Not having to worry about yet another security vulnerability caused by 10 year old code does impact me. It’s also nice to have other Apple products that MS could never produce because they worshipped at the alter of backwards compatibility.
Running outdated code on a bloated operating system doesn’t benefit me.
>Not having to worry about yet another security vulnerability caused by 10 year old code does impact me.
Surely you're not suggesting that OS X is somehow more secure because it doesn't provide as much backwards compatability?
>It’s also nice to have other Apple products that MS could never produce because they worshipped at the alter of backwards compatibility.
It is looking more and more like Apple cannot produce products other people can, not the other way around. Most of their recent product announcements(2017 and after, especially) have begun to look quite disappointing in my eyes.
By definition, the less code you have to maintain the less surface area for vulnerabilities.
It is looking more and more like Apple cannot produce products other people can, not the other way around. Most of their recent product announcements(2017 and after, especially) have begun to look quite disappointing in my eyes.
If that were true, you would see Apple’s products trending downward when other competitors are trending upwards.....
>By definition, the less code you have to maintain the less surface area for vulnerabilities.
It does not sound like you have any legitimate information about how Windows compatability increases vulnerabilites beyond vague statements. Trust me when I say that no one here thinks Windows is terribly secure, just that Mac OS X isn't secure at all either, and doesn't provide backwards compatability on top.
>If that were true, you would see Apple’s products trending downward when other competitors are trending upwards.....
Is this not the case? Lowered product buys have been offset by higher prices, but the craze of Apple products of the early to mid 2010s is over; I have also only heard negative things about their recent products too. The failed keyboard on Macbooks, how buggy the recent OS release has been, both of my roommates who have iPhone Xs are thinking about switching to Android after being plagued with constant hardware and software issues. Of course, it is possible I live in a bubble, but most people I know who have Apple technology complain a lot more about their tech than I do.
Samsung and every other vendor outside of China have announced lower sales as people keep their phones longer.
While everyone admits that Mac keyboards are horrible, Mac sales are so small compared to everything else Apple sells, it doesn’t really hurt their bottom line
both of my roommates who have iPhone Xs are thinking about switching to Android after being plagued with constant hardware and software issues.
Anecdote is not data.
It does not sound like you have any legitimate information about how Windows compatability increases vulnerabilites beyond vague statements.
Let me tell you a little story about how the half dozen different ways to represent and encode a string in Windows led to a security issue in IIS where you could just encode a DOS command in a browser window and have it execute remotely....
Yes and by then you already had the 7 plus versions of defining a string dating back to Windows 3 (1992). Backwards compatibility was already a problem then. Since then, MS has had 15 more years worth of cruft on top of that s d yet more ways to define a string. If backwards compatibility caused a security vulnerability back then, how much old Windows 95 code do you think is causing issues now?
I was not aware that phones, tablets, and watches were on the PC...
But on that note: the Surface tablet is considered the best hybrid PC in its class, and that includes Apple devices. The XBox has sold several tens of millions of units in each generation.
Oh, and here's the kicker: Microsoft's hardware is universally superior to Apple hardware in the same class. You can still use Microsoft hardware from the turn-of-the-century. Even Zunes still work (though you need to connect them as MTP devices instead of using the Zune Store). I have an HP Windows Phone that still works, and still handles call better than an iPhone.
I don't know anyone who still has an Apple laptop, PC, or other hardware more than 10 years old. Apple products simply aren't built to last more than a handful of years before they fall apart because you're using them wrong.
Running outdated code on a bloated operating system doesn’t benefit me.