they seem like they may have some utility who aren’t spending their every waking moment using generative AI tools
I have no intention of using any of this, but for those who might be curious to try, I say: Caveat emptor x9999Specific agents can be given specific instructions, and Windows will continuously enforce those restrictions. In theory, this could be used to prevent OpenClaw from accessing personal accounts on a work computer, or vice versa, or from deleting things without asking.
And it lacks these:df du env expr false find hostname la stat tac test true uptime xargs yes
Of the additions, find, la and du are things I type without even thinking and along with grep I'll find useful to have in general without launching WSL.dd dir dircolors expand paste shred tty uname vdir
Excited for the RTX Spark. I have the Framework AI 395 and the 128GB memory is nice. Docker builds and other non-AI work can easily consume tons of memory.
I know Macs go higher, but I have to use Windows or Linux. I use the DGX Spark for hosting local models.
Coreutils doesn’t include grep, but hopefully more Gnu packages will be done.Still, I'm glad for Windows users! We should all be able to grep files out of the box.
That's why I said et al. The Windows package does include grep.Coreutils doesn’t include grep, but hopefully more Gnu packages will be done.
Microsoft's version seems to...Coreutils doesn’t include grep, but hopefully more Gnu packages will be done.
Microsoft already publish Edge for Linux, if that's what you mean. They have for many years, now.Some how I see an MS Linux browser down the road.
So is MS trying to branch out into Linux because they're realizing how many people hate Win11? Honest question.
Some how I see an MS Linux browser down the road.
I might be nuts.
Wish it had. Lack of desktop Windows ARM64 systems is a bit of a development and CICD problem.Did the Qualcomm dev kit ever actually launch? I thought it had HDMI issues and basically didn't ship.
This is the article I used as a source: https://meincmagazine.com/gadgets/202...or-comprehensively-failing-to-meet-standards/
Edit: I think the article got edited
Migrating architectures is an MS problem. MS and Windows more or less allow anyone and everyone release, or not update, software. And when it came to ARM support they more or less did a "let the market decide"...which went about as well as all efforts where policy is "let the market decide". The market did the cheapest and lowest effort and most profitable thing--PC hardware vendors and consumers waited out ARM to see if anyone else would jump first. Which, basically no one did. And so adoption is a rounding error.Wish it had. Lack of desktop Windows ARM64 systems is a bit of a development and CICD problem.
That's why I said et al. The Windows package does include grep.
Now I’m interested enough to see if I can replace my decades old mingw port of GNU utilities with something up to date.Microsoft's version seems to...
I would hesitate to describe migration as a problem exclusive to Microsoft. Apple seems to be more of an exception than a common model. It's been how many years of the year of Wayland desktop? I definitely have been hearing about it for over a decade. Android has had a half-dozen projects to get OEMs to update faster. Adobe had a heck of a time trying to convince people to switch to ActionScript 3. Firefox still has people complaining about dropping its prior plugin model.Migrating architectures is an MS problem. MS and Windows more or less allow anyone and everyone release, or not update, software. And when it came to ARM support they more or less did a "let the market decide"...which went about as well as all efforts where policy is "let the market decide". The market did the cheapest and lowest effort and most profitable thing--PC hardware vendors and consumers waited out ARM to see if anyone else would jump first. Which, basically no one did. And so adoption is a rounding error.
Apple, say what you will about them, has managed 3 CPU architecture migrations expertly--by holding user and developer feet to the fire, having developer tools and outgoing-software emulation-tools production ready, and telling everyone to get-over-it the change is coming.
Ultimately an OS is just a software tool, running on a hardware tool, to let other work get done. It isn't a destination just a means. When a tool that is 100% supported (x86 Windows) costs as much as a tool that is only say 30% supported (ARM Windows, I'm making up a number here I know)--you'd need a massive carrot (e.g. battery life or compute power, etc.) to bother dealing with 70% incompatibility.
