People have different preferences for what they like to work on, but you seem to be implying the weather app engineers are incapable of doing that work. Like they're some kind of lower caste that must be kept away from working on security mitigations for filesystem drivers.
I don't believe there's some category of human that's capable of shipping Windows 10 feature apps, and only that. People can move internally! People can leave and other people can be hired. It's all priorities and task allocation.
The impression I get (and please correct me) is not really that there's an oversupply of news feed app builders on the market, but that the Windows team at Microsoft has been shifting to more user-facing features rather than internal deep kernel work.
There are many engineers who do super-boring stuff as main work, working on mind-bogglingly hard problems afterhours.
Also that weather-widget engineer could do some basic tasks offloading more experienced engineer, who would offload even more experienced engineer until that chain of offloading makes enough time for NTFS-ninja to hunt down and fix that bug or write a fuzzer that finds new zero-days.
So they shouldn't fund adding local weather to task bar while there are potential security flaws anywhere in the OS? This seems like a sillier straw man.
You have to look at the customers. If you push for Linux throughout your organisation and you got hit with a linux zero day, it's your fault.
If you use MS, then it's Microsoft s fault, you won't be blamed because almost everyone was exposed to it and you got hit.
These companies also have older workforce who are used to windows and the switch would be difficult. Yes I know some older users would be fine but that is not the majority.
It's similar to the "no one got fired for buying oracle" situation
That’s a ridiculous claim. Kernel programming isn’t some fantasy world where only the most passionate developers can do effective work. Most software engineers are web engineers because that’s where the market says they should focus. It says nothing about talent or ability to learn. smh.
People have different preferences for what they like to work on, but you seem to be implying the weather app engineers are incapable of doing that work. Like they're some kind of lower caste that must be kept away from working on security mitigations for filesystem drivers.
I don't believe there's some category of human that's capable of shipping Windows 10 feature apps, and only that. People can move internally! People can leave and other people can be hired. It's all priorities and task allocation.
The impression I get (and please correct me) is not really that there's an oversupply of news feed app builders on the market, but that the Windows team at Microsoft has been shifting to more user-facing features rather than internal deep kernel work.