Germany, IBM Sign Major Linux Deal 382
Skip Franklin writes: "IBM and the German government are getting together to implement Linux as the government's computing platform of choice. The deal is being touted as a big blow to Microsoft, although personally I prefer the glass-half-full perspective of a big win for Open Source. The BBC has the story."
backwards? (Score:4, Funny)
Not so sure (Score:4, Insightful)
I think that there will always be some areas where closed source software is the best option (OrCAD being a good example), but many other areas are ones where open source simply is a better model of development-- operating systems, office productifity apps, some games, dev environments, etc. (there will always be closed source games, I think, though).
This is significant because it indicates that the Germans are making the very logical choices with regard to security (not trusting a foreign company), etc. and shows that open source IS the best solution in many cases.
Re:Not so sure (Score:2)
I agree that Closed Source has it's place, especially in CAD and games.
CAD because there really isn't enough interest in building good CAD tools for it to be viable as a Open Source project. I've heard good things about qcad, but I haven't used it yet. People like me who have used 3d CAD tools like SolidWorks find 2d tools quite painful to use. I might try qcad for simple circuit design, or maybe floor plans, but that's about it.
Games because it's expensive and difficult to develope cutting edge stuff like we are all used to playing. If it weren't for the money involved, we'd all be playing Doom2 right now instead of RtCW.
OS, office apps, dev environments; these are things that get used by a lot of people, and so Open Source make sense. There is enough interest that the small percentage of people who are willing and able to contribute have enough numbers to make a project viable.
Re:Not so sure (Score:2)
One of the parties caught up in that pardigm is Microsoft. We would ignore that at our peril.
I think that people pick on Microsoft because they are big and visible, but no one picks on Adobe,
People pick on Microsoft because they are slimy, lying scumbags and their products suck. Just in case you hadn't noticed, lots of folks think that Adobe is in the same class since they (ab)used DMCA to imprison Dmitry Skylarov for breaking their eBook "encryption"
Re:Not so sure (Score:2)
People are? Or Microsoft? Which side are you on, man!
I'm sure. (Score:2)
The big difference between Microsoft and the other closed-source software companies is that Microsoft actively tries to destroy the healthy software ecosystem that open-source creates. Oracle has not released press statements saying that the GPL is "viral" and "dangerous". Adobe has never tried to cut off the gimp's air supply. Even historical control freaks like AOL, Apple, and even IBM have embraced open-souce for parts of their flagship products. Microsoft is the only company I can think of that's actively trying to destroy open-source software through bullying OEMs, illegal bundling, and generally spreading FUD.
Adobe's also on my shitlist for the Sklyarov arrest, but nobody is fighting open-source the way that Microsoft is. That's why they get so much attention and garner so much hostility here on Slashdot.
Re:backwards? (Score:2)
great news for open source? (Score:3, Interesting)
I've used Linux solutions by both of these companies (IBM's Linux superclusters and Germany's excellent SuSe distro) both at home and in high-impact low-failure-rate enterprise contexts. I have not once been let down, ever. Contrast this with the closed source free-as-in-shit Winbloze ME95NT, which nearly brought my life to its knees.
I can't wait to see what comes out of this groundbreaking deal! Linux may finally be able to compete against the lesser operating systems.
Re:great news for open source? (Score:2)
keep in mind, shit is free.
call it manure and you can charge.
windows=manure
All they need now... (Score:2, Funny)
Linuxkraut?
Re:All they need now... (Score:2)
Krebs
Re:All they need now... (Score:2)
Re:All they need now... (Score:2)
That would kick all ass. Little stylized logo of red shorts with suspenders... polka music, inane facts about the Bavarian Pure Beer Laws, sausages, and wines from the Rheinpfalz during install.
This makes my inner-German all giddy. I think I'll go get some Bratwurst and a bottle of Schneider's Weisse for lunch.
Re:All they need now... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:All they need now... (Score:3, Interesting)
BundesLinux
Re:All they need now... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:All they need now... (Score:2)
"The Berlin Firewall"
Re:All they need now... (Score:2, Funny)
Flawed argument (Score:2, Interesting)
"We are raising computer security by avoiding a monoculture, and we are lowering dependence on a single supplier," he said in a statement.
This is not really a valid argument, since all systems need to be secure. More systems, more potentially open doors.
Nevertheless, great step up for free software!
No, it is valid. (Score:2)
Re:No, it is valid. (Score:2)
Ahem.
Not all species have two sexes. Species which are currently successful and feasible that have hermaphrodidic reproduction. Anyways, this is all off-topic.
