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  3. What OS do you use at work / home?

What OS do you use at work / home?

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  • M Mitchell J

    I keep switching back-and-forth between Windows and Linux (elementary / Ubuntu flavour) for reasons such as greater compatibility and support with user-end software (on Windows) and cleaner networking tools, better command-line tooling, upgrade-when-you-want, etc (on Linux) WSL has made me lean somewhat more towards Windows (I get most command-line abilities from Linux) but it's not perfect: networking, hardware port support, virtualization, GPU access etc still leave a lot to be desired :| ^.^ Asking the question in the title because I'm curious about what kind of problems you guys have to work with & why you / your company chose your OS as the best solution for what you do - and whether you would change anything.

    Up, Up, Down, Down, Left, Right, Left, Right, B, A.

    L Offline
    L Offline
    Leng Vang
    wrote on last edited by
    #33

    I use 99% Windows OS. The 1% is running Pi as HT streaming videos to TV. Work: Mainly Windows 7. Company hasn't get around to certified any thing beyond 7 (Security issue). Home: Windows 7 (20%), Windows 10 (80%). Have a laptop (Acer S3) refused to work with Windows 10 and I hate Windows 8, so remain in Windows 7. Development: Visual Studio (Exclusively). VS2017(H + W). At home I also use Atmel's Studio, which is based Visual Studio for embedded micro-controller programming. After 10+ years of exclusive living in command line world (Unix, DOS) I'm tired of it and too old to remember those critics commands and options.

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    • L Leng Vang

      I'm the complete opposite. Exclusively Windows. 7 as work, company didn't trust anything beyond that yet.

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      P Offline
      PIEBALDconsult
      wrote on last edited by
      #34

      You're lucky.

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      • T Tim Carmichael

        PIEBALDconsult wrote:

        OpenVMS

        Awesome sauce! Details please!

        P Offline
        P Offline
        PIEBALDconsult
        wrote on last edited by
        #35

        https://www.codeproject.com/script/Membership/Uploads/2587207/Computers.png[^]

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        • OriginalGriffO OriginalGriff

          Win 10, desktop and tablet - I work at home, so the desktop is mostly work, the tablet is wholly home. In addition, I use an Android Tablet (technically, I have 2 1/2 android tablets - it's complicated) and an Android phone. Win10 still isn't as good as Win7 from a user POV, and it's still an ugly bugger. It's insistence on trying - seemingly increasingly desperately - to make me use Edge is annoying but unsuccessful.

          Bad command or file name. Bad, bad command! Sit! Stay! Staaaay... AntiTwitter: @DalekDave is now a follower!

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          U Offline
          User 13464963
          wrote on last edited by
          #36

          Windows 10, as our servers have been Windows based. But in the process of swapping all our software (database, languages, GIS infrastructure, tools) over to open source. Some of the tools and packages we use will only run comfortably on linux, so I will be dual-booting / migrating to Ubuntu over time. About the only MS product I am doing anything on anymore is Visual Studio Code (Python dev). MS Office has been switched out for Libre Office, Opera does for email, SQL Server / SSIS / SSRS has been replaced by open source based off PostgreSQL / Python / RabbitMQ.

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          • P PIEBALDconsult

            https://www.codeproject.com/script/Membership/Uploads/2587207/Computers.png[^]

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            T Offline
            Tim Carmichael
            wrote on last edited by
            #37

            That is awesome! Spent a good part of my career in OpenVMS and may still have some opportunities to do so.

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            • T Tim Carmichael

              That is awesome! Spent a good part of my career in OpenVMS and may still have some opportunities to do so.

              P Offline
              P Offline
              PIEBALDconsult
              wrote on last edited by
              #38

              My education and career up until 2002 was OpenVMS. I see no opportunities and I'm not looking for any. Joining the OpenVMS Hobbyist program allows me to keep from getting too rusty.

