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crystal_revenge 4 hours ago

> in windows terminal

This is an aside, but I'm really struck by how many people on HN use Windows (based on repeated mentions I've seen in comments). I've worked for a pretty wide range of companies over the last decade and only one, maybe two companies even had any people that worked on Windows machines. I haven't worked at a company where devs used Windows in 15 years (and even that company eventually switched to linux).

As I've gotten deeper into LLMs/AI roles even Macs have seemed to start having equal share compared to devs running full Linux setups.

Is this just a sign of that a larger and larger portion of HN users are working for large corporations? I honestly can't even remember that last time I saw a serious developer pull out a Windows laptop.

pixelpoet 4 hours ago | parent | next [-]

While we're doing anecdotes: I essentially never meet people who own an iPhone, and I've lived (3 months+) in a huge number of countries and cities. The handful people who do are American; bubbles exist :)

For a long time, high end graphics and games was mainly done on Windows and Visual Studio. I'm from that world, and only made the Linux transition last year November after Microsoft forced everyone's hand.

dmd 2 hours ago | parent | next [-]

Yep. I'm in Boston (USA) and I have literally met perhaps 2 people ever who have an Android phone - and both of them aren't from the US.

kowbell an hour ago | parent | prev | next [-]

> For a long time, high end graphics and games was mainly done on Windows and Visual Studio.

This implies games are not still mainly done on Windows, which they absolutely are!

smcleod 2 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

Shows how different countries are. In Australia the vast majority of people seem to have an iPhone, with Android being the outlier (at least in the major cities, I can't speak to rural areas). In the workplace it's far more common to see devs running Mac's than Windows, obviously there's pockets where you still see Microsoft but it seems pretty rare amongst engineers these days here. People will say I'm living in a bubble but I'm a consultant that hops around all sorts of clients so if I am it's probably a bubble of being in a city (Melbourne in my case).

recursive 4 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

I've been a developer for more than two decades. I've worked at four employers during that time, and all of them had significant fractions of devs using Windows. Not vouching for the idea that any of them are "serious" though. I've never worked at a prestige employer or FAANG or anything. Just boring businesses of different sizes. Some are software, and some just do software. But Windows has always been everywhere.

maccard 3 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

I work in games. Everyone, and I mean _everyone_ uses windows with visual studio.

tracker1 3 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

If you work at a company with well over a hundred employees, you're likely to see at least half of them on windows and devs may get an option of Windows or Mac... and IMO, Windows + WSL + Docker is actually slightly better than the Docker experience on Mac. There's plenty that I really do hate with Windows though. I'd rather run Linux but most corp environments just don't have the tooling for it.

lmc 4 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

https://survey.stackoverflow.co/2025/technology#1-computer-o...

JauntyHatAngle 4 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

One thing to consider is non-office whether remote or personal projects.

A lot of devs like gaming. Gaming is more simple on windows. Gaming PCs are usually high spec. High spec is good for most coding.

That's why I use windows quite often. My laptop is Linux, but when I'm running heavy models I'll still remote into my main Windows PC, which I also use for gaming.

Though in terms of workplaces - sure, I reckon you're on the money. Big corps often still force windows onto their Devs.

freedomben 3 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

I've likewise had a lot of variation from big corp to startups in companies in different sectors, and it seems to really depend on the org and what platform their managemetn likes. Windows companies usually offer a choice, but if management likes Apple then it's so common to get forced onto a Mac (and often with a dismissive "nobody wants to use windows" comment which really pisses me off). There's usually a small population using Linux if they can get away with it. When devs are given a truly free choice (with no cultural pressure) between windows, mac, linux, a relatively common split I see is about 40% linux, 40% mac, 20% windows.

coldtea 4 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

About 60% to 70% of devs in IT use Windows. And it's closer to 95% in some countries, even first world ones.

latentsea 4 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

Every company I've worked at has used Windows. Though the first one did use Linux VMs, the rest have all been pure Windows.

computerex 4 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

Maybe hackernews has older crowd. Windows was the defacto developer OS for a very long time.

alephnerd 3 hours ago | parent [-]

HN definitely has an older crowd, but additionally I've noticed HN is increasingly dominated by Europeans from 5am-2pm PST. "American" HN seems to kick off around 3pm-10pm PST now.

Even the HN dataset on HuggingFace shows that most engagement on HN is now during non-US hours [0] and drops off as Europe goes to sleep.

[0] - https://huggingface.co/datasets/open-index/hacker-news

garyfirestorm 2 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

Most of large engineering orgs use niche software built for windows. CAD, CAE, many don’t have Linux or Mac versions. See - solidworks, Siemens simcenter, ansys… to name a few. Engineering orgs have to build infrastructure around this and are forced to choose Microslop

leemoore 3 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

For developers at non tech fortune 500 companies, I would put money on Windows being the primary workstation os by a lot

slashdave 2 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

Windows is the de facto standard in most companies.

That said, I bet you will be really hard pressed to find a single Windows machine at Anthropic.

szatkus 2 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

Windows is pretty common and well supported in Javaland. Even though I prefer to work on Linux if I can...

vidarh 4 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

My biggest client right now is about 2/3 Windows 1/3 OS X in the dev team. It was very surprising to me, but I think I freak then out with my maximised tiled iTerms on multiple screens...

sterlind 2 hours ago | parent [-]

[dead]

gambiting 4 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

I'm a professional C++ dev working in games, and windows is used everywhere , from games themselves to the network infrastructure(I've worked for 3 of the largest games publishers too).

Windows really has a fantastic support for C++ and rendering programmers imho, the tooling is world class and Visual Studio has no match as an IDE. Even if somehow my tools worked on Mac or Linux I'd still pick windows out of sheer convenience of using it for work.

But as things stand - all major console toolchains are windows only. If you're making a game for PlayStation, Xbox or Switch, you have to be on windows.

watwut 2 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

> I've worked for a pretty wide range of companies over the last decade and only one, maybe two companies even had any people that worked on Windows machines. I haven't worked at a company where devs used Windows in 15 years (and even that company eventually switched to linux).

I think that your range of companies was much less wide then you think.

> I honestly can't even remember that last time I saw a serious developer pull out a Windows laptop.

What is unserious developer?

ls612 3 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

Windows laptops suck ass compared to an MBP. Windows desktops are pretty nice, you just need to do a lot of first time setup to remove all of the cruft and make sure you have a local user account etc. But for a typical dev building a desktop every 5 years or so that isn't a big deal.

recursive 2 hours ago | parent [-]

For work, I'd always be using a domain account anyway. Never used a local user account for work.

cute_boi 4 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

I used to work for company where they used to force windows. And it was pure torture. I tried but they told me performance isn't a good reason....

simsla 3 hours ago | parent [-]

I set up mine with WSL and used a Linux terminal over xserver. Once you have a decent unix shell (and a good terminal) it's fine. VSCode etc work fine. This was 2020ish, things might've gotten easier now.

But I do prefer a Linux or Mac for development, just because it's so much less hassle to set up.

Windows developers who don't set up a good terminal environment... I honestly don't know how they manage.

moronicles 3 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

[dead]