Hello, Marcus

Many thanks for taking the trouble to reply, and so comprehensively.

I certainly don't want to get into a sterile debate about the merits of
Linux vs. Windows (that I'm not qualified for, anyway). But there are a
couple of points (here I go, anyway)...

There are Linux builds for an extraordinary range of hardware platforms, and
making applications work is not always plain sailing - the support groups
testify to that.

And it seems to me that reliance on the shifting sands of Python has
consumed a fair amount of development and support resources.

Then there is the infamous WX/QT transition that seems to have upset a lot
of users apart from me. Some of us just give up at a certain point, so you
won't see endless complaints about the same old problems.

I can understand a "new broom" team may have to dump some legacy code that's
too hard to support, but it is a fact that some basic QT widgets do not
replicate the full functionality of their WX predecessors. In other words QT
is not really mature enough yet.

Windows developers have the "luxury" of an IBM-compatible platform, or what
passes for that these days. "Clean" code in C/C++ or C#, without other
language or toolset dependencies has been remarkably successful for quite a
few SDR authors (some distributing their product for free) who have no
inclination to stray beyond Windows despite their excellent programming
skills.

My impression is that Windows is *not* a mess. There is a strong market for
SDR software on Windows and, thankfully, developers for it.

Sorry, that was more than a couple.

Gnu Radio is a wonderful thing, and at one point made a huge difference for
me. And surely it will only get better with time. Congratulations to
everyone for all the successes, and many thanks for giving up their time.

Best regards

Paul White

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