@Mysticial I'm just so fucking sick of the Linux stack. In principle, with a lot of work, and error checking, I can achieve he same performance as Windows but not out of the box. I think as somebody who went Windows->Linux, I've seen how much easier things are on Windows, in contrast to people who have lived in a Linux cave for all of their lives.
@Mikhail Newegg has 2TB drives for $60. No tax shipping to IL. I'm tempted to get 8 of them (to complete my other build), but I need to cut back on my spending.
I'm also budging for a Skylake X/Purely build later this year.
And based on the info that I have about it (including a ton of info which I've been provided under NDA), this one is going to be much more tricky than my silly Ryzen build last month.
Tricky in terms of getting what I need. I certainly hope I won't run into as many stability issues.
@Ell Nope, I'm also a Linux user, and I've built my own kernel, an have written a driver before (for a class...). When I was ignorant I ranted about Windows.
The main issue I have with Windows is that certain resource allocations take longer by default than Linux (malloc for example), also response times of things like notifying condition variables, by default, are worse. On the other hand I think preventing programs from fucking over the system is a good design choice.
I forced myself to learn Linux back in 2010-ish prior to entering grad school. That was done by porting y-cruncher to Linux. It was not fun. While it didn't help much in grad school, it certainly did at my jobs.
A common pattern with Linux software that steps forwards come with steps backwards. Like, "Cool new version of Qt has better autocompletion. Oh but they also broke font rendering." (Which will be fixed eventually, but in this case it took over a year.)
Yeah, they keep fucking themselves over on the user facing side. But I've also noticed that the system internals a lot less mature, as evidence by frequent internal system resource exhaustion (threads, memory, etc), especially comparing to Windows released in the last decade.
I remember a few years back Ubuntu came with this startup disk creator utility. It's supposed to be used for making bootable usb sticks etc. But when I click on "Create bootable disk now!" nothing happens. Just nothing. No error message.
A few years later and that seems to be fixed now.
Good for them.
But by now I've learned how to do it using a command line magic incantation. (From Google of course.)
I could never remember the command so I have to Google it every time I need it. But at least it works.
The only piece of software that I can't get for Windows is KCachegrind, I think there a few other profiling tools that don't have equivalents on Windows.
I was always wondering about this: what are the theoretical advantages and disadvantages of having the network stack in the kernel? I heard that for very high workloads people move it out of the kernel...
Another complicating factor is that network card bonding (using 2 10G ports to get 20G) is implemented differently between vendors. When I asked people about it, they told me to go see a IT professional. Also the people I spoke to were IT professionals (similar to the bullshit you get on Server Fault)