Well, I must say that this has been a very engaging read...a lot of posts since my last. Tarwn I really appreciated what you had to say.
I disagree with some of the conclusions and evaluations about Microsoft and noticed a number of links to grave security issues with the Windows OS and Microsoft Software products...I did go read them. If one scours the web for security flaws I believe that one could make a case against any OS...I heard Linux mentioned
I heard Unix and Apache mentioned...have you already forgotten the hole that allowed the Slapper worm and rocked the open source community and their webservers back in September? Here's some ammo for both sides of the argument...you tell me about 20 and i'll tell you about 20
I hear MAC mentioned...go to
and look in the vulneribility section (vulns) search keyword MAC
Come on, anyone who feels that Windows is just garbage and that all these other Operating Systems are the greatest marvels of security/reliability/scalability the world has ever known are just spouting rhetoric...and usually second-hand rhetoric at that. Can a case be made against Microsoft? SURE! Anybody with an internet connection and IE (Netscape or Opera for those not Microsoft inclined) and the ability to type "
in as an URL can make a case against Microsoft...but don't think that the same can't be done to all the others. We can create scenarios where one OS would out-perform another until the cows come home. Is a security flaw in Windows a big deal? ABSOLUTELY! When you have the kind of market share that Microsoft has then it is indeed a big deal because so many more consumers can be potentially adversely effected by it.
Have I used and programmed for all of the Operating Systems we've been talking about? YES Do I currently run computers with all of the Operating Systems that have been spoken of here? YES I'm only saying this so you'll know that I am not just going on something I read in the latest copy of a Magazine or in some forum that I belong to or heard while on a smoke break with my co-workers.
My point is this...I believe Microsoft does indeed get a bad rap due to it's size, profitability, and exposure. That was the real question of this thread i believe. I tend to spend much more time on my comps running Windows because that suits my needs...and should I have a need that is suited by moving to the chair in front of one of my other computers that is running a non-Microsoft OS then I simply pick my butt up and move over there for a bit. And what was this stuff about not being able to pick and choose what you run because of Microsoft? Don't like IE use Opera, don't like IIS use Apache, don't like Windows Media Player use MusicMatch, don't like Outlook use Eudora, don't like the office suite use StarOffice or Corel etc. Other than the OS I'm not sure what is being referred to by this notion that Microsoft has cut off your choices to have pickles and/or onions. Maybe an implicit reference to BUNDLING? That argument doesn't hold water either and I would get into that but that's not what this thread started on and I stray far enough as it is.
Microsoft is on top of the heap because they meet the vast majority of consumers' needs the best out of all the other Operating Systems out there. Unix/Linux (in a myriad of flavors) is FREE for the download and STILL the overwhelming majority of consumers go with Microsoft and pony up the bucks to buy it. Why? Because they WANT what Microsoft Windows has to offer. If they wanted a copy of FreeBSD or Redhat or Mandrake (etc.) then they would go get it and save themselves a few dollars. Slighthaze =
NULL