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Ubuntu on Windows

(blog.dustinkirkland.com)
2049 points bpierre | 2 comments | | HN request time: 0.417s | source
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gumby ◴[] No.11397549[source]
I'm not being deliberately obtuse: I don't really understand how this helps anyone particularly much.

(OK, I assume there's a small number of developers who develop, or at least debug, for both systems and prefer windows as a development environment, but I assume that number is small, at least on Microsoft's scale).

If you're developing to deploy on Linux but are more of a Windows dev, this helps you, but that doesn't help Microsoft ship more server OS licenses.

If you're a Windows dev this is irrelevant.

If you're a linux (or posix only) dev I don't see how this helps you much. It does help a person like me, who only uses Windows when I need some weird tool like a compiler for an exotic embedded part or vendor-supplied FPGA tool that only works under Windows -- again, not a large enough market t move the needle.

Could the market be CIOs? I.e. demonstrating "hipness" in a way that can be verified when the CIO asks the devs "does this really work the way MS claims?"

Obviously it's not opening the huge number of popular Linux desktop apps to the Windows environment. :-(

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1. milkytron ◴[] No.11397866[source]
One of the things that excited me most about this is the ability to ssh. I have a feeling that is going to be incredibly useful instead of having to use PuTTY or some other client.
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2. JdeBP ◴[] No.11415376[source]
ssh is, itself, just "some other client".

I suspect that you meant some other graphical user interface SSH client, as opposed to a TUI client like ssh. Yes, a TUI SSH client is useful. I've been using one with SFU/SFUA on a Windows 7 Ultimate machine for some years.