Comment by philistine

15 days ago

The sane alternative is macOS because there is one thing that Windows lacks; a community. Since 1984, there have been boutique developers who have spent their whole career working on macOS, making it better and living the dream of working on consumer software.

When I look at the apps on Windows, all I see are abandoned projects and MVPs with a borderline malware financial structure.

> Since 1984, there have been boutique developers who have spent their whole career working on macOS, making it better and living the dream of working on consumer software.

Microsoft has had even more people working on Windows software..

"Developers, Developers, Developers!" - Steve Balmer

Microsoft has always had vastly more developers and development of software for Windows.

Apple still after all these years has a tiny market share of overall platforms, software, all of it really.

Not sure how you can suggest Apple is somehow the bastion of software development. If you write mac software, you'll be targeting a platform with 15-20% market share at best.

  • Isn't software development about making money? On phones, if you want to make money you have to target iOS, since this is where you have the people with money to spend on software. Do you believe that the vastly larger installed base of Windows guarantees more money for everyone?

    • At a previous workplace, we released certain software targeted at media/videography professionals for macOS first. The immediate response at conferences was, 'do you have a Windows version? We all use Windows.' Once we ported our software to Windows, the uptake was easily 1.5 orders of magnitude greater than for macOS.

      The era of 'macOS is a better media computer' is long gone.

    • >On phones, if you want to make money you have to target iOS

      It's funny that you think Android users are broke-ass nobodies. That's some reality-distortion-field fanboi nonsense. And it's also hilarious that you think phone apps are useful software that costs lots of money.

      Most people in tech with high-paying jobs that I know are using Android, because it's actually pretty awesome compared to the locked-down walled-garden that is Apple. More than half my friends use Android or Windows. They use Android because it isn't as locked-down as iPhone. They use Windows because it runs all the software they want it to run. We also really don't care about Apple's blue bubbles.

      No, Apple users are not the only ones with jobs. Plenty of Android users have plenty of disposable income. It's a ridiculous argument to make that Apple users have more money to spend.

      >Do you believe that the vastly larger installed base of Windows guarantees more money for everyone?

      I don't have to believe it, the market believes it. People vote with their dollars, and they aren't voting for Apple all that often worldwide. Plenty of wealthy people use Android and Windows. I'd wager that most big companies are still run on Windows - and I know this experientially, from back in the day setting up computers for major corps, it was 85% Windows, 15% Apple. Always was, always will be.

      4 replies →

Really?

I've been a fulltime Linux user for years but there are tons of excellent Windows-only apps.

Here are some that I miss: Directory Opus, ShareX, Wiztree, Everything, AltDrag, AutoHotkey, Paint.NET, irfanview, SumatraPDF. I'd add Keepass2 as well but fortunately KeepassXC is a thing.

Those are all feature-filled (in the bloat-free good way) and they've all been around for over a decade (from memory). Most are free and open source to boot.

  • If you like Paint.NET, you may like Pinta on Linux.

    Also, I am pretty sure that SumatraPDF is available for Linux as well. I am not at a computer but I think it is in the AUR.

To be fair, these exist on Windows as well. There's some cool stuff, MyLifeOrganized for example I would consider to be on par with OmniFocus.

But I agree that most of the boutique stuff on Windows gets drowned in all the enterprise software a bit.

  • MyLifeOrganized was the biggest thing I gave up when I switched to Mac in 2013. Still miss it -- nothing else (Omnifocus, Things, outliners, etc) has been as effective as a system for me. They've been talking about a potential Mac app for year, I'm on the waiting list, but I've given up hope that it'll ever come. Even if it does, I doubt it'll be as good as it is on Windows.