[mythtv-users] OT: A major difference between Widows and Linux

Damian myth at surr.co.uk
Thu May 12 13:41:27 UTC 2016


On 12/05/2016 11:02, Simon Hobson wrote:
> Damian <myth at surr.co.uk> wrote:
>
>> A fundamental difference between Windows and Linux
> Couldn't you have raised a less contentious topic like politics or religion :D
>
>> it seems to me, is ...
>> In Linux, if pretty much anything goes wrong, the user needs to enter some commands into the terminal in order to get to the bottom of the problem.
>> In Windows, no matter what goes wrong, there is almost never a 'need' to go to the command line.
> Go back a year or three and it's more like :
> In Linux, everything is possible (even if a bit arcane and tricky to configure), while in Windows the simple is easy and the difficult is impossible (ie if there's no GUI button to click).
> In Linux, when something goes wrong, it'll be isolated to something that's visible and fixable, while in Windows it's often easiest to just re-install the OS.
>
> On both, times they are a changin'
>
> With SystemD, Linux is rapidly moving over to the Windows ground of big binary blobs of obfuscated functionality and many unrelated functions rolled up into the one black box - with restricted configurability and obfuscated logs that need a special program to access. Windows on the other hand, is moving the other way, with PowerShell and even Bash now !
>
> As someone else put it, debugging with SystemD is like fault finding on electronics with nowhere to stick the voltmeter.
>
> It was often said long ago that "DOS is like Unix with the useful stuff taken out" - with PowerShell and Bash, they're finally fixing that. A few decades late, but ...
Thanks everyone,

I'll not respond to any individual point as I know the topic could 
snowball and be an annoying distraction from MythTV.

Thanks for those of you who responded. Very interesting to read your 
thoughts.

Cheers,
Damian


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