I am not a complete Luddite, I can switch one wire and feed any of these machines from ASPIRE.
Luddites actually weren't against tech and/or wouldn't use it, they were against how tech was being implemented.
Please Do not Support the myth or mislead people, needing to use
Windows XP.
ANY cutters with Serial or Parallel ports can be used on the latest
Windows or Mac computers.
That is true, but one also has to worry about the hardware that one is trying to keep alive those production machines. Firmware support can be a thing (although there could still be ways, I run plotters that have no officially supported drivers on my OS of choice and still able to run them, so there is that, but that does have some teething pains).
Do not even mention Virtual machine.
Why not the virtual machine? That is a viable option. Have the ability to have what one knows works the OS in question (and passing through a serial/parallel port is very doable in a VM, I have passed GPUs through to VMs(when there were 2 of them on a system that is)) while to still be on current
computer hardware, while only having the footprint of one machine. The biggest issue is hardware resources, but using something like XP, that's not like running the even more bloated current OSs that are out there now. Shoot, on a modest spec
computer, I was able to run the host OS, a guest of Vista and with that guest of Vista run another guest of Win 98 (most hypervisors stop at XP for currently supported OSs, I think even VMWare has deprecated support of 98).
But as long as the
computer doesn't need WAN access, it doesn't matter what's on it (why I hate the current SaaS model of software). So what if there is an older OS running? Depending on what the stuff is, I actually prefer an older OS, especially an OS that doesn't have any ability of outside traffic and if a person wants to do something bad with it, they have to have physical access right there at the machine. Being on the latest and supposed "greatest" isn't always the best. I see more examples of it not being the best versus the opposite.
What Version of Flexi is it?
Flexi7 can Run on
Windows 7 32bit. Issues with Rip/Print on 64bit.
Flexi8 works with no issues on any Windows7 systems.
Windows 7 is just as dead (as far as official support) as XP right now. Just moving on up to something that hasn't been dead long isn't going to help the situation.
since. version10.5 can be used on Windows10 or 11 as well.
I run CASmate on
Windows 10 32bit computers. Many of my Clients do not want to learn Flexi neither Enroute.
32bit as a whole is also a dead arch when it comes to
Windows. I do not think any new computers or ISOs are being delivered with 32 bit anymore thru official channels. So anything that depends on libs that aren't also included with 64bit system (say for instance, a program that may have a 16bit installation stub, but is otherwise 32bit program wont install as there are no 16bit libs on a 64 bit machine, not officially, there are OSS projects to get those back in) are going to have a hard time getting on 64bit systems, unless something more technical is done (in the case of the previous example, swapping out the 16bit stub with a 32bit one).
Shoot even distros like Ubuntu have dropped 32bit, I think 6 yrs ago. So if needing to run 32bit, not going to be on modern hardware either. More modern compared to XP, but it's quickly fading, so if the goal is to go modern and making that switch now, I would bypass the 32bit, but by doing so, probably have to make other changes as well and that leads back to either keeping an older
computer or running it on a VM.