this post was submitted on 29 Jun 2025
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I think it's mainly because the entire PC market is shrinking. Most people use phones and tablets these days and those don't come with Windows.
Gaming and corporate software are the last strongholds, but mobile gaming keeps growing and I see more and more people using tablets for office work. Especially when companies keep moving more of their core applications to the cloud with web/app interfaces.
I see that, too. Always makes me feel like a boomer (despite being in the wrong age group to be one), because I like my computer for the hundred and something keys which fit snuggly underneath all fingers, the separate keys for brackets and umlauts and numbers. And that I can open and operate like 3 programs next to each other while doing work. Somehow people younger than me(?) do it very differently.
(Plus I can install an operating system I really like on my computer.)
lol corporate isn't a stronghold. It's a big part were the erosion is coming from. So many businesses don't need x86 and windows any more. Low power arm is the current hotness and ai is an expensive joke
Most of my division has switched to macs over the past few years. I've always been a mac guy but having my IT department offer the switch a few years ago was a surprise, and seeing my coworkers actually choose it has been kind of a shock.
I'm forced to use windows for work and I absolutely loathe it. I'd rather go home and use my mac than deal with all the bloat, ads and nonsense. I just find it insufferable.
Yeah I can't believe my employer forces me to use a computer that's constantly popping up trying to get me to play games or read gossip.
ya so much for productivity tools haha!
I use Windows Server and Azure, and everything Microsoft touches is garbage, including Azure and all their new stuff.
my old state uni and my current job uses microsoft apps/azure. and i noticed the computers at work already upgraded to a newer version. the UI looks terrible.
and people love to work on Macs because its more convenient than windows when they are programming too.
I think it's both. People who've never before really considered using Linux have started migrating off of Windows ever since the end of service announcement for Win10.
Sure. But I think the total number of desktop Linux users is a two digit millions number. So those few millions we've attracted lately are more a decimal point when talking about 400 million. They're there and part of the picture, though.
That sounds horrible
That's most likely it. Most of the world is running on a smartphone.
I'm seeing that a lot with traffic. It's been a steady tick up on mobile and a steady downward for PCs in general. People just use their phones for more things now. And I don't see that trend changing. Including this comment.
Source: web dev with a site that helps maintain a pretty big corporate site.
This is a great example of people taking sides and not seeing past their own noses about it.
Also of not reading past the headline, but whatever.
If I have to choose between the janky but unlocked environment of Windows and a world of iOS and Googlified Android users I'd pick Windowsland in a heartbeat.
We need a better integrated device open alternative, and fast.
I'm sorry, I don't really get it. What sides? And who didn't read the article? That's their main conclusion as well. Plus they add some fluff before and after. But that's not really important. Could you maybe explain what an "device open alternative" is? I don't know that term. And it's kind of hard to find anything just by googling "device open".
I'm talking about all the people going "good" in this thread out of hostility for Windows/MS without realizing the change being described is a move to a more closed-off, privacy-invasive environment, not the opposite. Which is a result of either not reading past the headline or being so polarized on the issue that they are willing to take the downsides for the sake of schadenfreude.
As for what I meant by that vague term, I just didn't want to say "an open mobile OS". Mostly because... well, it invites a lot of open questions about Android I don't think are interesting right now, but also because I think "mobile OS" is increasingly a misnomer.
People are clearly using iOS and Android as their main computing platforms now, both of them are rolling out full multi-window desktops for larger devices out of the box and they're both already usable that way with limitations right now. When you say "mobile OS" people visualize a phone and want to talk about Linux on phones and... that's probably not the right answer or the right way to look at it.
Thanks for explaining. It's a bit tricky if you invent words without explaining them at the same time.
You're right. I'm used to read stupid takes here on Lemmy, so I mainly ignored those. It is like you said. People are moving more towards mobile devices where they're not in control of anything. They're mostly walled gardens. You don't get administrator privileges, Google or whoever is making those choices for you. And they're so easy to use, you don't even learn anything about the internet and their inner workings. It's all a service and content magically appears on your screen. All of that is a step down from where we've been before.
I struggle to recommend Microsoft instead. While it's still a computer and that definitely changes things, they're headed in exactly the same direction. Everything is set on spying per default these days, and they also try to lure you in into their walled gardens, paid services instead if owning software or disk space... It's not the same level. But not good either.
Ideally we don't want any of them to be in control of our platforms and devices, but have some control ourselves. With smartphones that's next to impossible. With windows you might be able to pull it off if you put in some effort, since it's not the default experience. Given it's something that can be changed.