To fend off those with Mod points that are having a case of the Mondays, I'll add some Linux relevant stuff:
IBM's dedicate to Linux is impressive. Sun, HP, other vendors pay what appears to be lip-service in comparison. IBM's culture does not suggest that one distribution will be their stance. Unless the whole central philosophy behind Global Services is redefined, I can see IBM supporting multiple distributions, with the solution matching the project. This could mean a mix of SuSE, Red Hat, Mandrake, Slackware (because its not dead, I don't need any more drooling Slackware-fanatics to flame me), etc.
Re:No, it is valid. (Score:2)
1. They sell hardware
2. They sell services
Everything else they do relates to those two things. Every time they support Linux, it is because it helps them do those two things.
IBM would not support Linux if they did not have a business model that allows them to make money in spite of Linux's free-ness.
Not that that's a bad thing, per se. I just see people talking up IBM like they are benevolent; but, they are greedy and profit-driven, just like Microsoft, Apple, Sony, RIAA, MPAA, <insert evil corporation here>, etc.
I'm all for IBM supporting Linux, but let's not forget those same people (management) would be fighting tooth and nail against it if they had the business model Microsoft has.
Re:No, it is valid. (Score:2)
If you equate profit with evil, than you must logically equate much success as evil, such as the lion eating the wildebeast, a sports team defeating all others, and even the strokes of luck we all wish we could have like winning the lottery.
Thats a pretty lame definition of evil.
As opposed to one subsystem, 16 open doors? (Score:3, Interesting)
To Quote Richard Purcell, Microsoft's director of corporate privacy [businessweek.com]
Is it really going to be another 5 to 10 years before Microsoft's products security becomes "Trustworthy"?
your brain is flawed! ;-) (Score:2)
For example, simply look at the nature of all life. There are many different types of life, even among the same species there are variations. Within a single species, there is usually enough variation that if a nasty disease spreads throught that species, there are likely to be many (of the same species) that are varied enough that they will not be destroyed by that disease.
Another example, MS Outlook. While it's arguable whether or not MS Outlook is responsible for the security breaches related to it, you simply cannot argue that these problems would have been less disasterous had organizations not used one single email program.
While a monoculture isn't necessarily more prone to have security breaches, they are definately more prone to disaster.
cross-platform worm (virus!) (Score:2)
Under Windows NT, the "mortal" and "administrator" roles are ordinarily mingled in the same accounts, meaning some users running e.g. Outlook may also have write permission to the executables they use, which is required for a virus to spread.
In the default configuration of most Linux systems, no "mortal" users have write permission to any of the executables they would normally run.
In the case of a virus, at least, running together with Windows systems does not increase the risk to the Linux systems.
Re:Flawed argument (Score:2)
Even if you have a hundred different kinds of systems with weak but different security, the population as a whole is more robust than a monoculture of one kind. Not that I'm advocating that as a security strategy, mind.
Re:Flawed argument (Score:5, Insightful)
"We are raising computer security by avoiding a monoculture, and we are lowering dependence on a single supplier," he said in a statement."
and the poster commented:
This is not really a valid argument, since all systems need to be secure. More systems, more potentially open doors.
No. Diversity in computing paltforms (in a very general sense) increases total, overall security, especially to automated attacks, e.g. worms and viruses.
For example, in a network of 50% Windows and 50% Linux, a windows virus can directly infect only 50% of the systems. In a network of equal numbers of Windows, Linux and BSD, one of these new hybrid Win/Linux viruses will be unable to directly infect one third of the systems. And the rule goes both ways. Windows boxes will be untouched by Linux worms that use Unix-style features like sendmail and portmap remote exploits.
Even for non-automated attacks, some level of diversity is more secure. The potentially successful cracker has to know not one, but at least two or more attack methods to be able to get at all boxes in an overall system that contains a mix of Windows, Linux, BSD, Irix, VMS or whatever.
Re:Flawed argument (Score:2)
This is not really a valid argument, since all systems need to be secure. More systems, more potentially open doors.
It is a valid argument because if all your systems are identical then they all have the same exploits. Once one of them has been cracked, cracking the rest is trivial.
This is the same reason that it's a bad idea to have all your crops based on the same genetic lineage. One disease can wipe out everything.
Re:Flawed argument (Score:2, Insightful)
Linux hate (Score:2)
Re:Linux hate (Score:2, Funny)
Not that anyone cares...
Bah... Just use active directory and XP Pro. You'll never EVER crash!
