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There are a number of tasks that are easier / more convenient in the Linux OS, and so on, that’s all, if you don’t have such tasks, then you don’t need Linux and there’s nothing wrong with that.
The OS is only a tool, when they ask me which is better, then I ask - for what tasks?
1) You will forever forget what viruses are, auto-update of the system, and so on.
2) The terminal in Linux allows you to install / remove a huge number of packages with one command. To put it simply, sudo apt-get install nodejs will have a node installed on our system in a minute, while on windows it will take a lot of operations to achieve this goal.
3) If earlier Linux was rejected due to the inability to play games, now you can install Steam there without any problems and fully use all its functions
4) Ubuntu is very beautiful visually
If you are asking this question, then you do not need Linux. And for me personally, it's simply more comfortable. There are a million reasons, I don’t remember everything at once, for example:
- updating the entire system and software with one command. And it will take a couple of minutes. I don't understand why Windows takes so long to update.
- You can mount anything to the file system. On Windows, even with FTP without third-party tools, you cannot do this. Well, that is, it is possible, but this is some kind of virtual file system with which WinApi does not work.
- Normal remote access. I also don’t understand why Windows blocks the screen when connecting remotely, even under a different login.
And yes, that it is not buggy is a myth. There are enough glitches here. Recent: In Arch Linux in Gnome 3.30, there was a segfault when going to the Shared tab of the Control Center. True, a couple of days ago the update came. And in "stable" Debian, MonoDevelop crashed when opening a solution. But here it’s somehow easier to deal with glitches: all the logs are in one place, many programs write a bunch of things to the console ...
x86 architecture is not eternal, and in another environment, shitty windows will not survive
The soft ones understand this - they are "preparing")
Examples of the beginning of the end:
- "killed" the Windows and Devices division, which is now called Experiences & Devices
- released Microsoft SQL Server for Linux
- bought github ( go to "openssource" )
- On most virtual machines in Azure installed ...
ps the head of microsoft worked in SUN :)
Having learned Linux, you will know the UNIX architecture, and this will open the way to understanding most of the existing distributions (Macosx, FreeBSD, Android, Raspberry Pi, Orange Pi, etc.)
Windows architecture is used, perhaps, only by ReactOS.
Well, to be able to work with this rather popular OS.
Here you have to work for / with a computer on which Linux works, and you op and don’t know how to do it.
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