Originally posted by: NightFlyerGTI
It's after hours and I'm in lazy mode. Is there a lazy mode summary?![]()
Originally posted by: aswedc
Not until Longhorn in 2005 I think. Plenty of time for the Linux distros to get their act together.
Originally posted by: MartyTheManiak
Originally posted by: aswedc
Not until Longhorn in 2005 I think. Plenty of time for the Linux distros to get their act together.
uhh..they already have their act togerther.
Originally posted by: ElFenix
summary: MS is planning to get the PC industry what the RIAA and big brother want: the ability to control who can do what with a computer.
Originally posted by: aswedc
Originally posted by: MartyTheManiak
Originally posted by: aswedc
Not until Longhorn in 2005 I think. Plenty of time for the Linux distros to get their act together.
uhh..they already have their act togerther.
So they say. People that think Linux is ready for real use keep on arguing about things like how its easier to install than Windows. Ok so maybe the modern distros are, but who gives damn when its still impossible to use once you get going. For example, lets say I wanna upgrade my web browser. I go to the Mozilla site, and grab the RPM. Double click, installs, WTF where did it go? How do you start it? Half an hour later when you figure that out, why do the fonts look like ass? Not to mention the default Linux download is a archive that has to be unpcked rather then installed! The only distro that is even moving in the right direction is the impressive new RedHat beta, IMHO.
tar -zvxf mozilla-i686-pc-linux-gnu-1.1.sea.tar.gz
cd mozilla-installer
./mozilla-installer
Just cause you don't know how to use it doesn't mean it's hard.
"It doesn't work like windows, it's too hard!"
Had you been using linux this whole time, and someone showed you windows, you'd be going "how the hell do I extract a tar.gz file?! What you have to downlaod a seperate program? Windows in too much of a pain in the ass!"
Except you never have to extract a tar.gz in Windows. Simple use of an operating system shouldn't be so complex, it should be for power users that want to learn.
Originally posted by: BrunoPuntzJones
On XP with the registration, what happens when they drop the support after 3 years? Will it still be usable, or will they close the registration stuff to?
You have a point, but lots of popular Linux software is packaged in RPM format. It's not often that you need to deal with tar.gz.
Also, .exe files for Windows are easy for users to deal with, but it also creates nightmare because of viruses and trojans.
Originally posted by: Czar
I doubt this will get through the DOJ, hope it wont at least and this will NEVER go through the EU thingamagic.
Originally posted by: aswedc
You have a point, but lots of popular Linux software is packaged in RPM format. It's not often that you need to deal with tar.gz.
Also, .exe files for Windows are easy for users to deal with, but it also creates nightmare because of viruses and trojans.
As are RPM dependencies. Think of it this way, Windows has a proven GUI model. True, it will be foreign to someone completely new to computers, but it has been the established way to do things for a decade. MacOS uses the same model, someone on a Windows machine can easy start using MacOS. But the Linux way of doing things is different. Is it better? I think the answer is definately no. Linux shouldn't be breaking OS usability rules unless it has something clearly superior. I like the RedHat beta, because the way the configuration is set up is like it is on Windows.
Define "better". If by "better" you mean "easier" then, no linux does not have a better interface. If by "better" you mena "more powerful" then, yes linux is better.
