Originally posted by: drag
Originally posted by: Brazen
Originally posted by: scottws
I think it's because the basic user that is just using the operating system to browse the web, create documents, change their background image, etc. Thery aren't really doing anything but opening and working with programs. And that in that case working with a Linux desktop like GNOME or KDE isn't all that dissimilar from working with Windows.
"Techies" are generally going to be more likely to want to install new hardware, install new programs, remove programs, reconfigure settings, explore the file system, etc. And this is where you start to see the differences between Linux and Windows. I don't have any Mac experience so I can't say anything about that.
Yeah. I think people like whoever Nothinman was quoting above say linux is ready for the average user, because it's not ready for THEM. The average user can use linux just fine. Skilled techs can figure out linux. It's the psuedo-techie-wannabes that linux is not ready for (guys like Seeruk fall perfectly into this category).
It's tough to switch.
Seriously.
Say your a technically inclind guy a few years ago. You wanted to learn a bit about programming, a bit about setting up a server.
So a 'server'. Pretty impressive stuff. Ohhh... 'ENTERPRISE'. Rooms full of computers with mainframes and terminals and all sorts of wires and beeping things in dark rooms. Grumbling adminstrators with keyboards in dirty little rooms with odd sorts of chairs and multiple displays listenning to odd rock music and wearing hiking boots. Either that or suites with professional degrees walking around talking to each other in rooms full of large machines buzzing around with tape reels and der blinken lighten.
So ya go to school or work for some small business some were and you learn about computers. They teach you that computers count in 2's and that a megabyte is slightly more then a thousand killobytes among other things. Then you get to the point were you get past the b.s. 'lets learn how to use excel spreadsheet' computer fundamentals 101 classes. Then you get to have the painfull experiance of installing Windows NT.
As you move on you learn more stuff. Get a job and you have these books, these bibles and manuals and other stuff that you look at. As you mature so does the platform. You learn a bit how it works it gets more stable, more usefull. You grow in capabilties, the computers increase in capacity, OSes increase in stability, everything works out. As you grow the platform grows.
Then you go into a online forum and somebody tells you that it's nothing but a pile of ****** and that people have been doing better stuff for a decade before Windows NT ever existed and it's all aviable at completely no cost. It's better, it's faster, and it has this crazy guy that tells you that producing closed source software is immoral. Except that you have to learn a bunch of odd command line stuff, which is better anyways then that grandma gui crap.
You'd think that
that guy was a loony too.