Why I chose to quit Windows
# 1 Because development chains are not welcome on windows.
- not only the shell is badly ruined to the point of introducing msys2
- but in addition, the compilers are suspect in the eyes of Windows defender so well that it increases the compilation times tenfold (see: View: https://twitter.com/wiz_a_thon/status/1180695964723449858?s=20
)
# 2 because of its awkward security design
- it is the designated victim of viruses
- real-time anti-viruses scrupt your own artefacts up close (go snooping elsewhere, window$ defender; you're polluting me!)
# 3 because I'm tired of suspecting malware when every morning windows keep scratching the hard drive.
# 4 because i'm tired of seeing the ram grabbed by the system
# 5 because I'm sick of the long updates every month and fear a power outage during that time.
# 6 because I'm tired of windows like changing the administrator experience, from one version to another
# 7 and as a corollary, because I'm tired of cursing Microsoft engineers
Why I chose to adopt FreeBSD
# 1 Because he loves developers, without bigotry; its license accepts you whether you are open source or not.
# 2 Because it is efficient, stable and safe at the same time
# 3 because the project-team and its distribution have only been doing 1, for 30 years.
- its community is therefore united around a single distribution.
- its development is continuous, sustainable and coordinated
- its ecosystem is standard, in fact.
# 4 because its documentation is of high quality
# 5 because it is easy to use (at least for a computer scientist)
# 5 because it respects your privacy; it doesn't squat your connection to send modestly called "statistics" or do whatever with your hard drive to the point of asking you questions about the faulty process.
# 7 because it doesn't mistake your desktop for a billboard
# 8 because as an authentic and last legitimate heir to UNIX, it respects ancestral POSIX traditions.
# 9 because its source code is open, compact and well designed so that its user can consider developing features in the near future and through this, repay the debt he owes to the development team.
# 10 Because almost everything that runs on Windows and Linux runs on FreeBSD thanks to wine and linux compatibility.
# 11 Because you can dress your office as you want and adjust it in your own hands
with KDE 5 & Plasma, you can disguise it as Windows 7 Aero, Windows 10, Mac OS X or macos.
In short, there is no photo
# 1 Because development chains are not welcome on windows.
- not only the shell is badly ruined to the point of introducing msys2
- but in addition, the compilers are suspect in the eyes of Windows defender so well that it increases the compilation times tenfold (see: View: https://twitter.com/wiz_a_thon/status/1180695964723449858?s=20
)
# 2 because of its awkward security design
- it is the designated victim of viruses
- real-time anti-viruses scrupt your own artefacts up close (go snooping elsewhere, window$ defender; you're polluting me!)
# 3 because I'm tired of suspecting malware when every morning windows keep scratching the hard drive.
# 4 because i'm tired of seeing the ram grabbed by the system
# 5 because I'm sick of the long updates every month and fear a power outage during that time.
# 6 because I'm tired of windows like changing the administrator experience, from one version to another
# 7 and as a corollary, because I'm tired of cursing Microsoft engineers
Why I chose to adopt FreeBSD
# 1 Because he loves developers, without bigotry; its license accepts you whether you are open source or not.
# 2 Because it is efficient, stable and safe at the same time
# 3 because the project-team and its distribution have only been doing 1, for 30 years.
- its community is therefore united around a single distribution.
- its development is continuous, sustainable and coordinated
- its ecosystem is standard, in fact.
# 4 because its documentation is of high quality
# 5 because it is easy to use (at least for a computer scientist)
# 5 because it respects your privacy; it doesn't squat your connection to send modestly called "statistics" or do whatever with your hard drive to the point of asking you questions about the faulty process.
# 7 because it doesn't mistake your desktop for a billboard
# 8 because as an authentic and last legitimate heir to UNIX, it respects ancestral POSIX traditions.
# 9 because its source code is open, compact and well designed so that its user can consider developing features in the near future and through this, repay the debt he owes to the development team.
# 10 Because almost everything that runs on Windows and Linux runs on FreeBSD thanks to wine and linux compatibility.
# 11 Because you can dress your office as you want and adjust it in your own hands
with KDE 5 & Plasma, you can disguise it as Windows 7 Aero, Windows 10, Mac OS X or macos.
In short, there is no photo