Topic: Are we losing our digital rights to an OS that plays monopol | |
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I have been a die hard windows fan for years while exploreing the
gnu/linux distros. Now, Microsoft windows seems to be losing thier mind with thier new OS, Vista. It is awsome as far as the visual aspect, but it took microsoft untill Vista to add additions to thier OS, that most Linux distros have had for years. This isn't including all of the digital rights that Microsoft is taking away from us. People didn't realize it as much with Win XP, but now with Win Vista, Microsoft is starting to show thier true colors. Me being a local OEM, in the town that I live, even small things matter. Really they always do. I can say this also, most of my customer support that I have to deal with are on the Windows boxes that people have. With Linux things just work. When will people really realize they should get what they pay for, and realize that they should at least try something that is FREE that works BETTER without restrictions?????? reserch link no 1 http://badvista.fsf.org/what-s-wrong-with-microsoft-windows-vista reserch link no 2 http://badvista.fsf.org/ |
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The best analogy that I have seen yet.
Ron Schenone said, Wrote on March 12, 2007 “Microsoft is the best marketing company in the world. They could sell you the worst toilet paper in the world and convince you to upgrade your toilets each time they change the color of the flowers of the paper.” |
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LOL netuserlla, I followed your links and read several articles plus a
lot of blog posts. I agree that an OS Linux could/should be offered, and pre-installed on new computers. Why shouldn't we have a choice? I would dump Windows given half a chance. I have been looking at getting a new laptop as mine is practically a crank it to wind it up OLDER type. I have to jump through (several) hoops to get files from it to this system and so wait until I have a gob of stuff on it to convert any files. What a pain in the drain. I have also been reading about Vista and the WOW factor hype. Just because MS says it, does not make it so. I am not naive enough to think that Windows is anything (all that) special. The last system to be super stable was Windows for Workgroups 3.11(in my opinion) and XP has been the bane of my existence for several years now. Reflecting on it, it seems lots of things went away when Windows became prevalent and was pre-installed on most consumer purchased pc's. I was also quite guilty of selling gobs of pc's with win95 on them, back when. I have never been taken with XP all that much and would jump at the chance to try out some of the Linux systems. I might even wait long enough (although sooner would be better)to get a machine with any Linux OS system on it. So many companies went by the wayside when Windows was not forthcoming with source code back when (and all that). And plenty have been gobbled up by the bigger corporations. Waking up to the fact that we are, and have been for the last 10 or so years being led down a garden path to a jail is finally coming to fruition. Choices and freedoms are disappearing. I try not to have my head in the sand but, just like everyone else what are us little folks supposed to do about it? I voted for Linux! Do you think it will make a difference? Let's hope Dell listens to all the voters. Have a great day tomorrow. Verb |
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Thanks for your comments Verb. Dell has been the leader-of-the-pack
OEM for some time now. Since the joining of AMD and ATI, Dell is starting to look at that side of the fence. They are thinking to change thier whole architecture to AMD. I think that that is really something considering that they flooded the advertising market with Intel. Intel is a great processor, but AMD has a better architecture(having the memory controler on the processor), but intel really does most of thier ruling with mobo chipsets. I'm sorry for straying off, this is another subject all together. WalMart tried Lindows and failed, but I think that if dell started pushing for Linux, it will at least start waking some people up. There is a learning curve to learning Linux, but it is worth it,and if you have dissected windows as I have over the years, the learning curve is small. |
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netuserlla,
I've heard lots of scary things about vista, and recommend all my friends buying new machines to insist on XP. I used windows 98 up until 2005, so I think there's lots of life left in XP; by the time people *have* to leave XP (due to old age), the linux solution should be even easier & better for them. We can sidestep vista altogether. Verbatim, i'm really glad to hear you voted for linux on Dell's site. i thought those votes were all coming from the die-hard linux users (who are not really Dell's customers), but i can see now that many XP users might really just want more choice. If anyone wants to try a distribution of linux, you can do it on your current PC without installing any software. Amazing, but true. Use a 'live CD' and the linux OS and applications will run directly off the CD, and make no changes to your harddrive (unless you tell it to). After your done, remove the CD and you are back using the same system you had before. You can get an older one for free from http://shipit.ubuntu.com, or you can buy a newer one for less than $10 (shipping included) through ebay or google a 'linux live cd' reseller. I like ubuntu and pclinuxos. netuserlla - can you recommend a good live CD thats easy to use? |
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Thank You! Great info. I know zip about Linux but learning new things
is all we have to look forward to, right? LOL I will get right on that Linux CD offer. Less than $10.00? sheesh. What a drop in the bucket compared to the prices of other software out there. I jumped from win98 to XP in a big leap a few years ago when I bought my newest machine that I am using (mostly) now. I spent zero time trying to learn XP because as soon as you learn a new system, BINGO a newer one comes out. I am sick of that, too. (would you like some cheese with that whine?) Learning Linux will be a step forward, in my book. I know that is probably not the usual answer from Windows users but as message knows, I stumble around in XP all the time. I have no desire to be a guru on XP. I guess I have set up a dozen systems (or so) on XP and have for some years concentrated on learning other things (that could put a few bucks in my pocket) instead of even the basics on XP. I know what I have to know to GET BY! LOL When you get older you have to think harder too to resolve things. This morning my network here was down, all I needed to do was re-enable the connection, but fumbled around a while THINKING about what went wrong while I was sleeping last night (not enough sleep either). Gremlins, I guess. ? OK, off to other subjects for a bit, more coffee and the morning cache of pills to down. Gotta get breakfast over and done with too. Back in a bit. You guys have a great morning. Verb |
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you might want to check out a program called XAMPP it will literally
install MySQL, PHP, Apache, filezilla on a windows based OS. When it is all done you have yourself a pretty nice webserver and what is known as a WAMP environment as opposed to a LAMP environment. Currently, Every website I have ever done is on Linux servers and I am very reluctant to take a job that requires me to work on a Microsoft webserver. Apache just does it better faster and more reliably. XAMPP and Linux are actually still free downloads if I am not mistaken you only have to pay if you want them to give it to you on a CD. |
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I have tried many distros, and even still I think that I have a few
live cd/dvd around. I like SUSE Linux and even have a live disk for it that I made myself. (Downloaded and extracted the ISO onto disk). I think that I would have to say that the best live linux cd that I have found for newbies would be KNOPPIX. I has most of the extras that you can get, after an install version, already included on the disk. It uses KDE GUI, and it even has Wine. (Witch is pretty good at running windows only programs). It even has an earlier version of Open Office, witch is comparable to and better in most ways than microsoft office. All of this for free. Also if you really like Knoppix, you can even do a hard drive install from the live disk. I guess that my favorite distro, witch I use at present, is Gnu/Linux Mandriva. This is an install disk only, but it comes with so many drivers that works with even windows hardware. Not just that, but from the welcome screen, you can chose witch GUI (graphical user interface)that you want to boot.I like KDE or Gnome. Well I can ramble on, but I guess that is a good start, so I will go for now. Oh, and happy Linux digging. |
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Have you tried Ubuntu? It is the best one I have seen so far.
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