BACK IN 2015, Microsoft decided that it loved Linux so much it built a whole Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL), which enabled Linux programs and development stacks to run natively. The official statement even had a heart emoji.
Heart or not, some were skeptical of Microsoft’s intentions, with memories of the “Embrace, Extend, Extinguish” mantra and the 1995 Halloween papers still fresh in their minds. But it seems as though Microsoft wants to accommodate Linux users (well, developers mostly), rather than force a mass defection.
A successor, WSL 2.0, was announced in 2019, built around a real Linux Kernel, rather than a Wine-like translation layer. It brought faster performance, swifter filesystems, and increased application compatibility. In April 2021, a new feature was announced, WSLg, which enables graphical tools to run seamlessly…
