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Their users don't need to be allowed to freely evaluate the source, period. When you write software, you control its distribution. What the users are free to do, however, is use an operating system/stack that they CAN evaluate the source of. If linux or any other open source alternative was a better actual product, it would find its way to the top of the market. In fact, it already has, on the server... by far. But linux wasn't made to be easy to use, to be quick and easy to install, to install other software onto, etc... and that has kept it back, and it kept it back long enough for microsoft to establish a de-facto standard on the home desktop market... The closed or open source status of a product has no bearing over its superiority at all. Again, in the world of geeks, it may, but in the world at large, it doesn't, and really, it shouldn't. |
For what it's worth (which may be not a great deal): I have installed a lot of Windows and Linux over the years, but my Windows experience has been lackin further and further behind these last few years. A short while ago, I had to a rare chance of setting up two identical machines side by side, one with Windows 10, one with Manjaro, an Arch Linux derivative. The Linux install finished sooner and with less need of interference than the Windows one. It also didn't require preparatory messing round with weird licensing codes and what have you, and of course it didn't require one tenth the amount of postprocessing to reach the desired level of functionality - compare the twenty second operation of setting up a LaTeX which worked to the corresponding twenty Windows minutes of setting up one which didn't.
Your anecdotal mileage may obviously vary.