I never have issues installing windows. At least not in the past couple years since windows 7. I can't even remember the last time I installed it. But then I don't keep on tinkering with new applications. I do however experiment with new features. It's wsl2 not wsl. And it's almost as fast as running Linux natively. But don't believe me, believe the raw performance numbers.
What custom tools do you need to tinker with windows appearance? I don't. Those who need to tweak every last font size and color, and positioning here or there are plain idiots who have nothing else to do with their time. And then they emulate windows apps that clearly are buggy and force them to run on Linux and then they spend pages over pages to solve the problems. For TRADING, mind you, you know that one area where you put your life savings on the line. How is this not plain stupid?
Hey, I don't try to convince anyone to change who has a hard on for Linux. But don't tell me or others how simple Linux is when you (plural) start even on the same thread page to moan about buggy trading apps on an emulator. Windows works perfectly fine on a computer with ample resources, it is safe (never had a single security issue or breach or hack), and it let's me spend hours on my work not on fixing an OS.
What custom tools do you need to tinker with windows appearance? I don't. Those who need to tweak every last font size and color, and positioning here or there are plain idiots who have nothing else to do with their time. And then they emulate windows apps that clearly are buggy and force them to run on Linux and then they spend pages over pages to solve the problems. For TRADING, mind you, you know that one area where you put your life savings on the line. How is this not plain stupid?
Hey, I don't try to convince anyone to change who has a hard on for Linux. But don't tell me or others how simple Linux is when you (plural) start even on the same thread page to moan about buggy trading apps on an emulator. Windows works perfectly fine on a computer with ample resources, it is safe (never had a single security issue or breach or hack), and it let's me spend hours on my work not on fixing an OS.
Why do you need Windows if you're going to only use WSL? You have it backwards. It's slower and what's magical in Windows for you?
Customisation is on another level with something like KDE. It's not essential but a nice-to-have. Does not compare to Windows at all, in Windows you need custom tools for everything and since they sit on top of the default Windows installation, they consume extra memory and CPU cycles.
But sure, in a way you're right. If everything works great on Windows for you, you don't need to switch.
Something like system level Python modules are only on Linux as well because the Windows system is too restrictive. Others only develop for Windows and thus users are left without choice. I'm not happy about Windows deliberately having backdoors left in by Microsoft, it does not compare to my login information as my e-mail doesn't store anything critical.
It doesn't. I needed to compile some code and for that needed Visual Studio, the component download was some 10GB or so and took a very long time due to a crappy connection. So I spent a good 20 hours getting it, when installing I had an error that read something like "Error 54", completely useless and uninformative. So I went to MS help to check for solutions. The solutions were basically "have you tried restarting" or "try removing the downloaded files and doing it again". A joke if that and of course none of it helped at all.
In Linux? GCC was there from the start. I did what I wanted to do within 10 minutes with zero problems and no 10GB downloads required.
I don't like MS but I have used Github before the MS purchase, there are other alternatives like Gitlab, so if MS does try something sneaky, I will just migrate. I also use VSCodium which is VSCode without the telemetry.
You seem to have some type of agenda while most Linux users just want to use the best tools and the best tools for them are rarely on Windows.
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