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Author Message
25 new of 203 responses total.
twenex
response 84 of 203: Mark Unseen   Feb 1 16:24 UTC 2007

I don't know of anyone who has bought hardware that does not run a version
 of Windows. I know of a lot of people, myself included, who have installed
 a Linux and found it has limited functionality for their hardware. If the
 trend is opposite for you, I'd be interested in knowing what you guys do
 differently across the pond!

I buy hardware specifically known to work with Linux, and I'm probably better
off in that it's almost by definition the low-margin vendors making
bog-standard rubbish who only support Windows (Linksys routers, for instance).

Anyway, I may have misinterpreted you. My reading of what you said above was
that once Windows is installed, it runs trouble free for years, and other
OS'es get "hiccupy". Most people's experience, otoh, and certainly mine, is
that Windows is the hicccupy one - in fact that's what brought me to Linux.
Jep seems to agree on the point.

As I think I have already repeated, however, I just don't understand this
attitude that if you go into a store, and buy pc hardware, most times you
/don't get/ to choose the OS software.
twenex
response 85 of 203: Mark Unseen   Feb 1 16:30 UTC 2007

Re: #82. There's also the point that when you release binary drivers, as most
people who write drivers for Windows do, then your old hardware might not be
supported when you upgrade to a new version. With source, the OS distributor
can just recompile.

 resp:80 Windows may not run *perfectly* for years, but as a user of
 Windows machines, who knows very little about computers really, Windows
 works just fine for what I need. I have no idea how to use Linux, and I
 don't see that is has much of a precense anywhere outside of computer
 groupies.

Linux can be used in almost exactly the same way as Windows - and to forestall
the argument that "almost exactly"is not good enough, different versions of
Windows are used in different ways. Mostly gratuitously, too.

 The average consumer knows little about how computers really work. They
 want to bring it home, plug it in and have it work. They like the bells
 and whistles- even if they don't use them- because then they can brag
 that their computers CAN do those things.

"The average consumer"knows little about cars "really work" too. But knowing
how to *drive* a car is a *legal requirement*.
twenex
response 86 of 203: Mark Unseen   Feb 1 16:33 UTC 2007

People are lazy, and they want things to be easy- for minimal usage
 requirements- Windows fits the bill. Sure, some things don't work right-
 at which point people either work around it, scrap the idea, or consider
 getting help. The user doesn't WANT to fiddle with settings, or
 recompile kernels- they want to plug and play. 

OK, we're back in FUD territory here. There's no need to do that these days.

They also manage to
 forget about all the time spent actually making Windows work the way
 they (mostly) want it to. 

Which if true only proves my argument that Windows is very far away from being
judged on its merits.

Similar to the memory deletion of the time it
 takes to search for that special key stroke command.

I don't know what this is referring to.
edina
response 87 of 203: Mark Unseen   Feb 1 16:36 UTC 2007

I really have no opinion on Windows v. Linux.  I'm sorry - that gene 
has just never been stimulated.  That being said, I find this:

"re #53 oh c'mon twenex, you don't support Gates' philanthropic work 
because he's a flaming liberal.  He and his buddy, the world's second 
richest man warren buffett, are both supporting Barack Obama in fact"
 
to be one of the FUNNIEST things EVER written.  

jadecat
response 88 of 203: Mark Unseen   Feb 1 17:05 UTC 2007

resp:86 someone posted a link awhile back to a study on which was really
faster- using only a keyboard and special combination keystrokes, or
switching to using a mouse. People thought kayboard only would have to
be faster, but the adherents 'forgot' about the time it took to remember
the specific combination keystrokes they needed to achieve what they
wanted. The time spent moving touse a mouse ended up being about the
same or faster than keyboard only. That's what I mean.

And I do agree, I don't think that Windows is really being judged solely
on it's merits. 

People may need a license to drive a car- but that doesn't mean they
know how the car really works. That's why they have mechanics. ;) 
twenex
response 89 of 203: Mark Unseen   Feb 1 17:09 UTC 2007

 resp:86 someone posted a link awhile back to a study on which was really
 faster- using only a keyboard and special combination keystrokes, or
 switching to using a mouse. People thought kayboard only would have to
 be faster, but the adherents 'forgot' about the time it took to remember
 the specific combination keystrokes they needed to achieve what they
 wanted. The time spent moving touse a mouse ended up being about the
 same or faster than keyboard only. That's what I mean.

?It takes far less time to learn the limited amount of commands you had to
use to learn Linux years ago (not now) than to deal with a repeatedly crashing
Windows machine. If you solve a problem by rebooting or reinstalling, you can
bet your bottom dollar it is going to happen again.

People may need a license to drive a car- but that doesn't mean they
 know how the car really works. That's why they have mechanics. ;)

Notwithstanding the fact that typing commands into a computer is most
certainly not necessary with Linux, it's not "knowing how it works" either.

