from Hacker News

Ask HN: Have you Sworn off Microsoft?

by meesterdude on 2/10/22, 3:19 AM with 10 comments

  • by version_five on 2/10/22, 3:37 AM

    This would be more appropriate in 2004. There is a lot I don't like about Microsoft (and to be fair I have sworn off windows), but they are not the greater evil in office suite or email and are competitively priced while still being, at least in appearance, professional, and not just a search company trying to drive traffic in.

    Maybe there is some paradise where we move beyond commercial software, but until we get there, Microsoft has some competitive products

  • by 71a54xd on 2/10/22, 4:14 AM

    Yep, I distinctly remember the last time I had to use a Microsoft Office product and have genuinely enjoyed not using windows since I don't play video games anymore. Occasionally I plug in my SSD with windows to edit video with Adobe products but otherwise, around 30% of the time windows breaks for inexplicable reasons.

    I genuinely have no issue looking down on people who work for microsoft - sure they have a monopoly on certain industries but their product is basically shit.

  • by thesuperbigfrog on 2/10/22, 4:01 AM

    "Sworn off" ?

    Do you mean "sworn at"?

    I've sworn at Microsoft many times.

    I still have to use Windows and Office at work.

    I use RHEL for software development work, but the Windows 10 desktop environment is better than Gnome 3 desktop environment.

    We don't always get to choose what we use, so it can be hard to swear off anything unless it is entirely personal use

  • by ohiovr on 2/10/22, 4:19 AM

    Visual Studio code is alright. Can't stand their other non free offerings.
  • by TowerTall on 2/10/22, 3:24 AM

    What do you mean?
  • by tanseydavid on 2/10/22, 5:21 AM

    There is a recurring dream I have that includes swearing off MS for good.
  • by girafffe_i on 2/10/22, 5:07 AM

    Just for development.
  • by simonblack on 2/10/22, 5:23 AM

    No. No need to swear off Microsoft. That's no longer necessary. And hasn't been for some 15 years or more.

    For most people today, Microsoft is irrelevant. Maybe a few software developers might think Microsoft is important, but the rest of the world's population and software developers know that it isn't.