ROFL!
Re:Linux hate (Score:2)
Is this what they call BBC English? (Score:3, Funny)
HAL 9000 may have been a who(m) as opposed to a what/which, but crashing was certainly an option for HAL!
Re:Is this what they call BBC English? (Score:5, Funny)
They hate that.
But, I thought: Open source poses security risks (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:But, I thought: Open source poses security risk (Score:3, Informative)
Read this email to which I have had no reply (Score:5, Interesting)
Subject: "Opening the Open Source Debate"
Date: 31 May 2002 15:45:59 +1200
Some references you might wish to consider before publishing your article "Opening the Open Source Debate"
http://www.businesswire.com/cgi-bin/f_headline.cgi ?bw.053002/221502375 [businesswire.com]
Bruce Schneier, one of the recognized leading expert on computer security on Kerckhoffs' Principle and Secrecy, Security, and Obscurity of software.
http://www.counterpane.com/crypto-gram-0205.html#1 [counterpane.com]
Dr. Blaine Burnham, Director, Georgia Tech Information Security Center (GTISC) and previously with the National Security Agency (NSA), gives an keynote speech overview of current encryption and security technologies and outlines possible strategies for future defense.
http://technetcast.ddj.com/tnc_play_stream.html?st ream_id=411 [ddj.com]
Also you might wish to address the issue of Microsoft's disproportionately high number of open vulnerabilities in its Internet Explorer components. All of which where discovered without access to the source code.
http://jscript.dk/unpatched/ [jscript.dk]
Richard Purcell, Microsoft's director of corporate privacy, has recently stated that any major improvement in regard to the security of it's products may be at least "5, 10 years, maybe".
http://www.businessweek.com/technology/content/may 2002/tc20020523_6029.htm [businessweek.com]
As for the issue of Trojan horse injection into open source code, it is far from being an open source only issue.
http://www.eeggs.com/ [eeggs.com]
Or were all the "Easter Eggs" currently found in Microsoft's products officially authorized?
If you are looking for a methodology for providing a suitably secure and hardened solution, start with a real world example.
http://www.openbsd.org/security.html [openbsd.org]
I welcome any open debate.
Hmmm (Score:2, Funny)
Incredible! (Score:4, Informative)
"It limits choice rather than increasing choice."
Yet another jaw-droppingly hypocritical statement from a Microsoft spokesperson.
Definition of policy. (Score:2)
I noticed this too. Is this spokeswoman even aware of what policy means. Here's the dictionary definition.
In laymens terms "policy" is when you favour one thing over another.Yet another journalist without a Linux clue.. (Score:2, Informative)
Unix? Open source? I don't think so.
While the software itself is free to download from the internet, companies - such as SuSE, the German distributor whose version of Linux IBM is using - can still charge for technical support and other services.
They can, of course, charge any amount for any part they want. They just can't restrict your rights to sell it again (at least on the GPL'd portions)
In proprietary software such as Microsoft's Windows, on the other hand, a single company controls the code, setting licensing terms for users but blocking outsiders from accessing the code.
They'll let some select few view the source code... but it's a look, don't touch sort of relationship. "Shared Source" and all that crap.
I really wish people that wrote about this stuff had more of a clue about what they were writing..
Re:Yet another journalist without a Linux clue.. (Score:2)
Actually, if I remember my Unix history correctly, the BBC is not far off the mark. Remember that Unix started as a research project, and that AT&T was legally forbidden to sell it.
Source availability was what created BSD out of the original AT&T sources. It was the major selling point in the prehistory of Unix, the fact that source was available, and even better, the fact that this source was in a (relatively) high-level language, so the same single OS could easily be ported to multiple architectures.
Wasn't it the CSRG at UC Berkeley distributing source that led to the infamous AT&T vs. BSD lawsuit?
Sure, it wasn't Open Source in the modern buzzword sense of the term, but that's beside the point.
MartSomeone didn't do his homework .. (Score:2)
Unix? Open source? I don't think so.
You don't have a good IT background have you ?
www.cs.vu.nl/~ast/books/mos2/sample-1.pdf
The history of UNIX has been told elsewhere (e.g., Salus, 1994). Part of that story will be given in Chap. 10. For now, suffice it to say, that because the source code was widely available, various organizations developed their own (incompatible) versions, which led to chaos. Two major versions developed, System V, from AT&T, and BSD, (Berkeley Software Distribution) from the University of California at Berkeley. These had minor variants as well. To make it possible to write programs that could run on any UNIX system, IEEE developed a standard for UNIX, called POSIX, that most versions of UNIX now support. POSIX defines a minimal system call interface that conformant UNIX systems must support. In fact, some other operating systems now also support the POSIX interface.
(This is copied from elsewhere, look it up on google for a history lesson.)
Re:Yet another journalist without a Linux clue.. (Score:2)
Uh, "-1, Redundant" ??
Bang on for the other two, though.
United Linux is already dead? (Score:2)
SuSE would not fall under the UnitedLinux umbrella (Score:3, Interesting)
Feel The fear from the WinTrolls! (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Feel The fear from the WinTrolls! (Score:2)
I guess that doesn't surprise me.
The last part is the best bit (Score:3, Insightful)
Mexico, for instance, has mandated open source in its education system - although it is widely believed to have botched the implementation. And Peru is considering a law mandating open source software.
Microsoft wrote protesting about the law and warning of collapsing software markets and portraying a nightmare scenario of incompatibility. But the answer - from a Peruvian congressman - refuted the letter point by point.
Hee hee! Viva la revolution!
...bottom-up too... (Score:2, Insightful)
Many professionals in IT have started using linux on their home and personal systems for many reasons. And, when they find (found) that open source systems work just fine and can contribute, those technologies have worked their way into corporate systems.
But, the major bump will first come when the top companies in the industry openly support a linux/unix solution across all systems including the desktop.
It is stupid to sell Microsoft desktops and linux/unix servers when Microsoft designs its technology to harm those customers who try to benefit from non-Microsoft technology.
IBM, Hpaq, DELL, SUN, Gateway and others have to wise up and avoid the companies that design its products to interfere with the effective use of the technologies out there. And, that is precisely what Microsoft is doing. So, Microsoft is the company to avoid.
Re:The last part is the best bit (Score:2)
The lone Peruvian congressman and his remarkable letter are impressive, sure... from the moment you started to read it you couldn't help but think that you were witness to an important contribution to the ongoing debates: a politician who actually got it.
But that's just the one guy. I'm not aware of any Peruvian laws or officially adopted policies in the open source direction. (Not proprosals, but actual official laws or policies.) I'm still hopeful, but I haven't seen any yet.
As for Mexico, I wish people would stop mentioning it at all as an open source success story. Fiasco more like. The article included the caveat that the installations may have been botched, but, it's worse than that. Not only did they supposedly botch those installations, but Microsoft stepped in with megabucks and bought out the threat. (I resisted the temptation to say 'bought out the officials'.) Mexico's vaunted i.t. initiative is going to be a Microsoft shop, set up with Microsoft money, on Microsoft's terms.
(lost the link, but if you want more information, ask Miguel. _He's_ the one who purportedly spoke to Vicente Fox about it all.)
Office? (Score:2, Insightful)
I hope that ppl will start using open formats to comunicate important documents.
If more govs do the switch. I wonder what will happen to closed file formats.... ( or will M$ port office to *nix )
But... (Score:4, Funny)
Oh wait...
Re:But... (Score:2)
"Government have been embracing open-source software as a way to cut costs and sometimes also to break free of a U.S.-dominated software market" - ZDNet
Don't get to excited, it's"only" the servers... (Score:2, Informative)
US is trailing again (Score:2)
Suggestion (Score:3, Insightful)
"It limits choice rather than increasing choice."
I think it's time to proclaim this Microsoft representative a troll. Two way reality is "their monopoly is greatest tendency to achieve what he says it isn't good in this case".
By the way, I don't recall they would say anything good about any other platform or software. They are always favouring their side and limiting choices with their "Security by obscurity" and closed formats.
Well, things you say must really depend on one fact "Who got it and who hasn't"
Re:Suggestion (Score:2)
I don't care what Microsoft says. I still favor attractive females over any man as a prospective date. I also have a policy of favoring foods I like over foods I don't.
What some would say "limits choice" I would call "making a choice".
The Staying Power of Monoliths? (Score:5, Funny)
Man, 30 years ago I would not have believed a statement beginning this way would imply victory for the little guy!!
servers on Linux, desktops on Windows (Score:2, Informative)
Check out http://www.bundestag.de/aktuell/presse/2002/pz_02
[sorry, German]
Germany misunderstood (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Germany misunderstood (Score:2, Funny)
The War was over, germans where way past their reserves and the Marshal plan was due and germany (west) was to be brought to strength again to serve as a good buffer to the commies. The american headquaters gave word across the atlantic to ask what the germans would need (food of course).
