• melfie@lemy.lol
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    While I prefer Linux and use it wherever I can, I use about every major OS on a regular basis. I have a machine that dual boots Windows due to some expensive specialized software I own that doesn’t work on Linux yet, I have an iPhone because Linux phones aren’t good enough to be a daily driver and Graphene doesn’t work with certain apps I need, I have an Android tablet / Android TVs because they have a usable UX while allowing sideloading of OSS apps that respect my privacy, and I use macOS on my work machine because company IT doesn’t support Linux. Yes, I’d prefer to run Linux on every device, but there are practical reasons for using other OSes, and it’s not like a competent techie can’t learn to use whatever. I assume Linux will continue to gain market share across form factors, but we are not there yet. I’ve actually never worked anywhere where Linux was supported, and while I’ll refuse to work somewhere with unethical business practices, I probably won’t choose to be unemployed to avoid using Windows. Google, for example, does support Linux devices for employees, but I’d rather use a Windows laptop somewhere else than actively build tools for surveillance capitalism.

    TL;DR - Pick your battles.

  • pewpew@feddit.it
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    Just wondering… Is there anyone on Earth using Windows Server?

    At school we were tought how to work with it (my teacher was so outdated, he barely knew what Linux was) but I can’t find any good reason to use it instead of Linux

    • Honytawk@discuss.tchncs.de
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      24 minutes ago

      Every single business running Windows computers (which is about all of them) will have an Active Directory running on Windows.

      Every company I worked for only ever had a handful of Linux servers and the majority of Windows servers.

      Microsoft revenue generated $26.7 billion in one quarter from its Licensing, and even though a lot of it was through cloud, a lot of it also came through self hosted Windows servers.

      You live in a bubble if you think nobody is using Windows server.

    • Zangoose@lemmy.world
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      1 hour ago

      My company uses it for some of our legacy on-prem hosting, but a lot of that is being actively decommissioned.

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      Yeah, I’ve seen a lot of it for two things.

      First being sqlserver, though that’s been able to run on linux for a long time now, there’s a bunch of features not supported but not a deal breaker for a lot of people, I haven’t encountered ssis or ssas in years for example.

      Second being Internet Information Services (IIS), which some people really seem to like.

      Wouldn’t be surprised if active directory required a windows machine either, definitely a bunch of cases I’m not considering or aware of but I’m no sysadmin.

  • arc99@lemmy.world
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    2 hours ago

    Guy just sounds entitled and precious they wouldn’t stump for a Macbook.

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    Honestly, yeah, I’d do the same. After several past jobs required Linux, even downgrading to a Mac feels pretty bad. Can’t imagine Macroslop Wangblows.

      • TRock@feddit.dk
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        4 hours ago

        What makes it shit for development? I’ve been using windows as a developer for almost 10 years. I have switched to Linux at home, but I don’t develop on that PC. So I’d honestly like to hear whats so bad about it, and why is your preferred OS better?

        • GreenKnight23@lemmy.world
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          2 hours ago

          over the past 10 years microslop has become increasingly hostile towards developers and encouraging vendor lock-in.

          just over the last 5 years alone, microslop has stolen finite resources and refused to relinquish them under the guise of a better “user experience”. these resources are important to the stability and development of systems locally. unfortunately microslop’s solution is “use Azure remote services”.

          everything microslop does is to drive users to their cloud services.

          I’ll put it down to numbers for you if it’s not clear.

          I can spend $1000 on a laptop, install Linux, and run 20± containers AND have a usable desktop environment for the next 10+ years.

          or

          I can spend $1500 on a laptop, install microslop and run 5+ containers AND have a slightly sluggish desktop environment for the next 6 months to a year, PLUS have my entire device bricked by an update or two within that time. microslop’s solution? “sync your files to onedrive”.

          this is why windows sucks for developing unless you’re locked into microslop’s development programs.

          if you’re doing c#, batch, .NET, or even Java, you’re probably fine using Windows. if you’re doing 80% of the rest of any development, you’re better off using Linux.

          • Honytawk@discuss.tchncs.de
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            20 minutes ago

            You could have had some great points, but the fact that you use “microslop” unironically shows how much of a bias you have. Meaning your points might as well not exist.

            You sound like an anti-vaxxer blaming everything wrong with their life on big pharma.

            • GreenKnight23@lemmy.world
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              you could have argued against my great points but instead you fixated on a singular word that rustled your jimmies. Meaning your opinions are invalid.

              I couldn’t understand most of what you said because of that sloppy microcock in your mouth.

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        5 hours ago

        As someone who does cross-platform development: everything on Mac takes twice as long, and breaks with every OS update. And that’s without even the switch from PPC to Intel 32 bit to Intel 64 bit to ARM.

        I’m exaggerating a bit, and I’m sure in many environments Mac is easy enough. But for us - there’s a reason we have more Mac developers than Windows and Linux combined, and it’s not because people want a Mac.

