With KEX installed, the tool can deploy "foreign" patches that would otherwise crash the system.
Twenty-five years after it first appeared on Compaq and Dell desktops, Windows XP still refuses to die. Not in the way a beloved pet refuses to die, but in the way a fungal spore in permafrost refuses to die. It lurks in the firmware of CNC milling machines in Ohio. It boots from a scratched CD-R in a Japanese convenience store’s POS system. It runs the MRI scanner at a rural hospital in Wales. windows xp legacy update