Windows Interoperability in A Linux Distro 355
Magenta writes "There is a review of the Desktop OS Version 3 Business Edition from Xandros. This operating system is meant to allow users to easily move from Windows XP to Linux without the problems that can arise. Xandros not only can use Window's file system but it is able to run a great number of Windows programs using its CrossOver Office tool from CodeWeavers. This is one of the most accessible distros to come along in awhile and it marks a big step forward in the progress on Linux on the desktop."
A must (Score:2, Insightful)
Omar
Re:A must (Score:3, Interesting)
I installed wine and all the apps he was used to -- MS Office, Photoshop, IE (actually he dumped IE for Mozilla on Windows a couple of years ago.) -- but he didn't really use them. He found it easy to switch. In the case of K3B he said it was "much easier to use than that Roxy-whatever thing on Windows." His slide scanner worked perfectly without the installation of any extra software,
Re:A must (Score:2)
Re:A must (Score:2)
Re:A must (Score:2)
Remem
No wayyy. (Score:3, Funny)
oh, and calc. I so love calc.
Just for fun... (Score:2, Informative)
BTW, Xandros isn't a pretty looking dektop. And, it is not FREE as in FREE BEER
Re:Just for fun... (Score:2)
$39.95 - $74.95 depending on which version you buy
And speed can always be better, and it continues to get better
Re:Just for fun... (Score:3, Insightful)
Nor should it be free as in free beer. It includes proprietary (well, for-pay) software in the install... CrossOver Office.
Free Software is not free [puzzling.org], and it probably never will be until our core society changes dramatically at the community and economic level.
Power costs money, bandwidth for hosting the project cost money, domains cost money, developer time costs money, hardware and backups cost money, distribution cost
Free version (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Free version (Score:3, Informative)
There's no shortage of other crippled features in the free version either, such as a maximum of 4x for burning CDs.
Re:Free version (Score:2)
Re:Just for fun... (Score:2)
Those that I could actually measure any difference actually ran FASTER under Linux.
This may not be a fair test, because I have finer grained control over resources on Linux, others may not have optimized their systems as I have.
Windows compatibility (Score:4, Interesting)
The only question that comes to mind is:
When do these Windows compatibilites start to become security issues in Linux? I mean I am all for having some Windows apps run in Linux. The main reason I use Linux at home was because things like IE and other security ridden problems in Windows arent available in Linux.
Just my $.02
Re:Windows compatibility (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Windows compatibility (Score:2)
Re:Windows compatibility (Score:2)
Re:Windows compatibility (Score:2)
30 Great Number (Score:5, Insightful)
CrossOver Office currently supports more than 30 of the most popular windows productivity applications
Well, that's quite an acheivement but 30 productivity apps isn't "a vast number of Windows programs".
Re:30 Great Number (Score:5, Informative)
Re:30 Great Number (Score:2)
When did people start getting "supported" and "working" confused with each other? Did you seriously expect CrossOver Office to bend over backwards for you when your $10 1994 shareware app doesn't work right?
Better than 90% of what you Need. (Score:2)
More importantly, the kinds of applications that people "need" to run do work. Office, Outlook, IE and in house software will work. As in house
Talk about advertising (Score:5, Informative)
Crossover office is a product you can buy and install on most Linux distros. It's a nicely patched up and packaged version of Wine.
As for being able to access Windows filesystems, the Linux kernel contains drivers for FAT, FAT32 and NTFS. I would be very suprised if this distro can write to NTFS safely as this is something that is still being worked on.
Re:Talk about advertising (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Talk about advertising (Score:3, Interesting)
This is infinitely dumb... (Score:5, Insightful)
That is a few hundred thousand people who will eventually run into application support issues, driver issues, printing issues etc that they won't be able to turn to friends for help with.
That is a few hundred thousand people who will tell their friends that they tried Linux and it sucked.
The Linux community needs to concentrate on driver support, end user support and encouraging developers to migrate native applications to the platform. Anything else is just inviting failure.
Re:This is infinitely dumb... (Score:2)
Of course, having a program to configure the kernel for the hardware that's in it, as well as hotplug support for figuring out what unsupported device you've plugged in and building the module would be really nice, but it's a lot less necessary with the current state of the hardware world.