      • leobm@feddit.org
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        6 hours ago

        WSL—and the ability it provides to run Linux on Windows—is actually quite convenient

        • exu@feditown.com
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          5 hours ago

          But if all you need Windows for is a VM to run Linux, then just run Linux

        • douglasg14b@lemmy.world
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          5 hours ago

          It is, but WSL is also pretty much shit.

          I’ve been maining Windows with WSL at work, and it works great, till it doesn’t. And then it just sucks, and sucks, and sucks.

          Almost always has to do with processes on WSL.not being killed by connectors to their windows counterparts. And docker desktop, holy hell, docker desktop and WSL just love to turn WSL into sludge.

          I’ve been fighting with it for years, WSL is an awesome idea, it works great when it works. But as soon as you out real development loads onto it it just folds.

    • tiramichu@sh.itjust.works
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      I think this person actually wants to run linux, but they are using Mac as a test case.

      They mentioned “install an alternative operating system” - which on hardware sold for Windows very much implies Linux.

      But if Linux is a no, and even macos is a no - which is from a “big proper company” with support agreements and everything - then the company is obviously a lost cause who are set on windows for life for all time.

      • tiramichu@sh.itjust.works
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        12 hours ago

        I think this person actually wants to run linux, but they are using Mac as a test case.

        They mentioned “install an alternative operating system” - which on hardware sold for Windows very much implies Linux.

        But if Linux is a no, and even macos is a no - which is from a “big and proper organisation” with support agreements and everything - then the company is obviously a lost cause who are dead-set on windows for life for all time.

          • tiramichu@sh.itjust.works
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            5 hours ago

            Whoops. I commented, decided to rephrase and edited. But it didn’t result in an edit and I didn’t notice as that’s when I went to bed.

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            11 hours ago

            I think this person actually wants to run linux, but they are using Mac as a test case.

            They mentioned “install an alternative operating system” - which on hardware sold for Windows very much implies Linux.

            But if Linux is a no, and even macos is a no - which is from a “big and proper organisation” with support agreements and everything - then the company is obviously a lost cause who are dead-set on windows for life for all time.

              • GianBarGian@feddit.it
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                8 hours ago

                I think this person actually wants to run linux, but they are using Mac as a test case.

                They mentioned “install an alternative operating system” - which on hardware sold for Windows very much implies Linux.

                But if Linux is a no, and even macos is a no - which is from a “big and proper organisation” with support agreements and everything - then the company is obviously a lost cause who are dead-set on windows for life for all time.

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    15 hours ago

    Why would you not be very clear about this right at the start of the interview process so you’re not wasting everybody’s (including your own) time? If this is one of your absolute show-stoppers, then say so up front and we can either work with IT to get you what you want, or decline and move on to the next candidate.

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        3 hours ago

        They didn’t even attempt to negotiate. They rescinded their acceptance as soon as “IT specialist” told them they only officially support Windows.

        That happened to me prior, and I actually told them “hey, I really want this position, but you can’t expect me to do it properly on the same hardware/software you give the data entry employees.”

        They gave me a budget to buy whatever hardware I want and told me I can install anything I want but I cannot reach you the sysadmin for any support outside of roles/permissions.

        • GreenKnight23@lemmy.world
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          They didn’t even attempt to negotiate.

          you’re seeing a snapshot of an entire interaction between multiple people. you can’t be sure there was zero negotiations.

          besides, you can’t even be sure any of this is even real.

          keep your unfettered outrage bottled up for something else, because this ain’t the one for you.

      • folekaule@lemmy.world
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        11 hours ago

        Fair point, and taken. Interviews are a two-way street: the candidate should ask about everything that matters to them, and the company should ask about everything important they want.

        To avoid situations like this, it’s best not to assume anything unless you ask first. Windows is the de facto standard in business, yes, but not everywhere and not in every industry.

        If your work OS matters to you enough that you will pass on the job if you can’t pick, then you should ask. I would not want to hire someone who will be miserable in the job. And as a middle manager I probably don’t have enough pull to make an exception just for this guy anyway.

        Rock stars play by their own rules and they will get whatever they ask for. For the rest of us, we just have to take what we’re issued.

      • chiliedogg@lemmy.world
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        12 hours ago

        Windows is the PC operating system used by almost every organization. If you aren’t willing to work with it, you really need to be clear about that up front.

        It’s like trying to get a job as a mechanic at an auto shop and telling them after the interview you refuse to work on Toyotas.

        • Aceticon@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          I’ve worked in all sizes of companies, in various industries and 3 different European countries.

          In my experience it very much depends on the industry the company in, the division one is working in and the size of the company.

          Engineering types in an Engineering/Tech company using Linux isn’t at all unusual in smaller and mid-sized companies. Sales types or accounting, definitelly are using Window. Creatives tend to use Macs, mainly because the Adobe suite runs perfectly in it and the hardware is superior to PC hardware - designer types almost literally salivate at things like 4K monitors.

