The Greatest Famine In World History Is Coming
The Greatest Famine In World History Is Coming
famine is already there filling your plate on table : "Generally, losses range from 10–80%, with averages around 50%"
https://www.healthline.com/nutrition/fresh-vs-frozen-fruit-and-vegetables#TOC_TITLE_HDR_3
when you buy laptop 300 $, 120 $ goes to microsoft operating system
instead of purchasing laptop 180 $ with linux
https://www.onmsft.com/news/windows-could-be-open-source-future-according-microsoft-exec
windows is encrypted to hide unix and linux free codes
"Windows 10 includes a Linux subsystem, allowing you to run full Linux distributions, including Linux applications, on top of Windows 10.
But this capability rides on top of a translation layer, translating the Linux system calls into the Windows equivalents.
There has been some speculation that Microsoft could do a Linux subsystem in reverse, running the Windows userspace on a Linux kernel and translating the Windows calls into Linux equivalents."
"BSD is a form of Unix. The University of California at Berkeley started working with Unix in 1974, extending its capabilities to meet its needs. By 1978, Berkeley was sharing its changes with other universities.
By 1991, BSD no longer contained any AT&T-owned code, so technically it could be distributed on the University of California’s terms, not AT&T’s terms. But the University of California had no rights to the Unix trademark. That stopped them from from calling it BSD Unix.
There was some legal wrangling between AT&T and the University of California. One reason why Linux is more popular than FreeBSD is because Linux was a clean-room implementation and spread freely during the early 1990s while the BSD family was tied up in court.
What does any of this have to do with Windows? Well, once BSD was free and clear, it could be distributed on the University of California’s terms. Their terms were generous. You could copy it all you wanted, including reusing the code in closed-source projects, as long as the copyright message remained intact.
When Microsoft decided to include standard Internet utilities in Windows, it just recompiled the BSD tools. This included the copyright message, which was required by law. This confused people, but Microsoft wasn’t doing anything underhanded. Why didn’t they bother to remove the message? They couldn’t.
The Windows 10 versions of these tools no longer have the message. But they did in NT4.
POSIX is a Unix standard for interoperability.
POSIX was a US government initiative to ensure a certain amount of interoperability. As long as your Unix implemented that baseline, the government would be able to work with it. This kept the government from being tied to a single computer vendor, which was good for everyone. It kept bidding competitive, didn’t lock anyone out, and kept the government from becoming beholden to a single vendor like IBM.
Microsoft included a POSIX subsystem in Windows NT. This layer made Windows NT just Unix-like enough that the government could run its software on it. This and a few other design decisions made Windows NT eligible for work that had previously been the exclusive realm of mainframes or Unix."
https://www.howtogeek.com/190773/htg-explains-whats-the-difference-between-linux-and-bsd/
main issue on linux beside driver compatibility is yast installer ...
it needs to use yast for installing software instead of merely clicking on "exe" launching installation and unpacking application according to different version of apps and yast,
as soon as set up will depend on program, not on operating system,
as soon as industry will release drivers for linux, not only for windows,
as soon as samba will take in charge most of hybrid softwares,
it will unlock free market and massive profits