If it weren’t for Solidworks and the inability to run it on many Linux installs, I’d be on Linux full time. I run a couple of lightweight linux servers (reverse proxy, load balancer, jellyfin, etc) on some jailbroken chromeboxes, and I use Raspberry Pi’s for AI/voice assistant/HomeAssistant/Automation stuff. But I use Windows for Solidworks, Fusion360, VSCode (microcontroller programming), and other things.
I don’t use MacOSX for anything, though I think if the world came around and migrated to it, we’d all be in a better spot due to it at least being POSIX compliant UNIX. I feel like it would be easier to develop compatibility layers and migrate the rest of the desktop world over to Linux from there if it ever happened.
If I needed to develop cross-platform applications, I’d essentially HAVE TO have a Mac, as it’s the only one that can run all 3 OS’s for testing purposes with the least amount of hassle. Though, that may have changed since the new ARM based macs.
If it weren’t for Solidworks and the inability to run it on many Linux installs, I’d be on Linux full time. I run a couple of lightweight linux servers (reverse proxy, load balancer, jellyfin, etc) on some jailbroken chromeboxes, and I use Raspberry Pi’s for AI/voice assistant/HomeAssistant/Automation stuff. But I use Windows for Solidworks, Fusion360, VSCode (microcontroller programming), and other things.
I don’t use MacOSX for anything, though I think if the world came around and migrated to it, we’d all be in a better spot due to it at least being POSIX compliant UNIX. I feel like it would be easier to develop compatibility layers and migrate the rest of the desktop world over to Linux from there if it ever happened.
If I needed to develop cross-platform applications, I’d essentially HAVE TO have a Mac, as it’s the only one that can run all 3 OS’s for testing purposes with the least amount of hassle. Though, that may have changed since the new ARM based macs.