          Real startups (so, not mature Tech companies that try and still be startups) will definitelly have their devs running whatever they want, whist for example big financial institutions will have everybody on Windows, except perhaps top-level management if they’re quirky and prefer Mac for some reason or other.

          Then to this add that the kind of professional who not only prefers Linux but can actually say “bye, bye” if they don’t get it is almost certainly be a pretty senior Techie (say, a Senior Designer Developer) and even now those are pretty hard to find for a permanent employment position (you can’t replace those with AI or outsourcing, not even close, and in the path to such seniority many devs who keep on progressing eventually step into management instead of staying on the Technical career track) - outside a large company (were the hiring manager doesn’t have the pull to make it happen), it a pretty good idea to let them use whatever OS they want in their work machine, even if it has to be with the proviso that they won’t be getting any support for it from the IT Support group (which, trust me, they will be fine with).

          If a hiring manager has the pull for it and there are no regulatory reasons to make it be otherwise, it’s pretty dumb not to let a rare resource like a really senior dev use whatever the fuck they want on their work PC if that’s going to allow you hire/keep that person.

            • yabbadabaddon@lemmy.zip
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              2 hours ago

              Yes. Doesn’t mean they don’t exist. Everybody is complaining about AI, Windows, whatever and nobody accepts to work for a smaller company because you earn less.

              Either take the money and stfu or take the loss and work where your heart is.

              • Honytawk@discuss.tchncs.de
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                16 minutes ago

                Nobody said outliers don’t exist.

                What we are saying is that the majority (like 80% or something) are run entirely on Windows. No matter what the Linux fanboys want to believe.

  • blackn1ght@feddit.uk
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    15 hours ago

    I dev every workday on Windows 11 and I don’t get why people feel like it’s awful to work on? I dunno what everyone else is doing but it’s basically just switching between the IDE, Slack and the browser. The OS never seems to be an issue for me. My only real gripe is that even I click update and shutdown at the end of the day, it updates and restarts.

    Same for my colleagues using a Mac.

    I’d be more bothered about using Teams over Slack

    • Aceticon@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      It very much depends on what you’re developing for.

      Back when I did server-side development (which almost invariably is targetting Linux servers), having Linux as my dev environment was much better if only because I could run parts (or even all) of our server code directly in my machine configured as a Dev Environment.

      However, for example, for Game Dev running Linux is much more of a problem because some tools are for Windows and you have to jump through hoops to make it run in Linux, if at all.

      If you’re doing development on internal frontend systems for use by the Business side of a non-Tech company, then Windows is almost certainly the best dev OS because the software is meant to run in Windows machines (as that’s what the Business runs, unless we’re talking about creative companies, in which case it will be Mac) so the very same reasons why Linux is better for server dev apply here for Windows - it way more straightforward to develop in a machine where you can directly test at least parts of the code within the OS it will be running in.

      Yeah, you can run virtual machines or deploy to a dev server, but that just adds extra steps and hence extra overhead for frequently done things like running small snippets of code whilst developing just to check it’s working as expected.

      Then there’s the whole big company vs small company side of things: big companies have dedicated IT Support people and those will naturally try to standardize things for the obvious reason that it’s way more effective (same thing in dev, by the way, good Technical Architects try to keep the number of programming languages used low because its generally more efficient to have libraries, frameworks, maintenance and hiring practices around a smaller number of languages than it is to do it for many languages) which in turn means that in large companies “everybody gets the same” is an almost unassailable policy except for top-level management.

    • RagingRobot@lemmy.world
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      14 hours ago

      You have to install extra crap to get the terminal to work like unix and I always had to fight with it to install things. Not worth the time. Maybe if you don’t need a terminal though?

      • UPGRAYEDD@lemmy.world
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        8 hours ago

        This sounds more like IT babysitting.

        If IT cant trust software engineers to have full admin rights on a work computer, either the calibur of your co workers is so bad that no one should want to work there, or the IT department has such a god complex, no one should want to work there.

        • aeiou_ckr@lemmy.world
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          6 hours ago

          No IT should trust devs to have full admin rights. Y’all know enough to fuck everything up and then blame IT for not knowing how to fix your weird ass edge case in 30 seconds before crying to the CIO.

          • r1veRRR@feddit.org
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            3 hours ago

            It obviously depends on the environment, but if I am supposed to develop tools that, in theory, can fuck up everything, then I also need access to everything (on my machine). There’s no point in testing, if the elevated access rights on the server suddenly surface a fuckton of extra bugs.

            Heck, I need admin just for the basics of installing developer tools and opening web ports.

            They tried to lock our stuff down once. After a couple of days of absolutely zero work being done because all our tooling was missing, and the poor IT guy had to somehow learn how to install every tool we needed and taking forever, we just got sudo rights.

      • Gladaed@feddit.org
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        6 hours ago

        Or you could just use a cross platform terminal such as Powershell? I also use Terminal to have nice UX.

      • blackn1ght@feddit.uk
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        13 hours ago

        You install git and you get git bash that works great in the Windows terminal. That’s something you do once. I use the terminal daily, not an issue at all.

