Comment by pjc50
1 day ago
There's no realistic competition because the amount of work to switch your OS ecosystem, especially for businesses, is huge. So the product doesn't have to be good, you can just slam ads in the Start menu or whatever.
1 day ago
There's no realistic competition because the amount of work to switch your OS ecosystem, especially for businesses, is huge. So the product doesn't have to be good, you can just slam ads in the Start menu or whatever.
At one point the product is getting so bad that the cost of switching becomes a real consideration. It seems that every other year I hear about businesses and governments making the move.
If you're good enough at killing lighthouse projects you can defer that.
https://www.linux-magazine.com/Online/News/Munich-Plans-to-D...
Weird that they've decided to switch to Linux in 2004 when Windows XP was great.
The switching cost keeps decreasing, because more and more stuff is being migrated to the browser and/or cloud.
Combined with some digital independence movements outside the US, I have some hopes that Windows monopoly starts to crumble.
Monopolies destroy everything. This isn't a binary it's a spectrum. You don't even need total control of the market, just extreme dominance of it, to see this effect begin.
The business version of Windows doesn't have ads in the start menu. That's the consumer/home version. The "Pro" flavors of Windows are quite a bit more pleasant and I don't think there is any downside even on a home computer.
Yes it wasn't until recently that I understood why people ran Windows Server as their home operating system.
The competition is more fierce than it has been since before Windows 95 started the complete domination of the desktop market.
Apple doubled their marketshare since the M1 chip came out.
You can just go out and buy laptops from multiple OEMs with Linux preinstalled, and it’ll run all your business apps (Slack, Google Workspaces, Zoom, Spotify, etc, everything works). That would have been unheard of in 2010.
You can even play a huge number of Windows games on Linux, and the most popular PC “console” is a Linux system from Valve (with another releasing this year). Microsoft has no control over the PC gaming market like it did back in the heyday of DirectX.
I think Microsoft should be all-hands-on-deck trying to build reasons for customers to use Windows.
I personally think Windows 11 is pretty good and is the most “going in the right direction” version we’ve seen in a long time, but it could be better. Yeah there have been missteps but the windows team does seem more free to just add stuff they wish had been in Windows for years but never got approval to go for.
Apple prices are out of reach in many world regions.
OEM laptops with Linux distributions pre-installed are only available on online shops known to HN/Reddit demographics.
You can buy Dell machines with Ubuntu or RHEL installed on Dell.com, same thing with Lenovo and their site.
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Not at all, last holiday season Best Buy was selling brand new in-warranty M2 MacBook Air systems for $699.
Apple has close to 20% of new PC marketshare globally which is too much to represent only the high end of the market.
Lenovo and Dell are not some fly by night unknown PC manufacturers.