive go south when trying to restore the contents of a failed drive in my main PC, and lost three months of data.
Doesn't matter if it's on a drive on the shelf or on the "cloud", it's still on a drive somewhere and those drives do fail.
Now, one would hope that there are backups in place and security is in place, far more then what the average end user would be willing to do on those cloud services.
The bad thing is, things make the news that shouldn't be a thing at all. Period, especially with companies that have a dedicated IT staff that have control over data.
I don't obsess about having my data "stolen", and I don't really care if MS or Apple collect metadata about me and my usage habits.
It's less about this (with me anyway), then it is about security and stability, particularly for production sensitive workflows. The single vector of things that cause consternation is the internet. Be it updates, malware, whatever, that's the single biggest vector of what can cause things to go south.
If there are open connections that cannot be controlled by the user, then those are connections that could possibly be exploited.
Sacrificing security for convenience is not a good thing (this also goes into being able to run legacy software on newer OSs as well, great for those that want to keep running older software (and developers that are too lazy to target newer, more secure APIs) not so good from a security standpoint). It's probably the biggest thing that makes Windows one of the most exploited systems. Having a huge user base helps the motivation to seek those out.
Things are much simpler now ....
I agree with this, but not in a good way. We are going back to the "dummy terminal" days (except for programs that need to leverage local resources) and that's not good overall.