        • r1veRRR@feddit.org
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          3 hours ago

          Cool, and then there’s NEVER any problems with different paths? With back and forward slashes? With the limit on path length? With missing permissions on the file system requiring weird workarounds?

          Most importantly, your server is likely not Windows, yet you test on Windows, and that’s never ever been a serious source of issues?

          And don’t say WSL. That’s like saying the fix to using Windows is to use Linux, but fiddlier. Not to mention you still get issues with the mounted file system.

          • blackn1ght@feddit.uk
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            3 hours ago

            Cool, and then there’s NEVER any problems with different paths? With back and forward slashes? With the limit on path length? With missing permissions on the file system requiring weird workarounds?

            Nope. The language we use handles that for us. I don’t think path length has been an issue for a while now?

            Most importantly, your server is likely not Windows, yet you test on Windows, and that’s never ever been a serious source of issues?

            We use serverless functions using Linux and it’s never an issue. My previous employer, we had Windows servers and Linux based containers, and that wasn’t an issue either.

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          7 hours ago

          I never had to do anything on my Mac it just works every time

          Also some of the libraries I use aren’t even supported on windows. I know a bunch of node libraries that I had to change in project repos to accommodate engineers using windows specifically. Windows is shit

          Also it’s riddled with ads

    • Randelung@lemmy.world
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      13 hours ago

      Teams has recently decided to stop working on any browser except edge. I don’t know if this is intentional (at least chromium should work similarly) or if it’s a wayland thing, but I’m just assuming malice since webrtc works fine in all other instances.

      Fuck all of microslop on principle.

      • ShrimpCurler@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        2 hours ago

        I use it in Firefox. I think I had to make some cookie exceptions or something like that to make it work, but it’s functional. Still buggy, but Teams has always been buggy for me no matter the platform.

      • nightm4re@feddit.org
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        5 hours ago

        That doesn’t seem to be a generic issue, I am still running Teams through Firefox as a PWA on Ubuntu.

    • Schal330@lemmy.world
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      15 hours ago

      Windows can add some complications as a dev, especially in the corporate environment when really strict group policies are implemented that stop Devs from installing or configuring systems as they need.

      One company I worked at remained on Windows LTSC for security reasons, and a lot of Devs that were working with Java hit a snag if for whatever reason an IDE they were using really wanted a system environment variable configured a certain way and it would straight up ignore user environment variables. They would be restricted from basically being able to configure anything without getting IT to remote on and make the changes for them.

      I was forced to use a Mac for the first time years ago for work, I still hate working on a Mac but I can’t deny how much more flexible it can be compared to working in a Windows environment that is locked down.

      • UPGRAYEDD@lemmy.world
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        7 hours ago

        This isnt a windows issue, its a company policy issue. If developers dont have full admin rights on their systems, its a failure of managment. If you cant trust your developers enough to give them admin rights, thats not a co worker i want to be around.

    • Weirdfish@lemmy.world
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      12 hours ago

      I think a lot of it comes down to the build team.

      We have a very strict build, and while there is bloatware I could do without, they’ve always been great about handing out new machines, so we generally stay ahead of it.

      The issue I run into is that at our company, I’m very much “That guy”, who needs all the exceptions and special software.

      While they’ve created some AD groups for me that provide most of what I need, transferring to a new laptop is a major procedure as I never know what new restrictions have been put in place that I’ll need exceptions for. It’s a constant battle between security and having the tools I need to do the job. I always have at least three laptops, one that I’m using, one I’m working on setting up, and the old one I can’t let go of.

      All that being said, yes, win 11 is an absolute pig compared to other options, once my machine is dialed in, I really don’t mind the environment.

      Course, it helps that my lab shares space with the end user IT support team, so all I have to do is call over my shoulder to have something fixed.

      • RamRabbit@lemmy.world
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        8 hours ago

        I always have at least three laptops, one that I’m using, one I’m working on setting up, and the old one I can’t let go of.

        You sound like you need some VMs. Particularly for whatever is on that old laptop.

        • Weirdfish@lemmy.world
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          7 hours ago

          Have been working on moving what I can to a VM, but the systems I develop require physical access, and when I’ve asked, I’ve been told there is no way to give a VM access to the laptops ports.

          Many of the systems / devices are on physically isolated networks, use RS-232 or USB for access, etc.

          If there are netsec approved ways of passing physical ports to the VM that would solve a ton of my issues.

    • Miaou@jlai.lu
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      14 hours ago

      It’s slow, it’s unstable, it’s slow, it’s hard to customise, it’s slow, it’s bloated, it’s slow, it’s counter intuitive. Did I also mention that it’s slow?

      • blackn1ght@feddit.uk
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        13 hours ago

        Personally I’ve never experienced any performance issues with it, seems fast and responsive to me.

        • locuester@lemmy.zip
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          11 hours ago

          Same here. I primarily use WSL2 as my dev environment. Everything outside that is native apps for collab and tooling.

