Quote:
Originally Posted by catilley1092
Linux had it's shot and blew it. Sure, who wouldn't want a free OS with no EULA's attached, make copies and pass them along. In theory, it sounds perfect. But along with the very steep learning curve, there's dozens of "distro's", as they are called. Had just two or three developers done it, and done to where it was usable out of the box, it may have had a chance. Now it's just a circus, and it was noted recently that Linus Torvalds gave Windows 7 the thumbs up. Some thought he was being sarcastic, but I think he knows what a circus that was made out of what he once helped build. So he may be acknowledging the truth, that Microsoft's the #1 computing company in the world. And always will be.
|
I don't think Linux ever intended to be a direct competitor and when I was following the Linux forums I don't think genuine Linux users were wanting or expecting it to be used that way. It seemed that the only ones wanting Linux to be more like Brand 'M' or Brand 'A' were users of those brands anyway.
The beauty of many developers is how it has the opportunity to take things along a different path without the constraints of business necessity.
Totally disagree about a 'steep learning curve', from never having tried anything Linux before I had Mint 6 installed and running productively faster then I got XP installed and I've been a long term Windows user. Mint never crashes and unless things have changed recently is essentially virus proof.
As soon as you log on in Mint it will automatically check for relevant updates for itself and you only install what you want and you can search it's extensive packages list for other stuff.
Now I should add that all that is on the basis that your a home user that just browses the web, does emails stuff like that. You don't get as much eye candy but then you don't need to spend $$$ on hardware powerful enough to run the OS. The beauty of Linux is how it works very well on low spec machines.
If you want to find some hardware drivers Linux (last time looked) falls a bit short in that area but HP give support for Linux.
I keep a Linux machine as a backup.
Mychael