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I love how Microsoft has billions at their disposal and they are being beaten to pulp by hobby programmers, fucking amazing, keep it up.
Lol, no, they aren't.
Linux isn't the desktop of choice for business, which is what MS cares about. That's where they make their money.
And that means SMB will run Windows Server to manage user accounts and the environment in general.
Add Excel to that equation, and Linux has no relevance in the business world (and before you mention any OSS competitor I have one word: tables. And I'll add decades of automation).
Yes, you could do things like Linux as the OS then run virtualization layers or Wine or whatever, but there's no value in that for a typical SMB, and a lot of risk.
Enterprise is even more of a lock-in for MS, because it's a simple choice, they get all the support they need from MS, and it "just works" for them.
MS has a mature user, machine, and software management infrastructure that's well known by millions of technical people. Desktop and office apps have the same familiarity (and again I'll mention decades of extant automation built around excel).
Linux doesn't stand a chance against MS in a business environment for the desktop. Can it be done? Sure. But in very specific use-cases and hoping you'll never grow into a circumstance where you suddenly need Office or some other element to interop with a vendor or client. This is exactly the situation management doesn't want to be blamed for.
Servers are different question altogether, and have been since 2000.
I fail to see where the comment you replied to had any concern whatsoever for the business environment.
Dont be too hard on them, theyre just a corporate user
Also, I can't see how the Xbox branch of Microsoft represents the business users that they supposedly care about
i have seen some of these. it all needs to burn. (and then be replaced by 3 python scripts and a csv file. )
Ew no. Put data in a database.
The post is about gamers, not corpo dogs.
Entire counties / governments all over the world are transitioning off windows products. Do they still hold the lionshare of marketshare for the desktop environment, yes obviously, but there was never an expectation that the swap would be all at once. Gradually over the next 10 years more will follow and would not be surprised to see this become closer to 70/30 (windows still dominant) by 2035.
This might change tho. The current push for digital autonomy by the EU is creating a pretty large movement towards open source and Linux in many countries. Sure, it's not an overwhelming amount of machines simply dropping windows, but it increases the amount of Linux and OSS software in government and attached business by a significant share of the market, creating a pull effect.
This might be what makes other businesses move away from Microsoft in the long run. Being able to say that the data you store is safe from US government agencies simply because you aren't attached to them anymore might be a plus in the current - and even more in future - markets.
It's similar to what happened in the server space. Everything was IIS, until it wasn't because OSS became the thing to use. These days MS rents out Linux servers.
Edit: this doesn't mean that we won't be stuck with Windows legacy stuff for the next decades tho :-(
I was working on server side stuff back then and IIS was never dominant - it was more a hodge-podge of various solutions including stuff like Sun's proprietary stuff on top of SunOS, and indeed IIS was also in the mix though at least in my experience it never really overtook the Unix-based solutions.
But yeah, Apache with Linux came out and took pretty much the whole webservers and web-services market pretty fast, and Linux itself took over most of the broader server-side market (so, stuff beyond serving web-pages or REST interfaces).
Windows NT had a bit of a moment before that, but it didn't grew all that big on the server side because of competing Unix solutions back then (SunOS, IBM AIX and so on) and then Linux came and pretty much crushed NT server-side for anything but serving Microsoft-ecosystem-specific stuff (such as services supporting single sign-on for Windows).
Hard to swallow pills
We'll get there eventually but the tools to do so are still being made.
What does SMB stand for in this context?
Couldn't they just use Google sheets
Edit: its free and has better features at time than excel though if the goal is to move to open source then There's a huge push in the EU for just that.