          • r1veRRR@feddit.org
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            3 hours ago

            Sure, if you just use Linux for dev, with a Windows hypervisor, you won’t notice the difference.

            We devs also have a serious issue of performance blindness, because generally work and test on pretty beefy machines. Windows 11 is undeniably heavier on the system than Linux, and Mac hardware flies anyway. If your dev machine is beefy enough, you won’t really notice though.

    • MashedTech@lemmy.world
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      5 hours ago

      God damn powershell. I use my terminal daily! More than daily even! I love my posix compliance and my gnu utilities! I like it when env vars, such as path, take effect without having to restart the top of tree process again. I like that my OS UI isn’t a react native app. I like that my laptop has a longer battery life. I like that sleep works reliably on my machine. I like that I can manage my packages and apps through a package manager (yes, I know you can now do it with winget). I like that I have control over what updates in my system and when and how I am affected. I like that I can use the multiple desktop/spaces features in a nice way and it is not finicky (Mac and Gnome do this particularly well). I like that my system search actually works well. I like that my system doesn’t show me ads when I try to use features of it. I like that when I change defaults on my system, I don’t get reminded to use something else than what I choose. I like that my defaults don’t reset after an update. I like that I can trust my os and that it doesn’t collect all possible data about me. I like that I have the ability to turn features off entirely and avoid them easily, and that those features aren’t straight up spyware.

  • bridgeburner@lemmy.world
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    Dude how many qualifications do you have that you can turn down a job offer in this economy over such a rather minor inconvenience?!

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      I find it crazy how many people here are making it sound like it’s torture to use Windows. I get that they prefer Linux, but for many it seems like it goes way beyond normal preference to something that’s a core part of their identiny.

    • GenosseFlosse@feddit.org
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      16 hours ago

      Dude, that’s like hiring a truck driver and telling him his lorry will be pulled by 4 horses.

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        16 hours ago

        If they want to pay me to deliver stuff on a unicycle, I’ll be delivering stuff on a unicycle. Do I want to ride a unicycle? Depends on the pay.

          • bstix@feddit.dk
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            11 hours ago

            Sure, but it’s difficult to classify which jobs are objectionable and what the price should be for someone to do them anyway.

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        16 hours ago

        Yet I work for a very successfully (we have too much work and don’t even advertise for it) small company and we all use windows computers as software engineers. We use C# .Net Entity Framework, SQL, GraphQL, React Typescript or WinForms.

        We have some large clients that most people ok earth have heard of.

          • dependencyinjection@discuss.tchncs.de
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            7 hours ago

            It really isn’t though. I’ve done in on Windows, Mac, and Linux.

            Mac and Linux are easier to install stuff but on the whole the experience has been almost identical.

            • r1veRRR@feddit.org
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              3 hours ago

              What exactly are we talking about? Doing Windows related development on Windows is roughly as decent as doing Linux related development is on Linux (or Mac).

              It’s just that because like 90% of servers are Linux, 90% of development benefits far more from being developed on a Linux-y system.

              For example, the Windows filesystem is very different. Over and over I’ve had issues with permissions being different, with paths being inconsistent (this happens esp. with WSL) and with limits on path length.

              You can develop on Windows, but having the test env closer to the real env takes care of so many little headaches.

            • R00bot@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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              6 hours ago

              You’ve used modern Linux and modern Windows and think the experience is almost identical? That’s an uncommon opinion.

              • dependencyinjection@discuss.tchncs.de
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                5 hours ago

                That’s an uncommon opinion here. Here being the operative word.

                Look in I’m not going to say I wasn’t disappointed that it wasn’t Mac which I used at my last job, but when it comes down to what we need to do in a day I don’t notice the difference.

                I tried Linux last year as a daily driver and gave up as I’m not looking for something else to debug in my own time. I now just want it to work.

        • RusAD@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          15 hours ago

          Have you considered that you might have too much work simply because these tools are inefficient?

          • dependencyinjection@discuss.tchncs.de
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            7 hours ago

            C# development is incredibly efficient to be fair.

            Have you considered not asking questions based on conjecture? No it isn’t because we are inefficient. It’s a mix of staff come first and the work comes second and a lack of greed I’d say. Most of our work comes from word of mouth and we keep client for as long as they’ll stay with us.

            If a client reads a spec and get the application described and decides it’s not right we will change it for them for free to build a relationship. Which is why we get more and more requests to work with us.

            • Zangoose@lemmy.world
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              47 minutes ago

              As someone who has worked with a pretty large C# codebase and several smaller ones, I’ve found it to be one of the least efficient languages to program in. This is maybe not a technical fault of the language, but the way Microsoft encourages developing C# means that once you get past a certain point even simple MRs will have 10-20 files changed. There is sooooooooo much boilerplate caused by .NET that even things like Java Spring Boot just don’t have (and even then I’d consider Java to be a pretty bloated language in terms of boilerplate).

