Well, no. Microsoft killed all competition.
Hm. Windows NT was very good at networking at the time and rivaled Novell's Netware and others, such as Banyan's Vines or LANtastic.
Rightfully in case of IPX/SPX and TCP/IP, I think.
Windows NT 4 was better at playing Netware server than real Netware, I remember.
But I'm not sure if it was so great at the average desktop, considering the lack of PnP and drivers..
Windows 95 was a phenomenon in pop culture, but that's pretty, much it.
No, wait - it re-defined the PC jokes genre, as well! 😄
Apple by contrast was struggling at the time and System 7 was running at beige industry standard clones, too.
Which often were better than Apple hardware, I think.
Then one founder came back and took over company, made it an designer company or elitist's company again. Afaik.
Before this, in early to mid 90s, it was more of a thought factory with lots of experimental stuff going on.
Not sure what was better for that company, though.
Normal shrink-wrapped software and games for Mac were still available in early 90s and then available in early 2000s again, I think (iMac G3 and OSX 10.1 days).
That's when the platform was popular in people's mind and treated like an ordinary, rivaling "PC" platform.
In late 90s and late 2000s, it wasn't so much, I think.
In these years, the focus was more on PC each time, I think.
Though as an internet client, Macs always were kind of relevant throught the years, including late 90s.
I remember many screenshots in ads showing classic System/MacOS running Netscape/IE.
Mainly to show off homepages of some company..
The Apple we know today dates back to 2006 when the ew-phone, um, iphone was released, I believe.
That's roughly when Macs started to become less repair friendly, too.
It was a change of philosophy, I guess.
Edit: Running Windows applications was no problem on other platforms.
Macs had Virtual PC and SoftWindows in late 90s, Unix platforms had WABI that ran Windows 3.1x Enhanced-Mode kernal.
There also was some sort of SoftWindows for Unix, with a copy of Windows 95.
So I'm not sure if Windows was a big problem or rival. Maybe, maybe not. 🤷♂️
Unix workstation users could run all the required commercial software, at least.
Edit: A big hope of the 90s used to be BeOS.
It was a third, um, "power" next to the Windows and Linux dualism.
BeOS was a modern and powerful multimedia OS, rather than an archaic Unix and server OS.
It would have been the fresh, young, dynamic desktop OS for single users we had needed so desperately.
I remember trying out BeOS 5 PE and was amazed..
Then, finally, Zeta (BeOS spin-off) appeared in early 2000s where I lived on a questionable teleshopping channel.
We knew something was fishy, that the software was beta, but the interest was still there.
Zeta had the power to seriously rival Windows XP among a certain demographic group.
Edit:
Although I have no doubt that big companies like Canonical and Red Hat
could pull the rug off from under open source community in the future, if Linux as a whole will gain a substantial market share.
Would that be good or bad, though?
I mean, if Linux becomes too powerful, then shouldn't it be stopped?
Before it succesfully aims for world domination?
Edit: I mean, there also was Google's "don't be evil".
And we can see what happened to it, more or less.
If Linux eventually becomes too powerful or too much of a heavyweight in marketshare,
who knows if it finally becomes corrupted by power or not.
Or the people working on it, rather.
"Time, it seems, doesn't flow. For some it's fast, for some it's slow.
In what to one race is no time at all, another race can rise and fall..." - The Minstrel
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