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              • P PIEBALDconsult

                My education and career up until 2002 was OpenVMS. I see no opportunities and I'm not looking for any. Joining the OpenVMS Hobbyist program allows me to keep from getting too rusty.

                T Offline
                T Offline
                Tim Carmichael
                wrote on last edited by
                #39

                When I started college in 1982, applications were done on punch cards on Apple II computers. However, over the Christmas break, a VAX/VMS system was installed. So, my college days finished out with VAX/VMS. Then, for work, it was at a cereal manufacturing facility working in VAX/VMS - the first two years were rewriting applications from a PDP-11 to VAX/VMS in Fortran and FMS forms; after that, it was develop other system and maintain what was in place. From there, it was a pulp and paper mill maintaining an ERP system on VAX/FMS, also in Fortran and FMS with some C for the check-writing application. In 2011, I switched companies and didn't work with VMS anymore. But... I recently started a new job and in the interview process, I was asked what my experience with OpenVMS was.. so there is hope yet! Even if it is rewriting applications into a Windows environment and shutting down the OpenVMS application.

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                • S Steve Naidamast

                  I'm with Mike. I am retired from the corporate world as well but still use Windows for all my development endeavors. Since I have a brand new laptop and workstation, both from DELL, both are running Windows 10 with Stardock's, Start10 software, to provide me with a Windows 7 Start/Menu. I have Visual Studio 2015 on my laptop but have moved my work to Visual Studio 2017 on my workstation. I have tried many desktop flavors of Linux in the past, including Ubuntu, and like Mike here, I found it more of a nuisance to work with than anything else. This could mean that Mike and I have become institutionalized over these many years but it also means we know Windows well enough to work with all of its idiosyncrasies and weaknesses... :)

                  Steve Naidamast Sr. Software Engineer Black Falcon Software, Inc. blackfalconsoftware@outlook.com

                  E Offline
                  E Offline
                  EoRaptor
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #40

                  All of my professional work, for the last twenty-odd years, has been in the MS stack. Over the course of those years there have been plenty of death marches, or overtime working, from home. So, I'm forced to us MS... in a VBox VM running on linux. Granted, I'm using Ubuntu (and I've upgraded every six months to the latest flavor), but I started way back when RedHat was still a hobby, before it went all enterprise-ey. Eventually, I switched to Ubuntu because I had neither the time, nor the mental capacity, to keep track of all the configuration files and settings of RedHat. I must admit, however, that Visual Studio Code, and .NET CORE, look awfully interesting from a linux perspective. The summit of Mt. Everest is composed of marine limestone.

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                  • L Leng Vang

                    I'm the complete opposite. Exclusively Windows. 7 as work, company didn't trust anything beyond that yet.

                    H Offline
                    H Offline
                    hpcoder2
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #41

                    Wow - a lot of Windows users! Me, I've been OpenSUSE for about 10 years, and mostly Linux since since 1993. After about 2000, other 'nixes (eg Solaris) went by the board. Used Windows (XP/7) from about 2006-2012 as required by some corporate environments I contracted to, but never really got used to them, and happily left them behind :).

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                    • M Mitchell J

                      I keep switching back-and-forth between Windows and Linux (elementary / Ubuntu flavour) for reasons such as greater compatibility and support with user-end software (on Windows) and cleaner networking tools, better command-line tooling, upgrade-when-you-want, etc (on Linux) WSL has made me lean somewhat more towards Windows (I get most command-line abilities from Linux) but it's not perfect: networking, hardware port support, virtualization, GPU access etc still leave a lot to be desired :| ^.^ Asking the question in the title because I'm curious about what kind of problems you guys have to work with & why you / your company chose your OS as the best solution for what you do - and whether you would change anything.

                      Up, Up, Down, Down, Left, Right, Left, Right, B, A.

                      G Offline
                      G Offline
                      Greg Lovekamp
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #42

                      Work: Microsoft Only - Windows 10 for desktop, Windows Server 2012 for servers, SQL Server, Visual Studio Home: Apple Only - macOS and iOS

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