              That’s ignoring the fact that the ecosystem surrounding .NET is a lot more enterprise-y, meaning a good portion of libraries require paid licenses to use.

    • Nato Boram@lemmy.wtf
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      16 hours ago

      “Minor” inconvenience is not having a coffee machine in the dining room, it’s nothing like the culture of incompetence that permeates organization that are that severely vendor-locked.

    • Scrubbles@poptalk.scrubbles.tech
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      I can say also as a senior engineer, I would never turn down another o ly because of this. It’s not my software I’m making, it’s the company. It’s not my things. If they want me to code on a pentium 3 I’ll happily do it, it’s their money. They want me to waste it on that, that’s on them.

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      That isn’t minor at all. If I’m using a tool all day, it needs to be something that I’m comfortable using. Forcing me to use Windows is like taking my office chair and replacing it with a chair that has a lumpy cushion and broken casters.

      I understand putting up with a shitty job situation because you need the money, but this is certainly not a “minor inconvenience”.

      • Tja@programming.dev
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        14 hours ago

        What’s so shitty? I’ve been using Linux for over 20 years, and Mac for work over 5. I have my terminal under f12 (iterm2/Konsole), I have my ide on one desktop, my calendar, my email and my slack on a another and a browser on another. I barely notice any difference. Honestly I don’t mind it at all. In fact if my desktop died and had to replace it, I might get a Mac mini instead.

        • r1veRRR@feddit.org
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          3 hours ago

          Ignoring prices, Mac is definitely the second best option after Linux for Linux-y development flows. None of my issues were huge, but still enough to ask for a Linux laptop for a replacement.

          1. Very little customization, compared to Linux. I’m talking horizontal tiling window managers like Niri
          2. Docker does not run natively, so you pay a hefty performance penalty with the VM
          3. File name case insensitivity caused a bunch of Git issues
        • MashedTech@lemmy.world
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          13 hours ago

          I have been using Linux since the 10th grade. But for work I’m using a Mac. Because I’m not only engineering, but doing other things related to work, having a Mac is more productive and practical.

          • Tja@programming.dev
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            5 hours ago

            I see very little difference, but I am still more used to pacman compared to brew. It’s nice not having to care about hardware, although I haven’t had problems with Linux for the last decade, at least (using desktops and old laptops, I’m sure the new fancy ARM ones are a handful).

          • pinball_wizard@lemmy.zip
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            but doing other things related to work, having a Mac is more productive and practical.

            I used to do the same, but lately every office thing is browser based, and I find the Linux and Mac experiences are identical.

            • NιƙƙιDιɱҽʂ@lemmy.world
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              12 hours ago

              The web version of Office is so scuffed. I wouldn’t wish trying to do any serious Excel work with the web version on my worst enemy.

              • pinball_wizard@lemmy.zip
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                11 hours ago

                That’s fair. I also wouldn’t wish serious Excel work on my worst enemy. But I understand someone has to do it, or the nightmare realm could escape the cell borders.

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          13 hours ago

          Also use Mac for work and personal. But I spend most of my time in neovim and the browser, so tbh I don’t really care what I use. I just like that I can answer texts from my Mac via iMessage. I haven’t tried them, but I think there are some i3 style window managers for macOS. That’s the next thing I would explore if I wanted a more Linux like experience.

          I started doing my Xcode builds in CI, so I guess I’m not really tied to Mac anymore. In its current state, I’m more attached to the hardware than the software.

          • Tja@programming.dev
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            6 hours ago

            There’s an app called “rectangle”, I think it’s even open source, that allows you to tile windows in macos, I’ve been using it since day 1. Not exactly i3, but it does most of what I want so it doesn’t get in the way.

            And to be honest on my desktop I’ve been using KDE for years, does enough tiling for my needs (usually just halves/quarters).

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            11 hours ago

            Codemagic? I’ve made some pokes at using that for iOS builds with middling luck.

      • Dr. Moose@lemmy.world
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        11 hours ago

        Windows has a really good shell too but it’s not about terminal. Both macs and windows are pretty awful dev machines.

          • Dr. Moose@lemmy.world
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            4 hours ago

            Sure but why waste your privilege on “fine”. If you have the market power as an employee to pick and choose you shouldn’t settle on just fine.

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        7 hours ago

        Don’t understand this. I dislike Apple in many ways, but MacOS is an objectively very solid operating system.

        • shane@feddit.nl
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          6 hours ago

          I found macOS difficult to use.

          For example, while you can have multiple desktops, each application lives on one of them. So collecting a browser and some terminals on a desktop and then having a different desktop with a browser for another purpose doesn’t work.

          There are a dozen examples of this, but in the end If your workflow doesn’t match the Apple way, then you are out of luck on macOS. It’s kind of the opposite of KDE. 😆

          • rothaine@lemmy.zip
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            47 minutes ago

            So collecting a browser and some terminals on a desktop and then having a different desktop with a browser for another purpose doesn’t work.

