Yes. I have been using Windows since 3.1, and I worked on virtual machine's of all the different early versions of Windows in college. Have you used them?
Yes... I used to service and administer Windows systems and dropped them from my business shortly after the release of Windows XP. I got my MCSE certification for Windows NT 4 (Workstation and Server), Windows 95 and Windows 98. I have the actual media for the following:
- Windows 1.0
- Windows 2.0
- Windows 3.0
- Windows 3.11 for Workgroups
- Windows 95
- Windows 98SE
- Windows ME
- Windows NT 3.1 Workstation
- Windows NT 3.51 Workstation
- Windows NT 4.0 Workstation and Server
- Windows 2000 Professional
To round out my background in Windows NT I also have:
- OS/2 2.0
- OS/2 Warp 3.0
- OS/2 Warp 4.0
It was also important for me to be an expert in Windows NT as I also supported OpenStep Enterprise, WebObjects, Enterprise Objects and Yellow Box. If you are curious as to what those looked like on Windows, might I suggest looking at screen shots of my installations
here,
here and
here.
Lets see, there's the dock,
Which has been a feature of NEXTSTEP since 1988, Windows didn't have anything like it that I know of. In fact I knew a NeXT developer that wrote an OpenStep runtime application to get her Windows system a Dock.
If you would like to see NeXT's version of the Dock (or NeXT operating systems in general) I've put up screen shots
here,
here and
here.
Funny, I seem to recall this as part of some Unix systems before Microsoft included it.
many of the features in outlook and office in general.
Like?
Apple's Mail is based on NeXT's Mail and has a long lineage going back to the first version of NEXTSTEP... which predates Outlook. Office isn't part of the OS, but Microsoft's word was based on Apple's original MacWrite application. And one shouldn't forget that Excel was originally a Mac app, and it was a licensing of elements of the Mac's OS that led to Windows 1.0 which was specifically designed to let DOS run GUI based apps like Excel.
But what app is copying Office? With all your Mac experience you should be able to be more specific.
I believe that a built-in web browser was something MS had before Apple as well, though I'm not certain about that at all.
Safari isn't built in, it comes with Mac OS X and provides WebCore services to other applications if they would like to use it.
It is nothing like the illegal tying of IE that Microsoft first did with Windows 98. Maybe you should read the
DoJ's case files on Microsoft. Quite informative.
As I doubt that you've done anything more than visit other operating systems (including Linux), have you ever become an expert on a non-Windows platform? That is, could you give up Windows 100% today and use something else?
I can work as effectively in IRIX, Solaris, NEXTSTEP/OPENSTEP, Rhapsody and Mac OS 8/9 as I can in Mac OS X... but it was important to me that I be able to move around like that. And had Microsoft not threatened to sue one of my clients back in 2002, I might still be willing to use their software today. But my home is now a Microsoft free zone! I boxed up all that software (even the Mac and Solaris versions of some of it) and put it in storage. But I wouldn't think getting back up to speed would be that difficult.
So what real experience do you have out side of Windows? See, I really hate those people who install some OS and call themselves experts on it but never actually learn anything about it. I bet you did that with both Linux and Macs. Took a look and walked away.
Let me give you a little advice... you want to learn an OS, make it your only OS for a month! Figure out how to get everything done that you normally would do. I see tons of
looky-loo techies installing Rhapsody without ever having actually used it. They know nothing about it, but they got it running and took some screen shots. That's not knowing a platform.
You obviously don't know Macs (or you wouldn't have made the Dock comment), so maybe you should stay in Windows threads where you at least have half a chance of knowing something.