On Fri, 27 May 2016, Rod Smallwood wrote: > Please can we have some specific instances of Windows causing problems.
Windows 95 - 98 either blue screened or locked up daily, no matter what you did. In fact, IIRC, there was a timer bug that would _insure_ the system couldn't stay up for more than 49 days (https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/kb/216641). That's an eyeblink in the kind of uptimes I'm used to in the Unix world. Don't even get my started on Windows 3.x with Trumpet Winsock I could write a Ph.D thesis on stupidity with that much material. > Not unqualified people at home or students but real production > environments with qualified support on hand. I used every version of > windows from 1 to 10. yes XP and millennium too My dad used to tell me how he thought Windows was great too. He worked for a company that designed and built chemical refineries (some in the US, but mostly small plants in remote parts of the world). They had to stop using Windows in any man-machine interfaces, because: (this was XP and win2k)> 1. People in Iraq or Siberia would put games on them and of course that broke them. 2. They got tired of flying out engineers to fix issues that were windows centric, like a NIC bug that kept kicking machines off the ethernet. They moved to QNX and they absolutely love it now. At this point in the life of Windows, I can believe it's MUCH more stable than those old Win95 based DOS-predicated systems. However, being a Unix zealot, I'd refer you to the same list Mouse posted earlier about why he's not a Windows booster. I'm totally on the same page with him. It's not only the reputation for lower stability, it's all the other heinous crap M$ has pulled over the years. Trust == nonexistent. > I wrote time and mission critical food distribution related software for > the ten years before I retired in vb and then vb.net (oo) I would have > seen just about every possible bug in windows and in developing > applications under it. You are probably a good coder who knows how to tweak Windows and make it do what you need. I don't doubt that's possible. However, there are still other factors (like the ones I mentioned earlier) that can make it less desirable. Plus, there is a ton of absolutely horrible Win32, MFC, and VB code. Not that I write on those APIs, admittedly, but I've experienced plenty of the application failures that result. -Swift