The germans back then ordered some x-hundred thousand tons of corn. (Korn) And got x-hundred thousand tons of what AMERICANS call corn. For more than a year then the germans ate corn-bread, corn-cereal, corn-soup, canned corn
I guess they should have ordered grain or something like "x of wheat and y of barley".
Anyhow, most certainly one of the funniest missunderstandings in recent history.
What was the first IBM/German deal? (Score:2, Informative)
A lot of folks believe IBM provided Nazi Germany with electronic cataloging support which allowed for the Unpopular to be shipped-off to death camps:
Since its publication in February, Edwin Black's book "IBM and the Holocaust: The Strategic Alliance Between Nazi Germany and America's Most Powerful Corporation" has stirred unprecedented controversy among students of the Holocaust, American enterprise and information technology.
Of course, an informed person might not believe every little thing they read. ;)
Important parts of the MS interview left out! (Score:2, Funny)
It says that switching to open source can damage a country's indigenous IT industry, because some varieties of open source software place restrictions on copyright and intellectual property. "Imagine if the software industry were tied in to restrictive licenses with unreasonable terms. How could anybody want to function in an environment like that?"
It also says that it is a more reliable partner than smaller, less well-established open source distributors. "Consider IBM, this open-source dot com the German government has decided to do business with. What's their track record? How long have they been around?"
"Any policy that favours one thing over another isn't helpful," a Microsoft Europe spokeswoman told the Journal. "That's why we support our applications on a wide variety of operating systems. We want users to have the choice of where they want to go. That's why we provide software for all version of Windows!"
SuSE involved too (Score:3, Informative)
Re:SuSE involved too (Score:2)
Well, you would be right except for the fact that the article specifically mentions that.
So you are completely wrong and several retarded moderators who also didn't read the article modded you up to informative rather than down as redundant.
Does this mean we have to call it GNU/Germany? (Score:4, Funny)
And in Taiwan... (Score:2, Informative)
Not just a good main story (Score:2)
Interesting time are ahead I think and hope.
StarTux
Isn't that wonderful. (Score:2, Interesting)
German government employees are doomed (Score:2)
What impact will this have on Shockwave and Flash games? Will there popularity rise? Those questions remain unanswered, only the future will tell.
Lord of the OS (Score:2, Interesting)
Seven for the Kernel-lords in their halls of stone,
Nine for
One for the Dark Lord on his Dark Throne
In the Land of Microsoft where the Shadows lie.
One OS to rule them all, One OS to find them,
One OS to bring them all and in the Darkness bind them
In the Land of Microsoft where the Shadows lie
I found this fitting since in the end, it is not a massive army that defeats the ring, it's the little people, the ones that were never considered by the Dark Lord himself. The Dark Lord launches his own attacks, "Microsoft wrote protesting about the law and warning of collapsing software markets and portraying a nightmare scenario of incompatibility." But in the end his armys are defeated, one by one, "But the answer - from a Peruvian congressman - refuted the letter point by point." The end is nigh, do you know who our Aragorn is?
This is more about Scientology than Microsoft (Score:3, Interesting)
Lee
Re:Oh joy. (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Oh joy. (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Oh joy. (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Oh joy. (Score:2)
It interpreted "Rules" as "Rules and Regulations", rather than "it's really great".
Re:Oh joy. (Score:2, Funny)
gänse fleisch mal den küfferüm üffmache?
linüx rühls
a german from hamburg
Re:Only IBM and Germany.. (Score:2, Insightful)
What too many people don't seem to understand around here, is that "free as is beer" is not NEARLY as important as "free as in speach."
NAM
Re:Only IBM and Germany.. (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Why IBM? (Score:3, Informative)
IBM is the service company doing all the work, though. I guess the government wanted to go with a big guy (either for support reasons or in order to take the "unreliable partner" argument away from M$).
Re:Why IBM? (Score:2)
Re:Why IBM? (Score:2, Insightful)
You may not know this but companies, including MS, were bidding and working hard to get this contract it's big money. IBM spent a shitload of time and energy into landing this contract, it's how businesses make money. This is how Linux will win, not by selling cd's and shit. Big support contracts that implement Linux solutions that are supported by large respected corporations, ok maybe just large corporations.
Re:Why IBM? (Score:2)
Re:Why IBM? (Score:3, Funny)
:)
Re:Why IBM? (Score:2, Insightful)
To this question, three possible answers:
Re:Open Source Unix? (Score:3, Informative)
AT&T did sell source code to corporations and gave it away for virtually nothing to Universities and other educational institutions. Hence one could say open source. Open Source however is indicative of the Open Source Initiative (OSI http://www.opensource.org). If one would be nit-picking, it isn't incorrect to say that UNIX was `open source'.
To further go into matters, some historical AT&T code is now released with a less restrictive license, thanks to Caldera. SCO used to govern the code and provide it for a fee to enthusiasts, which I believe was $100. While it has little value for todays computing, it is nevertheless out there. (At this time I can't seem to find the site, perhaps some kind soul can provide that).
Desktop, or server only (Score:2)
Re:Someone at the Beeb loves Linux... ;)) (Score:2, Insightful)
BSD
BTW The Beeb uses a mix of Solaris and Linux for its servers.
open source unix ... (Score:2)
b) the UNIX trademark is one thing; de facto "acts like UNIX" is another. "Variant" seems a fair word for me, though -- if I came up with a workalike system similar enough to the Dewey decimal system that it could be used interchangeably in many circumstances, I think "variant" would be an alright way to describe it. Same with Linux and the BSDs -- based on UNIX, whether or not they're stamped with the name by The Almighty.
c) OS X is widely touted for its UNIX underpinnings (and is an official UNIX, I'm 99% sure, though the right link isn't slapping me in the face yet), and Darwin is open source (and available separately, incl. for x86), even if Aqua isn't.
timothy
Re:Someone at the Beeb loves Linux... ;)) (Score:3, Informative)
The original Unix code, written by Bell Labs, who couldn't sell it, gave it away free, to universities, and whoever wanted it. Eventually Berkley got thier hands on the license, and BSD was born. In the early days, it was free, then it got licensed. Now, a version written from scratch is free again, thanks to our friends in the Linux Community
So there was, and then there wasn't but now there is now again free UNIX's.
I almost forgot to mention, there is now freebsd. Which is BSD with the copywrited stuff filtered out and re-written under a new bsd license that is a free for use license.
Re:Good news.. (Score:2)
All the modern distros have extremely easy to use update tools that beat the pants off anything I've seen from Microsoft. SuSE's YOU (YaST Online Update) is a prime example. It handles everything installed with SuSE, and is about as difficult as checking email. No mailing list involved.
Easy to use GUI? Take your pick. I like KDE, personally, but there are plenty more that fit the bill. KDE is at least as easy to use as Explorer.
In contrast, Windows has what? An update website that I have to somehow know about (since they don't seem particularly eager to publicize it) and check manually, unless I want to open myself up to script viruses, and which doesn't cover most of my apps (except MS Office, of course, which has its own update site). A GUI with all the Admin tools intentionally obfuscated. An obtuse and often self-contradictory security model, the tools for which are also intentionally obfuscated. A kernel which requires regular reboots to function properly.
If what people want is an easy to use GUI and rock solid security without mailing lists on an OS that just works, why the hell do they keep using Windows?
For the record, I know the answer to that question. Do you?
Re:Good news.. (Score:2)
Now tell me what's not easy to use in SuSE-Linux (= KDE/Linux with all Linux-stuff embedded into the KDE-control center. Everything desktop-related can be done 100% graphically and is reachable at a central place (the KDE control center)).
KDE/Linux is even a lot easier to use than Windows because all the settings are organized tree-like and are not just random tools thrown into a directory like in Windows.
and rock solid security that doesn't involve watch a mailing list and sitting in front of a console 20 out of 24 hours in a day.
Linux has a much better security track record than Windows. I haven't updated my webserver the last 6 months and I've not been infected NIMDA-style so far.
For infrastructure, it's top notch, for ease of use, it's a lumbering elephant. Just remember, some people don't care how or why it works, just that it works.
Oh, no, I've just fed a troll...
Re:Mortal Kombat filter (Score:2)
You need some serious counselling. Please click here [find-a-psychiatrist.com].
Re:Mortal Kombat filter (Score:2)
At least the C-S dreams are a lot more interesting and have more narrative depth than the Tetris dreams I had when I was addicted to that game.
The C-S dreams are a little familiar. Back in the 1980s I had my clock radio set to the local National Public Radio "News And Information" station. I usually had the alarm set to "radio", waking me up in the middle of "Morning Edition". Which led to a lot of half-dreams about guerrillas in Central America....
Re:SUSE (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Leave your licences on the train platform (Score:2)
Re:German youths meet propellor heads (Score:2)
Re:A big smack to Microsoft? (Score:2)