Yes, I can get around the commandline in Linux, but ask me how all the bits
fit together and I'd be stumped.
vivekm1234
response 90 of 203: Mark Unseen   Feb 1 17:23 UTC 2007

Re #73:
" I would argue that makes it a POS from everyone's point of view,.."
Not necessarily. See shit is useful as manure..Windows may contain
shitty code and may have bugs but that does not necessarily imply
that it is less useful than Linux.

"But note that history is repeating itself - Unix grew in use on DEC's /despite
 the fact/ that DEC hated it, wouldn't supply it, and wouldn't support it."
Oh yeah, i feel that Linux/Unix will get better with age unlike Windows
which has saturated. Well unless they come up with new stuff and not just
eye-candy.

"Word doesn't format Word documents reliably either. "
The question is to what degree - my personal experience with OpenOffice
is that it horribly slow and mangles complicated word doc's. Whereas with
MS-Word it's not too bad..in fact i've never noticed it till date.

" since although neither Grex nor Gardenweb is forced on people, Windows 
most certainly is."
Your idea of something being forced on you is the fact that it comes pre-
packaged with hardware. However i would like to point out that you could
just as easily toss it out and put Linux. Also note that you don't HAVE
to buy from said dealer. No one is blackmailing, threatening you to buy
the darn thing. It's like advertisement - it's in your face between shows.

What you are actually saying is that "Linux does not come pre-packaged" 
or "i'm not getting a blank machine".  Well you can only blame Linux for 
that - if they could market better or if there was greater user demand..
see what i mean

Re #84:
 "attitude that if you go into a store, and buy pc hardware, most times you
 /don't get/ to choose the OS software.""
Because it isn't a right. It might be bad business practise but that's
something the market should decide and right now the winds of fortune blow in
favour of MS.




remmers
response 91 of 203: Mark Unseen   Feb 1 17:24 UTC 2007

When you install Vista, you agree to some licensing terms that are 
pretty far reaching, and go even farther than Microsoft has gone before 
in limiting what you can do with your computer and its software.  
Michael Geist's blog about legal matters has a posting on this.
(http://www.michaelgeist.ca/index.php?
option=com_content&task=view&id=1641&Itemid=135 or if you prefer,
http://tinyurl.com/29ohhb).  Some tidbits that caught my eye:

    Vista's legal fine print includes extensive provisions granting
    Microsoft the right to regularly check the legitimacy of the
    software and holds the prospect of deleting certain programs
    without the user's knowledge.

    ...

    Once operational, the agreement warns that Windows Defender will,
    by default, automatically remove software rated "high" or
    "severe,"even though that may result in other software ceasing to
    work or mistakenly result in the removal of software that is not
    unwanted.

    ...

    For those users frustrated by the software's limitations, Microsoft
    cautions that "you may not work around any technical limitations in
    the software."

    ...

    ...numerous limitations in the new software [were] seemingly
    installed at the direct request of Hollywood interests. . . .
    [There are] restrictions associated with the ability to playback
    high-definition content from the next-generation DVDs such as Blu-
    Ray and HD-DVD (referred to as "premium content").  . . . 
    Vista intentionally degrades the picture quality of premium content
    when played on most computer monitors. . . . the technological
    controls would require considerable consumption of computing power
    with the system conducting 30 checks each second to ensure that
    there are no attacks on the security of the premium content.

No thanks.  I'll pass.
twenex
response 92 of 203: Mark Unseen   Feb 1 17:35 UTC 2007

Well it looks like Vivek and I will have to just agree to disagree on the
subject of whether you have the right to do what you like with stuff you
purchase.
vivekm1234
response 93 of 203: Mark Unseen   Feb 1 18:29 UTC 2007

Res #91 #92: Wow! Note however that i use Win2K and have no intentions of
ever upgrading so long as there is support for 2K by the various software
companies. As to: "right to do what you like with stuff you" i don't know
depends on what the courts say. Logically you have no such right..
Look it's a agreement with the devil. Devil's told you what's in the contract.
It's upto you to decide. However there are plenty of instances where the
benefit of the common good dominates..so..might is right.

BTW are there any stats comparing KDE/Gnome with Win2K - in terms of memory
and CPU? Also, things like start up time between SUSE and 2K. Not to mention
StarOffice and MS-Office..

I found this but it looks flaky: http://blogs.techrepublic.com.com/Ou/?p=14
0
twenex
response 94 of 203: Mark Unseen   Feb 2 01:46 UTC 2007

might is right.

Responses like that are why half the planet is still stuck in the sociological
stone age.
twenex
response 95 of 203: Mark Unseen   Feb 2 01:59 UTC 2007

Linux applications typically start up slower than their Windows counterparts
(it's a function of the split between "fork" and "exec") but they typically
stay up longer. There was some discussion a while back about investigating
how to make start up times quicker, but it doesn't seem to have come to
anything.