Re:This is infinitely dumb... (Score:2)
Let's just say that, while I use OpenOffice's writer, its spreadsheet program was lacking features I required. So I popped in my Excel CD and installed it. Woo. I never have to reboot that machine into Windows. Actually, I need to recover the Windows partition to add more space for Linux.
Win win for Linux. Succe
Nothing to wait for (Score:3, Insightful)
The reason we don't have supported 3rd party drivers is because Linux doesn't have the market share (yet) to warrant the OEMs supporting us.
The more people use Linux the more support
Re:This is infinitely dumb... (Score:2)
How do I get my Mom to do it? I just spent four hours yesterday trying to get her HP scanner working in WinME. If she moves to Xandros it'll free up my afternoons!
Blame goes where blame belongs. (Score:2)
Nonsense. Those people know the limitations and also know they can dual boot for whatever they think they still need. They also know that their old Winblows partition sucked to begin with, that's why they are taking the time and trouble to use something else. More importantly, they know that the root of their problems u
Re:This is infinitely dumb... (Score:2)
Credit where credit is due (Score:4, Informative)
But credit where credit is due , the article summary makes it seem like Xandros was responsible for these things.http://www.codeweavers.com/ [codeweavers.com] code weaver site , responsible of Crossover office and naturally a link to wine on which Cross over office is based http://www.winehq.com/ [winehq.com].
A link to the linux NTFS project http://linux-ntfs.sourceforge.net/ [sourceforge.net] (I assume this is the driver they are using , correct me if I'm wrong)
(Cross over office is a great product , It also has a rather pleasant installer in my experience.So you don't need to switch distros
Re:Credit where credit is due (Score:2)
What Xandros are selling is the boxed copy and the support contract , sure you can get all the apps free as in beer , but you are not going to find free professional level support , which is the key selling point for a distro like this
For us hackers , developers , sysmins(unless in the office) and power users though it is not really a great option.
I like ubuntus model( and a number
Cool (Score:2, Interesting)
Windows software... (Score:2, Interesting)
The real problem is hardware thats not compatable out the box, most people will give up. I've run Mandrake for 2 months no problems (However took a year to get hardware sorted) until a couple weeks back when t
How to get your wifi card working... (Score:2)
Re:Windows software... (Score:2)
I built my GF/fiancee's new pc specific for Linux use. it took me 15 minutes to uy everything that was 100% linux workable and get a machine ordered to install mandrake.
When you look at linux you can not look at it as a windows re
hardware support (Score:2)
I don't see the problem: if you buy supported hardware, then Linux runs on it. If you buy it preinstalled, you don't even have to install it.
On the other hand, if you install Windows on unsupported hardware, you will run into problems, too. In fact, you'll run into problems with Windows even on supported hardware, since many drivers are highly Windows version specific.
Order in Chaos (Score:2, Interesting)
The majority of users have simple, finite needs. They want to be able to browse the net, check Email, chat with friends on IM networks, play music and view pictures, and write documents using Word. Occasionally, they want to play games.
Let's assume there is a Desktop Environment / Operation System that allows them to do all that:
o easily
o virus/trojan/spyware free
o thro
Well.. (Score:2)
Embrace.
Enhance.
Exterminate.
MS Will Implement an "innovative" file system (Score:2)
http://www.eweek.com/article2/0,1895,1640212,00.a
But, someday, somehow, MS will have a new, improved, and totally propritary file system to bedevil us with.
Steven
Re:Well.. (Score:2)
As others have mentioned, WinFS didn't make it into Vista, but it will have transactional NTFS [msdn.com]. This will probably keep the linux-ntfs folks busy for a while.
Lacking GNOME is not a minus (Score:3, Insightful)
These distributions are much better off supporting only ONE desktop solution. The prime target of Xandros doesn't know what GNOME or KDE is, they just want to get their work done. Xandros chose KDE, which is not a bad choice, and did a good job integrating it.
Confusing the issue with two very different ways of using your computer is just not a good idea. It is better to completely integrate one solution.
This is also why Ubuntu should stick to one user interface with their official distribution, and leave KDE to the more unofficial Kubuntu.
For the more technical users / companies, there is always Red Hat, SuSE, Mandrake, Slackware, Gentoo, Debian, etc.
WTF? (Score:3, Insightful)
So:
- Four-click install with automatic disk partitioning [SUSE's just about got it]
- Industry-leading hardware detection & configuration [SUSE's got it]
- A single control center for all your settings [SUSE and many distros have got it]
- Shield your files from prying eyes with automatic home folder encryption [ok, it's not automatic in SUSE or most distros, but do you really want your mom and dad to encrypt their files?]
