![]() ![]() ![]() I'm finding tons of such issues for 1903, but not really for 1909, so maybe I mixed those up. (Azure wins by having pricing cheaper on setup environments that are more costly than AWS, Azure ready to negotiate long terms deal with companies, AWS doesn't really, beside massive deals, Azure wins in company ease of payment system (goes through Office 365), Azure has more locations around the world than AWS, so if you need a strong global access, including regions like Africa, with great performance, than Azure is your best choice. ![]() The company has adapted, the company main revenue is Azure now, not Windows, and Azure is not up to sizes of AWS which has majority shares, thank of them being, as we speak, a more mature platform, ease of use, better connectivity, and bigger and better servers. If you see their financial statements, it is pretty shocking how little Windows brings in these days. Microsoft main revenue is no longer Windows. The moment they get users using Edge and/or Bing and/or Microsoft Store (doing purchases, that is), then that would definitely replace the revenue from Windows sales and be officially free. Windows is getting to be a service, full on. and they were very late to the party, and look, they are doing great! Great leadership mixed with talented people at all levels in a corporation thanks to careful hiring, puts everything on their side to succeed. You should not worry about Microsoft or any company financial situation if you are not a shareholder or investor. It's nice when programmers learn or create small tools, but whole operating system or complex software? I would not like to work in company that must declare bankruptcy because bunch of people makes similar software for free. I have mixed feelings about that working for free idea. Comparing the linux GUI to the win10 gui is quite a smear against Microsoft: “people working randomly for free and actively fighting each other are doing as good a job as you lot are” is quite an accusation. I try not to look at linux and I fully agree. But they're not for regular users.Īnd who said that Microsoft must prepare every possible tool for everything? 3rd party tools are the same good for configure system (if they're good written). So programs like OO ShutUp 10 are basically list of shortcuts to registry entries or some more hidden settings. So Windows is flexible enough to setup everything you like, just not everything is possible using GUI. Especially if that options may cause problems later (for example - user first disable driver updates and then, after a week, will be angry because he will have problems with update drivers somehow - and of course because "stupid Windows don't let me do it!"). Making GUI for everything is lot of work and most of people will be terrified if control panel gives them 1000 options more. Look at Linux - lot of settings are possible only using command line, because nobody never prepare any GUI for them. I would never have found it at all without instruction. Getting to safe mode for instance is an incredible totally non intuitive hassle. Now, it has support for both Windows 10 and the latest Windows 11 today.Yeah. Low volume and no installation required.Īdditional support for O&O ShutUp10++ Portable version (no installation required). ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
Details
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |