Microsoft's new Azure Linux 4.0 is here, and it could replace Windows Server

9 hours ago (zdnet.com)

The interesting shift isn't that Microsoft ships Linux anymore—it's that almost nobody is surprised by it.

  • It is clear that UNIX won the server room, and the current form most people use of it is Linux, because POSIX ends up being a bit meh.

    Additionally, it is a kind of phyrric victory, because when using cloud services with managed containers, the underlying OS isn't that much relevant, unless using languages like C and C++, without rich runtimes that abstract the OS.