            Not sure when the last time you used it was, but this works fine. I regularly have 2 desktops for VS Code, 3 with Chrome instances (across multiple monitors), and 2 with Firefox.

            The biggest weakness IMO is that the entire OS is designed around touch gestures. If you want to use a mouse, your experience will just be worse. But even the touch stuff is lacking options, so you have to use third party things like BetterTouchTool.

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        10 minutes ago

        Memes are fine.

        But this is straight up propaganda trying to disguise itself as a joke.

        If I’d even encounter a dev like the one from the post. I’d laugh in his face and wish him good luck on finding a job that caters to their niche needs.

        • kittenzrulz123@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          5 minutes ago

          Im pretty sure the entire joke is he’s an obnoxious Linux user who will never get a real job and knows absolutely nothing about actual development work

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      15 hours ago

      We had a new joiner quit on his first day because of this. Didn’t even get to eat the burrito he ordered :( So it definitely happens.

    • Windex007@lemmy.world
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      17 hours ago

      Not IT, but my dad said they lost a chemical engineering hire over this once, like 25 years ago.

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      19 hours ago

      To be fair they tried posting it on the Linux community on .ml and there were so many upvotes and positive feedback that it crashed the server. So they had to post it again somewhere more balanced to limit the impact.

    • redlemace@lemmy.world
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      17 hours ago

      Not really. My employer provides win11 too, but I do over 60% of my job on debian machines running in hyper-v. (the other 40% are administrative tasks and work restricted environments)

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    21 hours ago

    99% companies have been using Windows for the past 30 years. I would gladly accept any job using Windows, even more if they paid well. I hate Windows way more than everyone else, but being unemployed is worse nowadays.

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      21 hours ago

      You assume they don’t already have a job and we’re just looking for other opportunities. Not everyone is unemployed before they apply for other jobs. If anything that is a good time to look as it gives you stronger position to negotiate from.

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        13 hours ago

        In the overwhelming majority of situations you cannot begin the onboarding process with IT while still working for a previous employer. Especially at this level of software engineering that would run afoul of moonlighting policies.

        is what your describing technically possible? sure. Is it even remotely probable? Absolutely not.

        • nous@programming.dev
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          2 hours ago

          You are right. You cannot onboard a new job before you leave your old one. Accepting an offer is not part of the onboarding process though. It happens before.

          After an interview process the company makes an offer. The candidate can then accept or reject it. But that is really all informal. You can then negotiate with them for an official start date and contract. You just need to ensure you can hand in your notice and work the rest of your notice period before the start date of your new contract.

          I don’t know anyone that would hand in their notice before accepting the initial offer of a company. At least here in the UK.

        • Noxy@pawb.social
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          11 hours ago

          They would quit working at the old company before they start work at the new one. usually there wouldn’t be overlap.

    • Slotos@feddit.nl
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      21 hours ago

      Senior backend engineering definitely doesn’t see 99% windows adoption rate.

      • Bluescluestoothpaste@sh.itjust.works
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        19 hours ago

        Yeah but a senior engineer would just use an old personal linux laptop from home, they wouldn’t even bother bitching about the employer issued machine.

        • Aceticon@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          1 hour ago

          Never, ever, EVER use your personal equipment for work.

          There are a ton of legal reasons for that, not just around who owns the Copyright of work done on that machine as well as licensing of the software running in it (most commercial software has different licensing conditions for personal and commercial use) but also because if there’s some kind of legal case against that company your equipment might very well be confiscated as part of an investigation.

          Also, more in general, if you have personal practices which are legally dubious or often frowned upon (piracy, porn) you don’t do it in the same machine where you’re doing your professional work, definitelly not on a work machine but even in your own machine it’s risky (see the point above about how your machine might end up confiscated and examined by the authorities if the company is investigated). The principle of “you don’t shit were you eat” applies here.

          Even for your own company, it’s best to have the company stuff separate from personal stuff.

          Beyond that, it’s also a very good idea in terms of having a good work-life balance to separate the personal from the professional: ideally you keep a very strong separation between work and not-work, at all levels, from work time and outside-work time to work/personal machine and work/personal phone - it helps make clear both for yourself and, even more importantly, others, that there is no work outside work, which reduces the chances of management doing things like call you on weekends or evenings with questions and makes it easier for them to accept when they try it and you say “I’m not at work now, so I’ll pick this up first thing when I’m back at work” - the cleaner and harder the split the less room there is for the “barely in control, almost 100% reactive” kind of manager to sneak work stuff into your personal-time.

        • TheseusNow@lemmy.zip
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          7 hours ago

          Clients will have intellectual rights on anything produced for them. Removal of that data from their systems and storing it elsewhere will be a violation.

          Using your own equipment other than maybe your monitor, mouse, or keyboard will be a no go. I don’t know of any serious workplace that would let you do otherwise.

          Even if you are a self employed contractor you will need to remote in to their virtual environment and work in that.

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          18 hours ago

          How are they going to use a personal device when corporate policy locks that down?

