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On 19/08/2024 09:37, Dmitry A. Kazakov wrote:
I think the main reason is that we do not pay the actual costs of software developing. OS, compiler require huge investments. Vendors never passed these to the end users funding developing from other sources. That effectively killed the market. Free software only aggravated the situation. In effect it is akin to the socialist production method which always kills quality.Both OSes contributed to the Dark Ages of computing. The reasons are not technical, because both were worst on the market.What sort of time-frame are you thinking of here, what were the alternatives that you think were "better", what markets or uses are you considering, and in what way were other OS's "better" ?
There's no doubt that non-technical issues have had a big influence on which OS's or types of OS have succeeded, but you seem to have something specific in mind.
Windows has locks on files, which are a different thing. While I can understand the point of them, they can be a real inconvenience (try deleting a directory tree when a file from that tree is in use).Oh, yes! I understand why I should not remove a locked file, but I still enjoy Linux's ability to remove anything an be it all damned!
In main case it is packet manager. I am too lazy to find how to turn off automatic update checks. So when I try to run apt or dnf I have to kill the lock.Under Linux you must log in as the root and remove the stray file lock manually. It happens in UNIX administration all the time.As someone who has administrated Linux servers for decades, and used it as my desktop OS on many machines, I am not sure I can ever remember removing a stray lock file. Certainly needing to do so "all the time" is a very wild exaggeration. Linux, like all systems, undoubtedly has its flaws and weaknesses, but this is not one of them IME.
Times change. Needs and uses change. Hardware changes.Yes. E.g. in automotive you still need the system booted right after you turned the key.
Keeping things separate and modular has advantages in scalability, security and stability. Keeping things monolithic has advantages in efficiency (speed and memory) and consistency. There is no "right" answer.
"You are in an open field on the west side of a white house with a boarded front door." That sort of games? (:-))On the other hand you still cannot have decent gaming under Linux.I do almost all my gaming under Linux. Some games do work better under Windows, but that is primarily because most games developers target Windows as their main platform. It may also be because Linux systems are more varied.
The official file name of "C:" would be some messy string with lots of backslashes. C: is a "DOS name." There are API to convert DOS names into proper names. It is a mess. All Windows API is a mess.I thought by "drive letters", he meant "drive letters" - "c:", "d:", etc.And single drive letters?>
They are dozens characters long actually, if you mean the device names.
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