Linux as an actually better experience, without gigantic embarrassing flubs like this, is looking better by the day.
Think that's hyperbole? Look at this, from the link:
> The first time a user runs a new executable, Apple delays execution while waiting for a reply from their server. This check for me takes close to a second.
> This is not just for files downloaded from the internet... this is everything. So even if you write a one line shell script and run it in a terminal, you will get a delay!
Consider a developer in this situation.
If your job involves lots of scripting - not unusual, for a dev - and you create dozens of scripts a day, or more - every single one will take about a second, and up to 7 seconds (!) to run, that first time you run it. And that could easily happen upwards of a dozen times a day, because it will happen for each script you create.
That's pretty terrible, for a developer. I don't think you can normalize startup times, for some hacky script, of 1 second as pretty okay or not noticeable. Certainly not if you're talking about a high end work machine.
Times that bad are associated with some junk laptop that's 15 years old - that's not supposed to be Apple.
Even if you build apps (I do), you might have the need to create scripts now and then, possibly even a lot of them (I do, for testing). I don't consider it acceptable to wait 1 sec+ each time I run one. It really does suggest that Apple has gotten extremely careless about their developer audience.
So, yeah - compared to that, Linux performs way better, and looks like a premium work machine by comparison.