>macOS and windows are not a good example. Those systems effectively
control the full stack and dictate what is supported and allowed,
starting at the firmware level, through the boot loader, the OS, the
file systems, etc. This is very different from us, where we support
a wide range of machine types and have to work with the firmware written
with the primary goal of supporting _other_ operating systems.

This may be true for MacOS but Windows boots from the same UEFI firmware that 
boots Linux systems. Windows faces the same hardware  diversity that Linux 
faces. And the last time I checked, Windows allocates a mere 100mb for the EFI 
system partition[1]. Everything else is NTFS. What is Windows doing right?

[1]https://www.terabyteunlimited.com/kb/kb-articles/standard-windows-10-partitions-for-mbr-gpt-disks/
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