this post was submitted on 06 Jan 2024
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[–] planish 34 points 1 year ago (6 children)

I'm going to go with "be normal".

Linux is unusual in a way that Windows is not. In a lot of areas (games, interfacing with weird hardware), Linux uses up one of your three innovation tokens in a way that Windows doesn't. You are likely to be the only person or one of a very few people trying to do what you are doing or encountering the problem you are having on Linux, whereas there is often a much larger community of like-minded people to work with who are using Windows.

Sometimes the reverse is true: have fun being the only person trying to use a new CS algorithm released as a .c and a Makefile on Windows proper without WSL.

But that's kind of why we have Wine and WSL: it's often easier to pretend to be normal than to convince people to accommodate you.

[–] [email protected] 25 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (5 children)

Linux is unusual in a way that Windows is not.

That’s funny because IMO it’s the exact opposite. Every mainstream operating system is a Unix or Unix-like. MacOS, iOS, Android, the BSD’s, Solaris, HP-UX, AIX, IRIX, etc. etc.

Windows is the only non-Unix OS that has any significant marketshare.

[–] planish 3 points 1 year ago (1 children)

On phones Android is pretty typical, and on desktop Unix is also pretty typical because MacOS is it. But non-Mac Unix on the desktop is pretty unusual, and stuff built for Mac specifically often won't work on other Unixes.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

Maybe POSIX-compliance is a better metric: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/POSIX

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