| ▲ | dangus 4 days ago | ||||||||||||||||
I disagree. I think the end of the “world revolves around Windows” era of Microsoft has been hugely beneficial to the OS. Microsoft is way less hostile to other platforms now that their main revenue source is Azure, not Windows, Visual Studio, and SQL Server licenses. It seems like the Windows team has been freed to add features that they want rather than adding features that fit into a narrative. WSL, pre-installing git, adding POSIX aliases to PowerShell, iPhone/Android integration, PowerShell/.net/VSCode/Edge on Mac/Linux, not making Office on Mac complete afterthought shit on purpose, etc. | |||||||||||||||||
| ▲ | yndoendo 4 days ago | parent | next [-] | ||||||||||||||||
I disagree that Microsoft benefits the end user. Their IoT which took over the Embedded version of Windows is completely bloated in 10 and higher. Version 7 allowed for only installing necessities where their successors force XBox and other built in forced features. Windows 11 IoT is also forcing the creation of a Microsoft account instead of allowing an local account. IoT / Embedded does not mean it is connect and often air gaped. They are also often used to host products and should not have a Microsoft account assigned. Microsoft's standards for quality keep going down hill. Windows 11 does not even allow the moving of the task bar from the bottom of the screen. Microsoft is end user hostile just like Google. | |||||||||||||||||
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| ▲ | HighGoldstein 4 days ago | parent | prev [-] | ||||||||||||||||
> now that their main revenue source is Azure, not Windows, Visual Studio, and SQL Server licenses. Funnily enough, opening their stack to Linux probably made it easier to sell licenses for everything except Windows, since now you don't have to commit to a potentially unfamiliar hosting environment. Even SQL Server runs on Linux now. | |||||||||||||||||