From: oml1 AT Ra DOT MsState DOT Edu (Owen LaGarde) Newsgroups: comp.os.msdos.djgpp Subject: Re: "Make DJGPP shine bright, make it Windows..." Ugh. Date: 20 May 1997 14:37:01 GMT Organization: Mississippi State University Lines: 27 Message-ID: <5lscud$oij$1@NNTP.MsState.Edu> References: <199705192209 DOT RAA20892 AT rrnet DOT com> <01bc6456$ab061980$9141d9cd AT null> <01bc64c4$2e6b8fe0$4ad20bce AT miller> NNTP-Posting-Host: ra.msstate.edu To: djgpp AT delorie DOT com DJ-Gateway: from newsgroup comp.os.msdos.djgpp Precedence: bulk *flame on, Jonnie!* A lot of programs work better if they can be coded for windoz??? PUH-LEAZ! The only advantage I've ever seen for a Windows app over any other environment is that of access to a massive user market -- oops, sorry, that's an advantage in terms of profit potential, not functionality. Well, gee, come to think of it, I don't know of anything Windows has ever brought to the table that's unique or even superior to other parallel products. Let's see... flaky time-share multitasking that Geos, MacOs, Linux, BSD, etc., all do with infinitely greater stability, fake multi- user via multiple environ. configs that all of the above do in concurrent sessions, et cetera, et cetera. What in the world has Windows been doing that requires two to three times the hardware required for x386 Unix? Christ, Geos did as much on a C128, so did the Amiga in 512k. NT looks like it might finally be [mostly] stable, and Win95's "safe mode" traps problems ... most of the time ... thanks, but I'll stick with OS's designed to run uninterrupted and for a large part unmonitored for weeks or even months at a time given completely arbitrary actions by users that might or might not know what they're doing. I'm kinda used to being able to depend on the stability of the system, ya'know. -- Owen LaGarde | Performance prediction through Forest Products Research Laboratory | AI-driven process simulation Mississippi State University | oml1 AT ra DOT msstate DOT edu (130.18.80.10) | "... Oh, what a Tangled Web ..."