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Re: Warning! Do NOT apply XP SP 3!
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Re: Warning! Do NOT apply XP SP 3!
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I recently installed it on my uncle's computer. I started with attempting to install Ubuntu, but that one ran into an error (related to a missing hardware cable for the clock, I suspect, but I didn't fight with it enough to actually prove that - he basically just uses the box to browse the net) while Knoppix didn't have any issues. Quote:
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Re: Warning! Do NOT apply XP SP 3!
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1. Ease of use. Linux is not easy to use for people not already well familiar with how computers in general work, and slapping a GUI on top of it doesn't change this. When I wanted to do something as simple as install the video drivers for my new graphics card, I wound up having to recompile the kernel. A PITA, but no big deal for me. Linux still has far too many operations that require mucking around with the command line that are simple point & click operations in Windows. And trust me, when you're trying to convince an elder sibling to switch over to *nix, and she winds up finding instructions to get her printer working that include a sneaky "rm -rf /" while running as root, well you might as well tattoo Windows4Life across her forehead at this point. 2. Consistent Support. With 99% of the problems I've had with Windows that were Windows problems, and not some other software/hardware not behaving itself, I've found the answer to in Microsoft's Knowledge Bank. The remaining 1% I have found no answer to, anywhere, ever. Try Googling any number of common *nix problems, and you'll find a huge variety of answers, most of which (from personal experience), don't actually work for one reason or another. There's no consistency of language either, even within a single distro, which can make finding the solution to your exact problem nightmarish. Windows problems, on the other hand, generally take me no more than a 30-60 seconds to find the relevant webpage, because Microsoft uses a consistent language to describe problems, which makes it far easier to find solutions. 3. The "Just Works" Factor. I plug my MP3 player into my XP box, it pops up and tells me it's found new hardware and installed drivers for it. Ditto my digital camera. And my external hard drive. I do the same in Ubuntu... Nothing happens. It's not until I start fiddling around in the CLI that I actually get some useful error messages, and eventually get things up and running. And in the dozen or so Linux distros I've tried, I've run into similar problems, and programs that fail to load without giving an error, and programs that crash with no error, and it's not until I haul open the terminal and start fiddling that I actually find out what's wrong. So I could even say that even when things don't work, they don't work, better, in Windows. As for Macs: 1. Right click, lol. Well, in seriousness, with all of Apple's vaunted "intuitive interfaces", I've found people with little to no experience with computers tend to figure out how to do things in Windows quicker. I've worked in a few places where people had the option of using either Macs or PCs, and inevitably, those least familiar with computers wind up on the Windows boxes. Note that I'm not referring to people who have only used Windows, I'm talking about those who have never owned a computer, and have only limited prior experience working with them. I don't really understand it myself, I'm actually quite fond of the OS X UI, but I've been told plenty of times that it's, "Nice, but only makes sense after someone explains it." 2. Developer Support. I've run into employees of EA, Ironclad, Relic & Rockstar (They all have offices quite near where I live), at a variety of social gatherings. Inevitably, I wind up asking them about the dearth of games on Macs & Linux. Everyone I've talked to has given my some variation of "Apple won't play nice" when it comes to Macs, and nothing but a thousand-yard stare when I prod them about Linux. I'm not entirely sure what this means, but from talking to these people it seems as though there's more than just market share behind the reason so few developers put out Mac versions of their software. 3. Letting you do whatever you want. Yes, a lot of people fubar their systems because of this, but that's more down to personal ignorance than any particular flaw with the OS. Have you ever tried to make a Mac do something that Apple didn't think you'd need to do? Holy crap. It will just fight you every step of the way, bringing to bear it's full arsenal of lockups, power downs and refusal to boots in an attempt to stop you from doing something as simple as enable support for writing to NTFS partitions, as I discovered on Friday. Now of course, there are plenty of things that Macs and Linux do much better than Windows, otherwise I wouldn't be running Linux on my laptop, or have a dual-boot set up on the desktop. But the fact remains that there are a lot of things that Microsoft does very well, and it irks me a bit when I see people condemning MS for things that aren't it's fault, when there are plenty of perfectly good reasons to condemn them for that are their fault. |
Re: Warning! Do NOT apply XP SP 3!
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Re: Warning! Do NOT apply XP SP 3!
For all the love Apple gets from it's fanbase, it's truely undeserving of it. Some of apple's policies are down right draconian. If Microsoft pulled the crap they did, Microsoft would be getting bent over a table by Anti-Trust suits.
For example. I can only use iTunes to load music onto my ipod. Other 3rd party MP3 players allow for USB connections and 3rd party softwares. Apple includes additional software in it's updates. The infamous Safari-bundled with quicktime and itunes updates. Apple Patent Mongering. Itune's online store carries different music prices in different regions. In fact, the EU is on their *** about it. Songs purchased on itunes may not work on anything but an ipod. A known anti-competitive practice once used with juteboxes and IBM used with system mainframes and microsoft used with servers. Apple Lisa pricing. If you bought one, you know what I'm talking about. iPhone is restricted to 3rd party developers, locking out independent programmers and businesses. Many key software packages that run on apple products can only be obtained from apple or apple-owned subsidiaries. I can go on. |
Re: Warning! Do NOT apply XP SP 3!
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Re: Warning! Do NOT apply XP SP 3!
That's the wrong kind of technicality, and you know it!
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Re: Warning! Do NOT apply XP SP 3!
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Re: Warning! Do NOT apply XP SP 3!
capnq, we all know about "Murphy's Laws!" My favorite is,
Nothing can be made foolproof, because fools are very ingenious! Now for reality, business makes money by selling product. If everyone sits there with XP on their computer, Micro$oft won't make any money. If they come out with a new OS (say like Vi$ta) and nobody likes it, why not 'taint' your old product to make everyone think that your new one is better? If you're a third party software producer and your software doesn't work on the SP3, then you should be the one to fix it! UNLESS the SP3 problem was something that was created by Micro$oft, then they should fix it. That's my story and I'm sticking to it!!! http://forum.shrapnelgames.com/images/smilies/cool.gif |
Re: Warning! Do NOT apply XP SP 3!
*shakes head*
The vast majority of Windows licenses come bundled with new PCs. They could care less about trying to convince people to upgrade current machines from XP to Vista. Even new machines sold with XP are still making MS as much money. |
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