- Acquire images through the USB scanner support [sounds like most distros]
- Support for new nVidia and ATI PCI-Express video cards [sounds like nVidia and ATI]
- Recursively change properties of files in selected sub-directories [Sounds like Konqueror]
- New! Synchronize your system clock with a network time server [Holy shit, computers do this...wow what a novel idea]
- Xandros File Manager [ie konqueror]
- Xandros Disc Burner [ie k3b]
- Full server-accessed Windows networking [ie samba]
- StarOffice 7 with full commercial support [too cool for open office]
- Special Xandros edition of CodeWeavers CrossOver Office 3.0.1 [don't see the major advantages over a well setup version of wine]
- Xandros Networks updates [sounds like most distros]
- Get notified of updates immediately with the Xandros Networks panel applet [sounds like many distros]
- Startup and Trouble-shooting Guide [weee!]
- 380 page User Guide (PDF with download version) [sounds like they cheaped out...SUSE still gives you two solid books in addition to the PDFs].
- Access to a huge inventory of free Linux software [ie the Internet]
- 90 days e-mail installation technical support [ie we don't want you to call and talk to us, oh yeah and screw you that you may have hosed your system when ntfsresize failed and now you can't get online]
The wrong direction (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:The wrong direction (Score:2, Troll)
The second you tell someone that they have to do ANYTHING on a command prompt then you have lost them. When Linux's options and setups are GUI only and just as easy to understand and use as wi
Distortions (Score:3, Insightful)
You may have found it better to use Linux, and better to train others without the albatross of Microsoft. But for those users without the benefit of a local Linux-experienced geek to help them out, a Windows-alike may be an easier way of exploring alternative OSes.
I actually agree with you in principle, but I meet
Re:Distortions (Score:3, Interesting)
The lack of savvy Linux users out there to help people get set up and give them some minimal training is indeed an issue in furthering the spread of Linux and other open-source operating systems. Also, there is no proof, per se, that mimicking Windows is a mistake. You are also correct in saying that I would argue that is is, though.
My first set of experiences with Linux were with "user friendly" distributions. Mandrake 9.2 comes to mind. Not only did the (albeit minimal) Windows-mimicking not impress
Wasn't Linux imitative of . . . UNIX? (Score:3, Interesting)
The original idea behind GNU and then Linux was to imitate UNIX with a free version. UNIX was considered a powerful and useful operating system, but it was proprietary as all anything and required expensive software licenses.
So Windows is proprietary and bound up in licenses, and people think it is useful to have a free work-alike, and they just happen to layer that work-alike on top of Lin
Re:The wrong direction (Score:3, Insightful)
Not only this, but lets say that noone does anything to create Windows compatability and Linux does overthrow the Windows monopoly. If nothing is done then there will be 15 years of Windows and Dos compatible programs that are lost. All of
Windows Filesystem (Score:3, Insightful)
I have never used Xandros, but are you implying installing linux on a Fat32 filesystem? Why would I want to use a filesystem that does not provide for permissions? If your just talking about mounting and accessing it, what distro doesn't? Every single dual boot system I have ever installed (Suse, Mandrake, RedHat, Fedora etc.) has detected and mounted the existing windows partition. My USB thumbrive mounts automatically in Fedora Core 4, it uses windows format. The only thing I really see different about Xandros is Codeweavers which I already have. I really don't see anything truly revolutionary here. Don't get me wrong I like linux but if you have seen one KDE/Gnome desktop you've seen them all. Every week a new screenshot gallery showing the same tired pictures of KDE, Gnome, OpenOffice etc makes it's rounds on all the linux sites. The only thing to me that has really made things easier recently is the move to Synaptic, APT, Yum, URPMI, Click & Run etc. But again they all do basically the same thing, some better than others but nothing earth shattering. What is so much better about Xandros that would make me want to dump PCLinuxOS? If your just trying to attract windows users, your going to have a hard time. Until Linux is pre-installed on Dell Desktops as a dual boot or cheaper option, your never going to get a windows user to switch.
Re:Windows Filesystem (Score:2)
Re:Windows Filesystem (Score:2)
That'd be junction points [elsdoerfer.info].
