Earlier this week (most importantly read, "before April 1"), Canonical and Microsoft announced something rather mind-blowing:

Ubuntu's bash and supporting utilities will be available on Windows 10.

No, really:

Ubuntu’s bash and Linux command line coming to Windows 10
<http://arstechnica.com/information-technology/2016/03/ubuntus-bash-and-linux-command-line-coming-to-windows-10/>

Here's how Windows 10's Ubuntu-based Bash shell will actually work
<http://www.pcworld.com/article/3050473/windows/heres-how-windows-10s-ubuntu-based-bash-shell-will-actually-work.html>

This is not a VM or container, nor has anything in Ubuntu been recompiled specifically for this deployment. Apt-get is in place and works directly with the existing Ubuntu repos. This is all done with a new component in Win10 that direct provides support for Linux system calls.

While this won't mean much for most of you, those who make enterprise solutions in mixed or Microsoft-exclusive environments will now have a MUCH broader range of tools to work with.

This can directly benefit LiveCode deployments in such environments by allowing us to use rsync and other shell calls regardless whether the system is running Linux or Win10. No more need to fork PowerShell and bash calls; now you'll have one-stop shopping for nearly every devops need.

Sure, it's a niche in our community. But if you do enterprise work this is some very exciting news.

--
 Richard Gaskin
 Fourth World Systems
 Software Design and Development for the Desktop, Mobile, and the Web
 ____________________________________________________________________
 ambassa...@fourthworld.com                http://www.FourthWorld.com

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