It's a Jubilant thing. They're the company that co-owns franchise restaurants of Dunkin, Domino's and Popeyes in India, and they run stock Ubuntu on their devices and remote into a Windows based server for orders and billing using VNC.
It got healthcare system from USSR. Now it's chronically underfunded for last 25 years. There are improvements in regional centers(like digital records and appointments system), but in regions(and even some regional centers) there are less and less doctors, and buildings themselves have self-disassembling ceiling from neglect, disrepair and systemic corruption that builds yachts and palaces in Gelendzhik for Putin.
But in Moscow and SPb it's good. Also dialup? I don't think there any of it left here.
Me with raspberry pis. Also complain when digital notice boards don't use low power systems like the pi and use windows PCs instead when all they do is show picture slideshows.
And you know it's some 8 year old Optiplex crammed in a corner somewhere just giving its all for that slideshow, absolutely choked with dust bunnies. Its survival somehow an exception to the rule.
I've always been surprised to find all the ATMs in my country run different versions of windows (XP, Vista, 7)
Like even from purely an accountant point of view, if you're using some shitty proprietary software why wouldn't you implement it in an OS that doesn't require commercial licences???
Then again the entire software stack of any established financial institution is just spaghetti code and things held on with duct tape and prayers
Embedded systems are frequently Windows based. It’s always
a little surprising. Also, it’s downright terrifying how many of those embedded systems rely on a version of Internet Explorer that’s been deprecated for 20 years.
Banking systems running COBOL on IBM mainframes. So archaic that even hackers can't understand the code, and if they did the bank would pay them voluntarily tp sort it out, and the hackers would say no, because COBOL, eww.
I actually have a friend who is the old meme -- his mother is a sysadmin for a small regional bank and he's been training under her for years to take over when she retires. No one in the open market can even begin to understand what she does.