I didn't mean exclusive to Microsoft generally...but the failure of ARM Windows adoption all comes back to the feet of MS. The same way Android being the mess it is is at Google's feet, almost exclusively (QCom can be dicks about drivers, but Google has the muscle to boss them around if they want). The US not using the metric system is another failure of "let the market decide".I would hesitate to describe migration as a problem exclusive to Microsoft. Apple seems to be more of an exception than a common model. It's been how many years of the year of Wayland desktop? I definitely have been hearing about it for over a decade. Android has had a half-dozen projects to get OEMs to update faster. Adobe had a heck of a time trying to convince people to switch to ActionScript 3. Firefox still has people complaining about dropping its prior plugin model.
I'm sure there's more, but these are just the ones I could come up with in a reasonable timeframe.
Their designs over the past decade or so have been pretty clear. Microsoft loves Linux... as long as it runs in a virtualized container under Windows. Anything they've been doing for Linux since then was to encourage that."Embrace, extend, extinguish"; I worry what designs Microsoft may have on Linux in the future, and as happy as I am that windows is getting some long overdue basics, I can't help but feel deep suspicion when MS is involved.
Right you are, Ken!The GitHub repo for MXC also mentions that it provides “multiple containment backends” that can be used to contain other kinds of plugins and tools. So if the concept sounds interesting to you but you don’t care about AI agents, they could still be worth learning about.
Apple has control over all the hardware that will run their OS, and can say "every Mac we release from today on will run our chips and there is no choice in the matter." Microsoft can't do that.Migrating architectures is an MS problem. MS and Windows more or less allow anyone and everyone release, or not update, software. And when it came to ARM support they more or less did a "let the market decide"...which went about as well as all efforts where policy is "let the market decide". The market did the cheapest and lowest effort and most profitable thing--PC hardware vendors and consumers waited out ARM to see if anyone else would jump first. Which, basically no one did. And so adoption is a rounding error.
Apple, say what you will about them, has managed 3 CPU architecture migrations expertly--by holding user and developer feet to the fire, having developer tools and outgoing-software emulation-tools production ready, and telling everyone to get-over-it the change is coming.
I have a similar setup, which mostly works well, but git-bash is kinda janky sometimes. I'm intrigued by coreutils in Powershell, but I'm worried I have too much Emacs/Readline muscle memory at this point. Not sure I can live without C-a, C-e, C-k, C-y, etc.i spend my day on Win11, but i'm mostly running VSCode, with several git bash terminals open and they're all running node, yarn, git, etc., talking to microservices with cross-platform back-end code. full stack web dev. and all the Office stuff is there, too.
it's like having one foot in Win11 and one in linux all the time.
so a Windows box all set up with a strong linux-ish base makes sense to me.
No, Azure runs a ton of Linux and has for over a decade at least now, Microsoft has supported development of many Linux tools for even longer. over 60% of VMs and cores running in Azure are Linux flavors of some sort and Microsoft even has an Azure Linux variant based on Fedora you can deploy. This is really aimed at developers and enterprise customers that create and host things in Linux environments for a variety of reasons.So is MS trying to branch out into Linux because they're realizing how many people hate Win11? Honest question.
Some how I see an MS Linux browser down the road.
I might be nuts.
Some may not remember how unlikely that would have actually been....I'd have killed for coreutils et al. in Windows twenty years ago, but it's way too late now. Still, I'm glad for Windows users! We should all be able to grep files out of the box.
I'm more interested in the "distraction free" element. The idea of a stripped down dev install that doesn't take ages trawling through GPO, random regex hacks etc. to disable upsells and whatnot sounds promising.Some interesting stuff announced once you walk past the hype. The WinGet improvements alone will be great. I've used the winget config stuff in the past to help get devs up and running fast on various projects. The WSL stuff is also going to be nice.
At the rate things are going, I'd expect to start seeing more MS stuff appearing on Linux over the next decade or so. It would not surprise me at all to see MS release a dev focused distro to go with all this other stuff.