Quote:
Originally posted by DarkReality@9 November 2003 - 05:47
Shn - You're proving my point, and you still have never answered my statement about why Lindows is important. You just come off with the elitist hacker Linux user. Don't make me break your glasses. That's not a threat. Or a promise. It's a wiseass remark. I had to say that, because I didn't type it in assembly language, so I figured you wouldn't get it.
That's fine, you like your command-line based OS which doesn't support half the hardware out there made for Intel/AMD based PCs and has shitty software support. I'm very adept with Windows, but Linux is a whole other animal. I'm sure you know this. Nothing is the same. It's all different. The fact that they're both windowing GUIs is very trivial. So I need an easy to use Linux distro, one that will basically hold my hand as I learn it, because being good with Windows (I won't say guru, cuz I'm not) I just want to jump right into a new OS and try everything.
So who died and made you king of OS standards, as you put it? Linux has given every competent coder the opportunity to configure the OS the way they want it, and Lindows has chosen the path of user friendliness. I guess you use Slackware from your Signature? I've heard some things about Slackware. That it's a very user unfriendly system. That it's geared to power users. And that's fine. For you. Because you know Linux. I don't. So I went with Red Hat. It was supposed to be the best. But it didn't support my sound card. So I tried Mandrake. People said it was easy to learn. But all it was, was a command prompt and I don't know Unix. Lindows came along and I had a chance to use it at no expense to me and I got a 6 month Click n Run membership. So I tried that too.
Actually, you can bash me harder because I don't run Lindows anymore. Just XP Pro. Lindows had a few things I didn't like. Text wasn't showing up right, I couldn't find full screen video in six media players... there was a number of reasons.
I hope that Lindows forces or at least encourages (and I'd prefer the latter) other Linux makers to make Linux easier to use. Linux can still be a power OS, and be simple enough for people to actually use.
Linux will run on just about anything. You have to have the initiative to get the system up and running accordingly.