DEV Community

Somenath Mukhopadhyay
Somenath Mukhopadhyay

Posted on • Originally published at som-itsolutions.blogspot.com on

From My Computer to This PC - you will own nothing and be happy - the rise and fall of Windows PC...

From My Computer to This PC

1. The Era of “My Computer” (1980s–2000s)

The early PC era was about personal ownership and control.

Companies like

  • Microsoft

  • IBM

  • Intel

created a system where:

  • You bought hardware

  • You installed software locally

  • Your files lived on your machine

Operating systems like:

  • Windows 95

  • Windows XP

reinforced the concept of “My Computer.”

You had:

  • Local control

  • Offline capability

  • Permanent ownership of software licenses

This was the golden age of personal computing sovereignty.

2. The Shift Begins (2010s)

The model started changing.

Major shifts:

Cloud Computing

Platforms like:

  • Microsoft Azure

  • Google Drive

  • Dropbox

moved data from personal machines to remote servers.

Software Subscriptions

Traditional purchase → subscription model

Example:

  • Microsoft Office → Microsoft 365

You no longer own the software — you rent it.

3. The Rise of Platform Lock-In

Modern ecosystems increasingly control the user environment.

Examples:

  • Windows 11 requiring Microsoft accounts

  • Cloud-based authentication

  • Telemetry and data collection

The PC becomes less independent and more connected to corporate infrastructure.

4. The New Model: “Your Computer Is a Terminal”

The trend now is toward:

  • Cloud desktops

  • Streaming applications

  • Web-based software

Examples:

  • Windows 365 (Cloud PC)

  • Google ChromeOS

In these systems:

  • Your apps run in the cloud

  • Your data lives on company servers

  • Your device becomes just an access terminal

5. The Counter-Movement

Many technologists push back with open and local computing.

Alternatives include:

  • Linux

  • FreeCAD

  • Blender

These emphasize:

  • Local ownership

  • Open source transparency

  • Offline capability

Interestingly, my own interest in FreeCAD, OpenGL, and simulation sits squarely in this “sovereign computing” movement.

6. The Big Question

The future may split into two computing worlds :

Consumer world

  • Cloud apps

  • Subscriptions

  • Locked ecosystems

Engineering / research world

  • Local computing power

  • Open software

  • Full system control

High-end engineering (CFD, simulation, graphics) still needs local compute sovereignty.

In short:

The PC is evolving from “my computer” → “their platform.”

But in domains like simulation, graphics, and scientific computing , the traditional power-user PC is far from dead.

Top comments (0)