Posted May 30, 2021
I think you should use whatever you feel comfortable with. For me I left Windows around Windows 98 SE to Windows XP era. It was not for me. Been on Linux since. It's where I'm most comfortable. Around 2000 I joined an IT Firm in NYC with sister agencies in LA and Chicago. Regardless of what everyone tells me I based my opinion on Linux on two factors - 1) How easy it makes my home computing life 2) How many contracts I get for it's usages/installation/support. The home life has always been easy for me with Linux, since it allows me to do as I please. Mind you I stick to native games and apps and call it a day. Work life has been an adventure to say the least.
The IT firm that I joined was at the beginning Unix, Eagle (Medical Software) and Windows based contract services. In 2003, the company started taking on Linux based contract work. Eagle was phased out around 2008 and Unix last contract for our company followed the same year with a very small few still around for some bigger companies. So we had Windows and Linux contracts with Linux based contracts being 5% to 8% of the business. In 2010, that number went from 8% to 23%, I can't tell you what happened but I will say that A LOT of DOE schools, charter schools, non-profits, after school programs and small businesses were ASKING for Linux right out of the gate. We provided training, installation and onsite and remote support services.
Around this time the company officially formed a Linux division. I applied and went in. Instant 17k on top of my previous pay. I've not worked on any other contract work outside of Linux since. In 2015 to 2017, we had another major spike in contract work putting the overall contract numbers at 43.5%. It's been hovering around there since with small blips of increases here and there but negligible decreases. When ppl talk about how hard Linux is...What I look at is our tickets intake and compared to our Windows divisions and outside of server maintenance and repair - it's nothing. Last month we got 12 calls and 2 emails. Window divisions stays in the 200+ calls with over 50 emails easily. Now we are getting ChromeOS and other cloud related contracts. Which I believe will start to crush all of our other divisions.
In 2017, I took on a side job working with Building Management Services companies in the Tri-state area for every other weekend helping a friend start his own business up. Many of the offices I walked into were either phasing Windows out or using older versions of Windows (with no desire to upgrade - intraoffice work), already using Linux, ChromeOS or some custom OS based on android for their workflow. The money in this sector is CRAZY.
In my personal opinion, I think the nature of the modern computing work and home life is vastly different from how it was before. So when ppl advocate for against an OS with that old mindset, I just sit back and collect my checks. As children are growing up using GSUITE/Google Workspace and it's free office alternatives the formal grip that other OSes have on market share will become a moot point as the cloud is calling.
The IT firm that I joined was at the beginning Unix, Eagle (Medical Software) and Windows based contract services. In 2003, the company started taking on Linux based contract work. Eagle was phased out around 2008 and Unix last contract for our company followed the same year with a very small few still around for some bigger companies. So we had Windows and Linux contracts with Linux based contracts being 5% to 8% of the business. In 2010, that number went from 8% to 23%, I can't tell you what happened but I will say that A LOT of DOE schools, charter schools, non-profits, after school programs and small businesses were ASKING for Linux right out of the gate. We provided training, installation and onsite and remote support services.
Around this time the company officially formed a Linux division. I applied and went in. Instant 17k on top of my previous pay. I've not worked on any other contract work outside of Linux since. In 2015 to 2017, we had another major spike in contract work putting the overall contract numbers at 43.5%. It's been hovering around there since with small blips of increases here and there but negligible decreases. When ppl talk about how hard Linux is...What I look at is our tickets intake and compared to our Windows divisions and outside of server maintenance and repair - it's nothing. Last month we got 12 calls and 2 emails. Window divisions stays in the 200+ calls with over 50 emails easily. Now we are getting ChromeOS and other cloud related contracts. Which I believe will start to crush all of our other divisions.
In 2017, I took on a side job working with Building Management Services companies in the Tri-state area for every other weekend helping a friend start his own business up. Many of the offices I walked into were either phasing Windows out or using older versions of Windows (with no desire to upgrade - intraoffice work), already using Linux, ChromeOS or some custom OS based on android for their workflow. The money in this sector is CRAZY.
In my personal opinion, I think the nature of the modern computing work and home life is vastly different from how it was before. So when ppl advocate for against an OS with that old mindset, I just sit back and collect my checks. As children are growing up using GSUITE/Google Workspace and it's free office alternatives the formal grip that other OSes have on market share will become a moot point as the cloud is calling.
Post edited May 30, 2021 by Arcadius-8606