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by Dalewyn
650 days ago
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You said "why must Linux have" a feature that can be useful to some and not useful to others. Taking that to its strongest conclusion[1], you're saying Linux shouldn't have something if it's not useful to "everyone" and asking for counter arguments; this is not unlike the "Do one thing and do it well." Unix ethos. Clearly, as demonstrated by history, most people prefer that their computers can and will do the many things they need or want with minimal finagling. That is what having DirectX inside Windows means, and why Linux which makes that a finagling option at best and flat out refuses as heresy at worst flounders. [1]: https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html |
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I said no such thing. You're taking a question and converting it into a statement in your own head.
Why must any operating system be designed with a 3D rendering engine compiled into it? It's just a question. I'm trying to learn. I've never once said it should or should not have the thing, I'm asking why would it need it? Why should it have an equivalent to Windows' implementation of such a thing? What do I gain? Is that always a good design choice? Is that true of Windows Server, and if so, why do I need 3D rendering baked into my Windows Server? What about Windows Server Core... does the NT kernel have it baked in there?