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by mamon 3532 days ago
It really depends. Developers may have better skills, but also have bigger needs, in terms of software we need to use on daily basis. And with things like proxy servers, ActiveDirectory, group policies, or antivirus softwarem which you cannot reconfigure or turn off, working on Windows can be real pain in the ass.
1 comments

Realistically though those are organisational decisions not requirements of the Windows platform. there's nothing that mandates that a windows environment must have AD/Group Policies or Anti-Malware software, you can configure a stand-alone windows 10 PC quite happily without any of those. Personally I work in a Windows environment but don't sign into a domain.

It's more that organisations demand that windows, which they understand, be configured in a specific manner.

Some might say "ah well you've got to have A-V on windows or you get malware", but at actual technical level there's not a lot of reasons that MacOS is less susceptible to malware than Windows, and indeed its rise in popularity has seen more emerge