Re:Windows Filesystem (Score:2)
Deja vu (Score:2)
Do keep up.
Fraction of the cost?!?!? (Score:2, Interesting)
At $129 dollars per license...that's one helluva fraction!!!
Save your money! Use your fav linux distro and buy Crossover Pro for $75 bucks [codeweavers.com] if you need that functionallity!
Don't listen to lamers and trolls (Score:2, Flamebait)
While I applaud the community's efforts to continue making Linux more user friendly, something we need to realise is that regardless of how much work we do, there are always going to be the "ready for the desktop" idiots churning out one article after another about how Linux isn't acceptable purely because it isn't 100% identical to Windows. Because
Looks like Windows (Score:2)
In my many trials of setting up Linux systems, printing is the one area that seems to never function "straight out of the box".
What is the issue with being able to print from ANY of these distro's ? Is it a lack of drivers? A lack of manufacturers? What printer do I have to purchase to allow me to setup a network print
Fraction (Score:2)
I haven't had any trouble with printer sharing with ubuntu. Check out the forums: http://ubuntuforums.org/ [ubuntuforums.org].
Re:Fraction (Score:2)
It caught my Windows printer... (Score:4, Insightful)
I have a Brother HL 1020 laser printer, which strictly speaking is a Windows printer. Xandros identified it and set it up correctly right during the installation.
Let's just say I really like this distro. I chose it very carefully, and I have yet to have an issue with it.
Xandros is a nice distro (Score:2)
The CrossOver inclusion is why I orginally purchased Xandros, but that's not what kept me as a customer. I stayed with it because it's easy and it works. Used CrossOver a few times early on mainly for the wife's stuff, but as she got mor
Xandros (Score:2)
I am disheartened (Score:2)
1. A pretty run of the mill Linux distro
2. With KDE preferred over GNOME
3. WINE (usually CrossOver) is included
I could build something just as nice as Xandros using Gentoo. But, of course the point to Xandros is that it's all ready to go. Sort of. The real truth is that NO Linux distro will ever be "ready to go" out of the box for regular users because all Linux distros are made of multiple projects that have varyin
Will it make a difference? (Score:2)
Probably not. Who is going to switch?
1. People using XP aren't going to replace XP with this. After all, they already paid for XP so why pay for Xandros Desktop OS 3 Business Edition? At $129, it's not that cheap.
2. People comfortable with XP who are in the market for a new computer aren't going to go through the effort to find a great deal on a computer, buy the OS, install and configure the OS.
Think what you may, but Windows XP is now pretty secure. Use Firefox and Thunderbird, keep your AV up
Big step forward for Linux on the desktop??? (Score:2)
From a non-fanboy's POV... (Score:2, Interesting)
I'm currently on Mandriva, and I must say, if my parents need an OS when their Windows machine craps out (again), that will be what I'm installing. Everything works out of the box, and my parents are good enough web searchers that they'll be able to find what they need help on in a google search and on forums.
Even t
no, not really (Score:2)
What's the point? (Score:3, Informative)
This is not progress.. (Score:2)
Moving from windows to linux takes some home work to find out what the user does on a system and identify an equivalent package under linux to do that job. Keeping a user with feet in both OSes does not do them any good. I recently moved a user from a Windows ME system to Linux. Their needs were modest. Took a few hours to build the system on a new harddrive and then save some files from the old system. They were up and running on linux t
Re:/shrug (Score:3, Informative)
Re:/shrug (Score:5, Informative)
Re:/shrug (Score:3, Informative)
World of Warcraft is apparently considered extremely playable. Unfortunately as is common with the Transgaming stuff that still means that the installer crashes (but has finished when it does), the graphic glitches in places and performance is lousy in some situations without a special hack. Overall it is a way to get to play games, but it is hardly the most user-friendly solution there is.
Re:/shrug (Score:2)
Harass the game developers about this (even though we know it's futile, but bug them anyway)
Maybe I should stop voting these games down in the voting process? naw =P
Transgaming Cedega isn't perfect (was Re:/shrug) (Score:2)
Re:/shrug (Score:2)
All the game makers need to do is use SDL and make a few other adjustments, and the game will be cross-platform. It's not terribly difficult. Most developers don't need all the shiny new features of Direct3D.
