On Sat, 10 Nov 2018, David wrote:

I wonder what is Microsoft's long-term plan?

Further integration in to the open source world I believe.

Being able to run Linux apps on Windows doesn't mean there will be widespread abandonment of Linux. The trend has been in the other direction for a couple of decades. Rather it means that cross platform apps will be easier to build.

Microsoft has been a member of the Linux Foundation since 2016. A plurality (likely soon to be majority) of VMs running on Microsoft's Azure cloud platform are Linux systems.

Microsoft tried to destroy Linux/open source as it perceived this to be in its best interests. It failed. Microsoft now works with the Linux/open source community as it perceives this to be in its best interests.

Having been actively involved with the Linux/open source community for over a quarter century I've watched Microsoft change. I remember when the Mozilla development team announced that the Microsoft IE team had contacted them and wanted to meet. They tentatively agreed to the meeting, publicly admitting they didn't know what to expect. That was the first crack in the ice and represented a change of direction (and culture) at Microsoft that took perhaps a decade.

I'm looking seriously at using Powershell for my next project because Microsoft ported it to Linux (my preferred platform), released it open source, and it seems like the right job for the task.

Cheers,

Rob
_______________________________________________
Link mailing list
[email protected]
http://mailman.anu.edu.au/mailman/listinfo/link

Reply via email to