onlyonemac wrote:zdz wrote:Windows targets more platforms than any other OS and the variety of configurations can be considered infinite.
In addition to targeting as many desktops and laptops as possible (which is almost every desktop or laptop these days), Linux also targets mobile devices, embedded systems, servers, and supercomputers. Microsoft have been trying to edge into the mobile devices and more recently the embedded systems industries, but Linux has unambiguously been targeting those platforms for far longer.
I'll take this from a PM on the same subject: I was reffering to windows being used in more corrporate environments and by more casual users or people who use it as a gaming platform. I should have made it clear when I wrote it
You have to agree with me that you pretty much don't what to expect from a normal user. The Windows Update my mom receives on her work PC and the Windows Update some gaming journalist with a high-end PC with two graphic cards and what not is the same.
I don't know about mobile, but I doubt it that it is the same kernel that goes on mobile platforms and on desktop platforms.
Oh, and by the way, Windows 10 won't let me add a second user account without trying to link it to a Microsoft account.
That's why I have 3 accounts and only one is linked with a Microsoft account.
My main problem is that you can't do with Windows what you want. The source code is not available, so no one can change the behaviour of Windows, except if someone is a very skilled hacker that knows how to edit hex codes. Windows imposes arbitrary restrictions on users, has backdoors, and every security vulnerability is reported to secret agencies, according to the Free Software Foundation (I repeat that I don't like their badly-written software, I just agree with them that everything of this above is bad).
It is a thing that is sold. For money. As many other things that are sold it comes in different pricing variants, for different targets. Please read:
http://www.joelonsoftware.com/articles/ ... ckies.html
I'm not even going to touch on that secret agencies stuff, but I'll say it again: Intel and AMD are able to build backdoors directly in the CPU! SGX is just a way for NSA to hide better.