Re:/shrug (Score:2)
Re:/shrug (Score:2)
Linux should focus more on becoming user-friendly so it gets a bigger customer base
I have a non-negotiable arrangement now that friends / family / etc only get my computer support ("Help, the mouse isn't working" stuff) if they're running Linux. Windows users get the Linux installation offer or nothing.
Who cares about useability? It's ease of maintenance for the local IT guru that really matters to Linux uptake.
Jesus... (Score:4, Insightful)
So here we have a linux distro that according to the review is very easy to use and on top off that even offers the possibility to run many Windows programs out of the box.
Now what does the average slashbot have to say to that?
But I want to run my Windows(tm) games. As long as my Windows(tm) games don't work on linux, linux isn't for me.
Finally, as if this comment hadn't been dumb enough, he tells us that linux has to become more user-friendly in order to gain more market share, so that more games will be available for linux.
The funny thing is that just before that he told us that linux wouldn't gain any market share even with a userfriendly distribution (remember the review?) that runs many windows programs out of the box, because he couldn't play Everquest on it.
Needless to say that it only took seconds for the famed
Impressive...
Re:Jesus... (Score:2)
Re:Jesus... (Score:2)
If you should dropped your linear thought process for a while you would see the reason my so-called Windows(tm) games ARE Windows(tm) games is because until Linux gets a bigger user-base companies won't make jack$hit if they try to sell a Linux version of their game/app. Newsflash buddy, the world revolves around money and if its not there it ain't gonna happen.
How hard is it to make an operating system where someone can double-click ins
Re:Jesus... (Score:2)
Granted, I DO realize that alot of the programmers working on Linux don't get paid, but there are still many that do. I am greatful for what DOES work.
BUT, most
Re:Jesus... (Score:3, Informative)
dpkg - i package.deb
or apt-get install package (if its on a repository
Don't like the command line , then you have the choice of a GUI front end such as Synaptics for Apt-get , Im fairly sure there are also dpkg front ends , i have never looked though as I'm comfortable on the command line
there you have a zero mouse click install
Re:/shrug (Score:2, Informative)
Overrated? Troll? (Score:2)
Whomever is modding today needs a metal boot in their ass. Linux SHOULD focus more on the gaming side. Cedega doesn't run anything that I would like to run (like the games he mentioned) and most of the games that it does run don't even compete with the level of performance that I can get from using DirectX di
Re:/shrug (Score:2)
Re:/shrug (Score:4, Insightful)
You've hit the problem right on the head! The users have come to expect (in the Windows world) that everything they buy that "fits" in their PC, will "work" in their PC, at the highest level of performance and optimization.
They've grown comfortable in their propritary softwareship. The problem here is that these same vendors are PROHIBITED (by contract in many cases) from opening up their APIs to non-Microsoft partners if they wish to continue to use the "Certified for Windows" stamp of approval on their hardware.
Do you go out to Sears, buy tires that "look like they'll fit", and then complain when you bring them home to find they don't fit on your Mini-Cooper? No, you find out what kind of hardware your Cooper takes, you bring those specs to Sears and you ask them which tires meet those specifications.
In Linux, since vendors refuse to support the hardware or software through proper drivers (ATI, NVidia, 3Com, etc.), you find out (via the Linux HCL) which hardware is supported by which vendors, and you support THOSE vendors with your wallet.
But I stand by my statements. None of this is a Linux problem. There is more than enough code, talent and time in the Free Software community to write perfected drivers for every single piece of hardware out there that fits in a computer (embedded, PC, workstation, server and mainframe). The problem is that the vendors don't provide docs or APIs, or the ones they DO provide are incorrect, false or just plain wrong.
Trust me, I've been on this side of the fence, working for a Linux company that 3Com approached to ask us to write drivers for their WinModem in Linux, because IBM insisted they "fix it" for their Thinkpad line of laptops (this was back in 2000/2001). 3Com assumed we could just write 100% compatible drivers in a WEEKEND and have a fully-debugged, functional equivalent of their Win32 WinModem driver shipped to them by Monday. No docs from them, no APIs, nothing more than a binary copy of their Win32 WinModem driver.
We insisted they give us docs or APIs or something, and what they gave us... and you'll love this (I still have a copy in my email archives), was a slightly-blurry digital picture of a whiteboard, where their engineers described how they "thought" the Linux version of their WinModem driver would work.
Needless to say, we laughed at them and told them to find someone else. They never did.
So the problem is NEVER on the Linux side when it comes to hardware not functioning properly.
