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Sometimes people have their computers turned on, but then they turn them off. I know, it's wild.
I've never, in multiple decades of using Windows, and thousands of updates, ever had an update installed and not had my computer work again. I suspect this is most people's experience, or they wouldn't use it.
Because most people are not system administrators and don't have the time or knowledge to debug their computers every 5 minutes, or to figure out how to do what they want it to do or run the program they need to run. I've used both extensively and Windows is, by a landslide, the easier system to use, regardless of what the reasons are.
We have found the one Windows fan on Lemmy!
I still use windows almost entirely because of certain software I need for work. But if not for that I'd switch in a heartbeat, I'm not the most tech savvy person but in my experience Linux is much nicer and easier to use and if you need to debug it every 5 minutes you're doing something very wrong. The only downside is software support which I'd argue isn't the fault of Linux.
Yeah, definitely not. I still use Linux on like 6 computers.
But if the reason people use Windows is truly a "mystery" to you then you're simply delusional. I am not a genius but I'm competent enough to make it functional.
It just frustrates me less than a remote server constantly fucking with my computer and actively preventing me from doing what I want.
Probably. That doesn't make it any less frustrating.
Whose fault it is is completely irrelevant. If ya can't do it, ya can't do it.
I mean you can break Windows enough to have to debug it every five minutes, too, that would also be frustrating.
For the average user who isn't tinkering with everything Linux is a pretty smooth and pleasant experience.
Also I'm not mystified by Windows' market dominance, but we all know the reason isn't because it simply provides a better experience. Most Windows users have no choice in the matter as it's just the default.
Also software availability doesn't have much to do with the OS. It's a reason I don't use Linux more, but it's not something the OS does poorly. It's something software developers do poorly.
I don't break anything. The most recent debacle I experienced was that the maintainer somehow lost the signing keys or something and it just gave a generic error message and refused to update.
We all know that's not correct. Why do you think it's the default? Why do you think people pay real money to have it installed on their computers vs. the free option?
LOL wat?
It doesn't matter whose fault it is. It doesn't work. That's all that matters.
Windows is fine at being an OS, most of the time it just works. I think the exact same thing is true of certain Linux distros, especially for the average user who could load it up, browse the internet and watch videos without ever breaking or having to debug anything.
If we're purely talking about the OS. Forget software or imagine you're exclusively using software that works fine on both. I think Linux is a much nicer experience. It has really improved over the years.
Obviously we can't just ignore software, though, and that's a huge part of why Windows is still so popular. But another huge part is that Microsoft pays a lot of money to make it the default OS on lots of hardware. I can't even think of a single person I know who chose windows, it's just what companies use and what most computers come with pre-installed. Companies like it because Microsoft provide tech support. There are many reasons why Windows is so popular that have nothing to do with the user experience.
You have that backwards.
Sorta but not really, it's ubiquitous now so it almost has to be on new hardware, and Microsoft offers big discounts for OEM versions. They lose money to guarantee it stays the default I guess? Either way, I still don't think there's a lot of people actively choosing it.