Quote:
Originally Posted by Bearcat
It's a safe bet to assume the money/opportunities are in Windows (not that you're assuming... you obviously have the experience)... of course that's what people are familiar with and it's what needs to be fixed.
I certainly wouldn't say Linux is dying and (depending on what you meant, I guess) has no future in business. It's not going to take over the application layer any time soon, but it's the backbone of what you see and gets shit done on the back end. I don't know what that translates out to in salaries and what not, but it's definitely not just a toy for geeks.
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A good portion of all SoC based appliances, whether you're talking about networking gear, video streaming devices, or whatever else, are running a Linux kernel of some kind.
It's not dead, it's evolving.