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I work for a microsoft gold partner, and our VP of development is an MVP. When we report bugs, they get addressed.
As for features, a month ago I made a good argument for supporting POCO objects in dynamic data, and with the latest push we got a DynamicObjectDataSource that does just that.
I'm not saying that. I am saying that the vast majority of linux software is pre 1.0, which by its version number means the DEVELOPERS WRITING IT do not believe it is production ready.
And just so you don't think im just bashing linux, I also think by and large the GUI apps on windows leave a lot to be desired in terms of usability, consistency, and esthetic, especially when compared to mac apps. And that if you ignore tooling, free software really sets the bar on infrastructure stuff and protocol specs.
As an MS gold partner I've no doubt that you've got an attentive ear from MS. That, however, is not the case for the vast majority of MS customers.
As a "basic" user of FOSS you have access to developers, you can submit bugs and feature requests. Sure, you have no guaranty that those requests will be addressed but at least the communication channel is there.
And I'm sure that for the kind of money your privileged relation with MS is costing you you could get the same level of service from a commercial Linux distribution.
As for the quality of Linux desktop software, using it daily both professionally and at home, I must say that most applications don't feel the least like beta software. Firefox, Konqueror, Amarok, Krita, OpenOffice, KDE in general, none of them feel shaky or amateurish to me.
Now on the other hand using Windows always feels like an adventure, the question not being "will it crash?", but "what will crash and when?"






Member since:
2005-12-21
And tell me, when was the last time that MS fixed a bug you reported to them? or added a feature you asked for?
And don't tell me Word, Outlook, IE, Visio, etc. has never crashed on you, taking away your time or your work. There is this bug with MS Word, where it crashes with a 'not enough memory' when opening a document. It's been there since Office 95, instead of fixing it, MS gives me a ribbon instead... Yes, Companies are so much better at listening to their users, sure.