My $0.02 - IOS seems to be pretty stable ... much more so than my Droid's were. Background: I was a loyal Droid user up until about a year ago.
My $0.02 - IOS seems to be pretty stable ... much more so than my Droid's were. Background: I was a loyal Droid user up until about a year ago.
My $0.02 - IOS seems to be pretty stable ... much more so than my Droid's were. Background: I was a loyal Droid user up until about a year ago.
I can't say I disagree and I'll up you IOS too
I am a long time iOS user and yes it is very stable but less functional and much more proprietary than Android. I actually meant to say MacOS
I think that what irks me the most, is the third "Level of Access" that Windows 10 has - the "Microsoft Level of Access". Leave your Windows 10 computer off for a few weeks, and then watch what happens when you turn it on.While every OS certainly has flaws, by default, OSX (a Unix derivative) does not provide Root access. You have to explicitly tell OSX to give you Root. Windows does not do this - most Windows users are using Admin level accounts with Root access, which is why the viruses are able to work as well as they do.
Maybe...but look at the high performance of a completely Open OS like Ubuntu or Linux Mint, where you can literally screw with almost anything (with perhaps the exception of the Kernel).Because Apple is as controlling with their environment, you can have somewhat predicted results. You also have Apple providing a high level of support. With Windows (where anything goes), the vendors (to include MS) are constantly sending you off to someone else for support and blaming each other for performance issues. An 'open' environment is also one that provides for people to hide 'bad' code without the big risk of being caught.
Ubuntu and Mint are also flavors of Unix - so the same security scenarios apply. In this light, Osx is not that different, especially in God mode. Once you get to the OS, it's a whole new world.Maybe...but look at the high performance of a completely Open OS like Ubuntu or Linux Mint, where you can literally screw with almost anything (with perhaps the exception of the Kernel).
If Serato or Cross DJ were available for Linux - and I'm willing to PAY for that - and the idiot Linux World finally settled on only two or three derivatives - I wouldn't even be having this discussion!
With Windows (where anything goes), the vendors (to include MS) are constantly sending you off to someone else for support and blaming each other for performance issues.
I must be special .. I constantly get calls "directly from Microsoft" from tech guys that want access so they can "fix my system: ...
While every OS certainly has flaws, by default, OSX (a Unix derivative) does not provide Root access. You have to explicitly tell OSX to give you Root. Windows does not do this - most Windows users are using Admin level accounts with Root access, which is why the viruses are able to work as well as they do.
Completely agree.... 99% of the problems on Windows machines are ID10T errors...And yes most of those problems could be stopped by not using an admin account
Yes .. for actual DJ use, a dual deck (or more) setup is generally needed) .. for automatic playlist play, one isn't usually cueing.
And I drink Johnny Walker Blue personally ...
Probably made Johnny Walker Blue many a time ...Reminds me of a joke i heard... can only remember the punchline...
"Shes out in the distillery making Johnny Walker red..."
cc
That's part of the problem with Windows, you should not use Admin, but most users hate having to keep doing 'Run As Administrator' - so they end up using Admin every day - and the hackers love it - because you're giving them root access to your entire machine - read that again .. Entire.I've seen Tig (and others) mention not using an admin account on Win many times. I tried it for a while but minor annoyances disrupted my workflow - Installing apps didn't always put shortcuts on my (non-privileged user) start menu, deleting desktop icons required UAC password because it was placed in the public folder. I got annoyed and made my account an admin again.
Doesn't UAC essentially make the machine have a sudo setup like MacOS and Debian?