Milos wrote: ↑Mon Apr 12, 2021 11:55 pmThis is even easier to be done on Windows. And I've never seen a problem on a modern Windows that can't be recovered in a matter of half an hour by even half decently experienced win admin.
Versus five minutes under Linux without experienced admin.
Milos wrote: ↑Mon Apr 12, 2021 10:52 pmYou know there is a thing on Windows called fast reboot
How often that "urban legend" Win frying itself on update happens per number of users?
Just have a look at the MS help forums. The most frequent "solution" btw. is to reinstall Windows. Which is odd because that was the state of affairs under Win 95, and it was unheard of under Win 7 unless the user did really stupid things like installing some cracks from shady websites AND dismiss the MSE warnings.
Can you actually support those wild claims of "Windows Home users are now the unpaid beta testers for the enterprise version"???
I won't educate you much if you have been living under a rock for years, Google is at your disposition. The summary is that before, MS used to test on thousands of real PCs under various configurations. These days, they test on VMs only so that they only find bugs that will virtually hit everyone. Whenever you see an update that is "not compatible with your PC", all it means is that enough users under your config have already been bitten by that so that MS pulled the plug on it. In case you wonder, MS knows this through telemetry. What's worse, their devs don't have a proper test field so that they debug into the dark.
Again observational bias. If I just counted how many times something got screwed when I tried to do something very basic under Linux it wouldn't fit into 10k characters.
Which ties into the next one:
And I am actively administrating both Linux and Windows machines. And as an admin, I can say administrating Windows is like a 100 times easier than Linux.
The reason is that you may have Windows experience, but shouldn't be administrating Linux machines. Think about why most servers are under Linux, not Windows. Certainly not because more experienced admins than you like to incur more hassle.