        • Trilogy3452@lemmy.world
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          They don’t use a personal laptop, and I’ve never heard of such thing for any company that has more than 10 employees. The security risk is huge

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      21 hours ago

      I haven’t found a company that enforces windows of everyone. Seems ridiculous. I would sign the contract then simply require a Mac because I don’t know how to use Windows. IT be dammed.

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        20 hours ago

        Smaller companies, maybe. But bigger companies will have a ‘Security and Compliance’ department which will force everyone to use a company-supported platform. It goes beyond OS too. Unapproved apps, even if you are allowed to install them, may not connect to company resources.

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          Managing centralized security and device management correctly on multiple OSes must be a nightmare. From EDRs to app and device provisioning.

          You should do dev work in devcontainers anyway.

          Not that it’s an excuse or that I’m happy with that, but I can totally understand why companies do that, and tbh I’d rather see a properly secured than have the option to run Linux.

          But I’m biased, because I used to do Red Teamings, and the things I’ve seen…

          • pivot_root@lemmy.world
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            17 hours ago

            You should do dev work in devcontainers anyway.

            Devcontainers work for Visual Studio Code when developers are more than happy to click their way through running builds and debugging problems. But, as someone whose workflow is optimized for the command-line, they can fuck off.

        • Pika@sh.itjust.works
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          19 hours ago

          for a senior engineer position though? That seems counterproductive. I would expect it of one of the entry levels or non-it but forcing a windows ecosystem on a development or engineering sector screams red flag to me.

          • Zak@lemmy.world
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            A senior engineer obviously needs (and knows how to handle) considerably more access to their workstation and company IT infrastructure than the average employee. On the other hand, I’ve occasionally read complaints from IT security types about engineers being way to eager to install sketchy stuff.

            There’s some truth to those complaints. I might need to try out several libraries and tools to see what works best for a certain use case. Is that new one with 15 stars on Github actually safe? Are all of its dependencies? How many developers perform a task like that in a sandbox? How many of those perform a thorough audit before taking it out of the sandbox?

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        18 hours ago

        I recently quit a company that does. They hid that until after I accepted and started. I quit out of frustration after a couple weeks of having to listen the the fan all day due to their surveillance and telemetry running. They even disabled sleep mode, so you either had to leave that thing phoning home 24/7, or forcibly shut down every day. 10 minute boot time on a brand new laptop.

        • Serinus@lemmy.world
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          11 hours ago

          Can you explain this disabling sleep mode thing? What does having the thing awake while it’s closed even accomplish?

          • plz1@lemmy.world
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            9 hours ago

            Clamshell mode. External monitor, lid closed. My issue was that I could not tell it to sleep when not in use, because their IT disabled sleep to ensure their corporate spyware was always running.

            • Serinus@lemmy.world
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              9 hours ago

              That’s the part I get, but what does having the corporate spyware running 24/7 accomplish? What kind of telemetry would they even get out of that other than ip/location, which isn’t all that interesting.

              • Aceticon@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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                It can check if people are typing or using the mouse.

                It’s also possible to use the camera of a notebook to track if a person is present and looking at the screen or not.

                Any company using that shit is the kind that uses “bums of seats” rather than actual deliverables as a measure of performance, which means they’re also the kind of place were unpaid overtime is the norm and, if in dev, things like projects often ending up in a death march stage - such places are stupidly inneficient and badly managed with a disfunctional work culture.

                Avoid such companies like the plague - you’ll be luck if the worst that happens is insane work hours.

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      Was willing to consider a job at Microslop in the first place, so not against big tech, just Windows it seems.

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      19 hours ago

      Gmail is functional at what it sets out to do, which is send and receive email.

      The sender is not expressing privacy concerns, they’re expressing functionality / utility concerns.

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        Fair enough, still seems silly as hell to me. Windows is perfectly functional for corporate, and even software development use as long as the team managing the image and standard settings at your workplace is competent.

        Yeah, being able to customize everything to meet your preferred workflow etc with Linux is preferable.

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        Gmail is functional at what it sets out to do

        it is not. it can’t even do such simple thing as sorting the inbox by the sender’s name. it may seem functional to people who never used real mail client and were brainwashed into accepting this as the only available ui, but it is really not.

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          37 minutes ago

          not really… when job hunting most people have to spam the world with CVs and nowadays that also includes registering in a ton of shitty services so you can post your resume or get contact info… once hired, you would use the company’s email so whatever you provided first is usually irrelevant

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        19 hours ago

        I use it at my “catch other people’s emails” account, tho so far I haven’t been quick enough on the draw to do cool stuff like slurping account creation tokens, goodie delivieries or stuff like that.

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        16 hours ago

        Sure, but kind of silly for someone who would take a stand against MS to the point of refusing a job to be happy with Google.

        Then again, they also expressed they’d be happy with Apple/Mac

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          12 hours ago

          Their basis seems to not be corporate actions, but the usability of software.
          They would probably have been happy with Windows 7.