I think its mostly sunk cost and “i dont want to invest time to learn new things” that keeps people on windows.
Work is a separate thing. My work laptop runs windows, a matter I dont have a say in. But for personal use cases? I feel there are exceptionally few that are more than “i have to change the programs I use and learn how new ones work”. And if that’s too major a barrier for someone to overcome, good for them. The least they can do is say “I dont want to use Linux because its too much effort”.
It doesn’t fit everyone’s use case.
Use a VM if you must.
Then you will still find MAS useful.
I think its mostly sunk cost and “i dont want to invest time to learn new things” that keeps people on windows.
Work is a separate thing. My work laptop runs windows, a matter I dont have a say in. But for personal use cases? I feel there are exceptionally few that are more than “i have to change the programs I use and learn how new ones work”. And if that’s too major a barrier for someone to overcome, good for them. The least they can do is say “I dont want to use Linux because its too much effort”.
Perfect is the enemy of good. It fits most people’s use case.