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Maybe it’s a myth, but it sure sounds plausible. The software that checks the “Windows 9” substring doesn’t even have to exist for this to be reason they chose to skip to version 10 — they just had to be concerned that it might exist.

Sure, maybe there’s no C function that returns the string, but there’s a ver command. It would be trivial to shell out to the command. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ver_(command)

This doesn’t prove anything, but there are a TON of examples of code that checks for the substring. It’s not hard to imagine that code written circa 2000 would not be future proof. https://sourcegraph.com/search?q=context:global+“\“windows+9\””&patternType=keyword&sm=0

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4 points

but there are a TON of examples of code that checks for the substring

oh

oh no

There’s code in the JDK that does that??

I really wish I didn’t see that.

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Yup!! Never look under the hood in software, you’ll just be disappointed ☹️

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3 points

I’ve been a software developer for 20 years and this comment is too real. Some days I’m amazed that any software even works at all.

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