Re:Not good for free software (Score:2, Insightful)
It's OSS, it's Linux, it's familiar. Don't get me wrong, I'm not a fan of the XP-style interface, but for some people it could ease the migration process. Let people become accustomed to the benefits of a stable kernel, a powerful software toolkit. If you have faith in the inherent quality of OSS this shouldn't scare you, surely?
Perhaps I'm an incurable optimist, but a journey of 1000 miles must begin with a single step.
Re:Not good for free software (Score:2)
Re:Not good for free software (Score:5, Insightful)
However, allowing people to run unfree software on a free platform using Wine or Winex or Crossover Office or whatever is Evil and Wrong and encourages people to forever be trapped by Bill Gates.
How come you guys think that people can only migrate from the applications downwards, rather than from the OS-up?
I'd have thought once you got people to switch the Operating System, your job's mostly done, and getting them to switch applications would be relatively easy - people install and uninstall applications all the time, compared to their OS, after all....
Re:Not good for free software (Score:2)
Re:Not good for free software (Score:2)
Re:Not good for free software (Score:2)
Re:Not good for free software (Score:2)
Now it makes it somewhat harder to get them to switch if they can still functionally get their tasks completed but things are 'different' - ie switching from Excel to another spreadsheet that doesn't emulate excel exactly.
It would be almost impossible to get someone to switch to a 'bet
Re:Not good for free software (Score:4, Insightful)
>hosts or supports Open Source or Free Software.
Gee...is that why there's a Windows version of Firefox?
>Why should we continue
>to spoonfeed them when there
>is no benefit coming back our way?
>They aren't supporting our community,
>they aren't supporting our
>development, they aren't supporting
>anything we do,
Fanaticism's fun, isn't it kids? I can really visualise the foam issuing forth from the mouth of this particular commenter. Of course, in their autonomic fanaticism, it never occurs to such enlightened thinkers as this one that perhaps when using OSS applications in Windows, it might cause at least some users to become curious about these apps' native OS. This also genuinely does happen...Newbies visit the Linux From Scratch IRC server all the time.
I actually can't think of a better way than something like Cygwin for gradually familiarising a windows user with a command line. It's the perfect wading pool scenario...they can get their feet wet to their hearts' content, but they can also run back to the percieved safety of Windows whenever they need to. Then, when the day comes when they feel they've learnt enough in that medium, they can begin to dual boot. Maybe they want to be able to web surf without security risks. Maybe they've grown sufficiently accustomed to bash in cygwin that they want to experiment with scripting/automation more thoroughly. Maybe they want a graphical user interface that is configurable from the ground up. Either way, they can keep XP for games or whatever else they want, while embracing Linux for those individual reasons...then when the day comes that Linux does run the games they want as well, (via cedega etc)
if they're confident enough they can uninstall XP completely.
Migration is a very transitional process...it doesn't happen all at once...and it has to start somewhere. Getting Linux more widely accepted is going to be a very long term, large scale task...and attitudes like the one in the parent article are not going to help us get there.
Re:Not good for free software (Score:3, Insightful)
How many Microsoft Windows users have you seen reporting bugs with the Free Software they're running on their Windows machines? How many contribute code fixes back? How many actually donate or support the Free Software projects they're using in ANY way? I'd venture to guess less than 1% overall.
While the number of windows users who report bugs or who contribute to FOSS may be small this may be because they just want things to work and either wouldn't know what the problem was or didn't have the programmi
Re:desktop linux (Score:2)
And it's also harder for mom and dad to use. Some people's time is worth more than f*cking with X to recognize your video card. That's why I switched from Linux back to Windows. Less rhetoric, less stupidity, more time for things that are important in life.
Recognize that not everyone is a computer programmer, and messing with some arcane operating system that promises the ultimate in user configurability is not one of their goals in life. Co
When I read this Monday it was not a Dupe (Score:2)
Both were at XYZcomputing.com and irritated me by having too few words per page and too many pages. The worst crime was the lack of a Printer-friendly edition of the document so I could scroll at my own leisure.
Re:The road for Linux (Score:2)
This is a step in the wrong direction. How will OpenOffice improve the rise of free software if the people who are migrating to it still use Microsoft Windows?
(Sounds silly, right? Most people want continuity, not a clean break. Some will want continuity in the applications, some will want continuity in the operating system. Make both available.)