If only the whole world used Softplan as their one and only one software application, then I would be more receptive to what you are saying. Since it is not, many personal and professional uses of computers are moving to different devices and OSes since the days of 95% Windows OS share for internet connected devices. The transition cannot happen fast enough and I don't even think MS would care as they have pivoted away from the Windows OS business a few years ago.
I am a Mac fan since the first one, but i am not that hardcore fanboi to ignore the realities of the computing world.
Macs are still missing a lot of software that only exists in Windows. Plain and simple.
Also, Apple its not making it easy for everyone to adopt them. Example, i need a new Mac and i like the Studio, but not only is that thing grossly overpriced, apple in the typical consumer hostile way, made that system almost impossible to open up just so you can dust it off. Imagine having to take the time to unplug, carry it to an apple store just to have it duested off. Worse, you will have to pay for that if out of applecare coverage.
I have a feeling when SteamOS officially launches their desktop OS that Windows will take a bit of a hit.
Well, you still need the likes of Adobe and even MS to release their programs on Linux and clearly, they dont have such plans.
Never share an EFI partition with Windows. This has been the case since Windows 8 got released.
Well, I did a test drive on an Alpha workstation by installing NT, so i will say, way before that.
Yes please! Although, that might only add to my biggest gripe with Linux, segmentation. If everyone just came together and made one unified Linux desktop distro, it could run circles around Windows. It already does as a server OS.
Amen. As a huge fan of Linux, sadly I agree, their segmentation is their worst enemy.
As more stuff goes web-based, that support is unnecessary
In the future? Yes, but currently , all of the programs that i have tested, the web version is always trailing the full client.
and honestly what MS seems to be pushing for, even in it's own suite of apps. Office on a web browser is looking an awful lot like Office the standalone suite
But its lacking a lot of features, like PST in Outlook.