Regardless, without being able to compare with W2K, when Windows starts up
it takes a LONG time before the computer is usable after the desktop comes
up. In Linux the desktop takes longer to come up, but is actually usable when
it does and is therefore probably faster than Windows. The only case when this
might not be true is when you have a LOT of programs set to start up on login,
but as far as I can tell, even in that pathological case it's still possible
to interact with the desktop (starting up other applications, etc.)
vivekm1234
response 96 of 203: Mark Unseen   Feb 2 15:13 UTC 2007

Re #94: "might is right" that was wrt to society imposing it's will on
individuals for the greater good.
twenex
response 97 of 203: Mark Unseen   Feb 2 15:22 UTC 2007

Ah. Communism.
richard
response 98 of 203: Mark Unseen   Feb 2 15:55 UTC 2007

re #97 no, he said "the greater good"  You do believe there is or could 
be a "greater good" than your own individual needs don't you?  Or are 
you an Ayn Rand Objectivist?
twenex
response 99 of 203: Mark Unseen   Feb 2 16:03 UTC 2007

Yes I do believe there can be "a great good than my own individual needs".
However, I trust no man or group of men (or women) smaller than the human race
to know what that is. Situations in which "a Food Good Men" have controlled
society for its "benefit" have inevitably lead to the deaths of A Lot of Good
Men (and Women).
richard
response 100 of 203: Mark Unseen   Feb 2 16:27 UTC 2007

So unless there is unanimous consent among the entire human race, you 
won't accept laws impacting you that are passed for the "greater good"?
sholmes
response 101 of 203: Mark Unseen   Feb 2 16:31 UTC 2007

greater good reminded me of this definition of democracy:
"two wolves and a sheep voting on what to eat for dinner"
cough
response 102 of 203: Mark Unseen   Feb 2 17:11 UTC 2007

thats stupid
remmers
response 103 of 203: Mark Unseen   Feb 2 19:02 UTC 2007

If I may be so bold as to post something relevant to the topic of this 
item (Microsoft Vista)...

ComputerWorld has an interesting article by Scot Finnie on some of the 
things baked into Vista that he considers to be problems (DRM stuff and a 
number of other things).  You can read it here:
http://www.computerworld.com/action/article.do?
command=viewArticleBasic&articleId=9009961
(also at http://tinyurl.com/2xcbmy)
richard
response 104 of 203: Mark Unseen   Feb 2 19:55 UTC 2007

bill gates really threw down the gauntlet when he declared Vista the 
safest o/s system in history.  Basically saying its hole-proof.  I mean 
I know he's got the best software engineers working on it, and he's 
probably had them looking for holes in the beta version for some time 
and maybe they finally got to the point where they couldn't find any.  
But how can you possible write that much code and not leave some sort 
of maze that leads right through it?  
remmers
response 105 of 203: Mark Unseen   Feb 2 21:20 UTC 2007

You can't.  For an interesting exploit, see:
http://www.techtree.com/India/News/Vista_Speech_Recognition_has_Flaw/
551-78904-580.html (or http://tinyurl.com/2kbbkg).
twenex
response 106 of 203: Mark Unseen   Feb 2 21:28 UTC 2007

Re: #100. No, I simply put my faith more in evolution than revolution.

Re: #103. How dare you?!

Re: #104. My, you do enjoy making us laugh. Most secure OS ever? That's what
he said that last time. Best engineers? They must spend most of their time
playing pocket billiards. They certainly can't be putting much effort into
creating decent code.
tod
response 107 of 203: Mark Unseen   Feb 2 22:59 UTC 2007

re #104
I've sat in lectures from both James Whittaker and and Mike Howard.  Both of
these gents have been on the development/security of Vista.  Mike's pitch was
that they employed a file fuzzing for malformed data, threat modes and
blockbox testing, memory defenses and stricter services, block header
integrity checks, heap terminations on corruption, and rooted over at least
1.2 million annotations.  Even through all of that, Mike knows and admits that
Vista will have bugs which will show up after shipping.  He also admits though
that they will patch and fix whatever pops-up much more efficiently than is
done with any other flavor of OS you see on the market.
James Whittaker on the other hand..he's the guy who breaks the stuff before
it ships.  He's a hell of a lot of fun and I'm envious of his job at
Microsoft.  He discussed the origin of bad things, noticing the environments
of applications as well as their inputs and logic within.  At the end of the
lecture, we explored an IE 7 bug in the internet options security tab where
you could set all sorts of restrictions against porn sites to protect your
kids at home only to have them create their own msrating.dll file in the
iexplorer.exe directory which is blank but bypasses your original settings.
  >;)
vivekm1234
response 108 of 203: Mark Unseen   Feb 3 15:30 UTC 2007

Re #106: Ahem! I think it was James Gosling that said that MS coders were
pretty good in some article ages back.
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