Ubuntu, Macintosh and Windows XP 641
LXer has an interesting look at the big three operating systems with some surprising results. From the article: "If you think that a Linux advocate cannot make an objective analysis of desktop operating systems, then you need to read this report. You may find yourself surprised with some brutal honesty that leaves out the free software philosophy."
Far from "brutal" (Score:5, Insightful)
A more thorough analysis would have focused on why these packages are lacking. What is so special about Windows and Mac that they have these markets clinched? Does his analysis show that Linux needs this software, or is it actually competing in a different market? These are the types of questions that are actually important.
Finally, some of his analysis was just confusing. According to the author, Apple is nicer than Windows because they make nice hardware. Wait. Aren't we comparing software? If hardware is a key issue, why isn't that brought up in all three analyses? And why does he believe that the higher price of Apple's hardware makes it only appealing to Enterprise users when it's quite obviously home users who use it?
All in all, I give him an A+ for effort, but a D- for content. He's really trying, but he doesn't have any real goal in mind during his comparisons. As a result, his analysis comes out confused and unfocused.
Re:Far from "brutal" (Score:2, Insightful)
M-Windows XP with SP2 is the best version of M-Windows yet. I find it stable but it is still vulnerable to infiltration. It's familiar to many long-time M-Windows users and its market-share won't be dropping sharply any time soon. Call this phenomenon, "Winertia".
OS X is a delight to use. TFA's author is right to say that the tight coupling to Apple hardware is its challenge. Apple
Re:Far from "brutal" (Score:2, Informative)
Ever had to connect to a WPA enabled network? It is not usable at all. The wireless tools are mediocre at best; the NetworkManager service doesn't support wpa, and it appears like development is moving ahead at tutrtle's pace.
And stil, the menu editor seems to be read only (at least in FC). It's getting better, but no where close to mom and dad simplicity IMO.
I like Linux and Gnome a lot, but it has some serious usability hurdles to get past first.
Hear you loud and clear. (Score:4, Insightful)
I don't find installing a new distro to be something enjoyable or entertaining, thus I'll probably stick with Ubuntu until I find a very compelling reason to change to something else, but I think if I was going to do it all over again I probably would have picked SuSE or RedHat. All in all, running Ubuntu has been an interesting experience -- I've discovered that the "spit and polish" aspect of an OS counts for a lot more to me than I thought it would.
So I suppose I'll keep coughing up $2.5k every few years for a new shiny thing from Apple, since so far they're the only company that I've found that does it right.
Re:Far from "brutal" (Score:3, Insightful)
No, Sir, I have not. Wireless is not a major selling point for desktops in the enterprise. Secure-wireless networking is not a show-stopper for Ubuntu.
Ubuntu is junky for Bluetooth as well. But that hasn't stopped Ubuntu from gaining significant support.
Re:Far from "brutal" (Score:3, Interesting)
No, but there are thousands of companies with dozens to hundreds of users. And that, my dear sir, is a market of equal size.
Your comment really illustrates my biggest problem with Linux folk. Point out an issue and they'll do a song and dance about how that issue really isn't an issue because no one who's "intelligent" really needs to do it that way anyway.
Can't print to your printer? Well who'd want to! And beside
Re:Far from "brutal" (Score:3, Informative)
With Ubuntu? Yep. No problems. WPA-PSK TKIP and WPA2-PSK (AES). In fact, there is more than one step-by-step guide on how to get wpa-supplicant up and running on the Ubuntu Forums. The hardest part is cutting and pasting the shell commands.
WPA works fine on the other distros I've used including the latest Open Suse and FC4.
Re:Far from "brutal" (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Far from "brutal" (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Far from "brutal" (Score:4, Informative)
Yes, too often things are too difficult to do in Linux. Getting that same card to work in Ubuntu was a lot more difficult, and they had detailed instructions on how to get it to work (AFAIK, it should work now OOB with zero hassle). But many things ARE getting better, and many things that used to be very difficult and tedious to set up are actually very, very easy these days. In the end, the main reason why many things are difficult is because the hardware-manufacturers don't provide Linux-drivers, and we have to resort to hacked-together kludges. As it happens, that WLAN-card had vendor-supplied GPL'ed drivers, and getting it to work was as easy as plugging the card in. Took about 5 seconds in total.
Re:Far from "brutal" (Score:5, Funny)
Ubuntu has been mentioned regularly.
http://slashdot.org/search.pl?query=ubuntu [slashdot.org]
http://slashdot.org/search.pl?tid=&query=ubuntu&a
It must be Digg that you're reading. Slashdot is the ugly site, remember?
Re:Far from "brutal" (Score:3, Funny)
Must be that new "confuse them" journalism.
Unavailable tax software??? (Score:5, Informative)
I did my taxes this year with Quicktax under WINE. To my surprise and delight, everything just worked. Kudos to the sidenet-wine-config [sidenet.ddo.jp] people -- this tool downloads and installs several key bits of software from Microsoft that many windows apps expect (such as IE).
Or the internet (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Or the internet (Score:5, Informative)
>companies are making their software
>available as web packages, which OS
>you are using becomes moot.
Yup.
Even if that weren't the case, judging a computer system by whether or not you can perform a task that one needs to perform roughly one hour per year is just silly. The author mentions a dozen application that are used daily, followed by the line, "and most importantly income tax preparation software." Most importantly? In what bizarro-universe is a home pc's most important feature tax prep software?
Even if there weren't several very robust online tax prep services, and if paper forms and human tax accountants weren't an option, it's hard to believe there are many potential linux users who don't have a friend or colleague who would lend them a windows machine once a year in order to do taxes. (Whether you're willing to give your SSN and banking info to a machine administered by someone other than you is another matter, I suppose.)
In passing, it's worth noting that of the other "missing" applications, only two that are genuine categories of software rather than specific vendor packages - PDF converters and legal DVD players - really have no place on the list.
There are plenty of ways of generating PDFs on linux. Having spent a fair amount of time generating PDFs from both platforms in recent years, I claim it's far easier to make arbitrary material into a high quality PDF using an unmodified linux install than it is in windows, even after paying hundreds of dollars to Adobe.
What's more, while there are no *legal* dvd players and there are a hand full of important codecs that are *legally* restricted in the US, it is trivial to install illegal software to satisfy one's every multimedia need. If linux growth were restricted only to those of us who claim it is ethically defensible to obtain an illicit copy of media playing software which is distributed for free to users of one OS but cannot be purchased at any price by users of another OS, in order to play our own legally purchased media on our own hardware, the linux community would never notice the difference.
Re:Or the internet (Score:5, Funny)
Note to IRS: Just Kidding
Jeez, no kidding. (Score:2)
Q: How do I get it to run on Linux?
A: I use a high-tech interface called a web browser, specifically Firefox. As a result, my tax software is OS-independent.
Really, this isn't hard, is it?
Re:Jeez, no kidding. (Score:4, Interesting)
Once open office base becomes stable that will answer the other critical need for small business.
Re:Far from "brutal" (Score:2)
As a result, his analysis comes out confused and unfocused.
I kept trying to figure out what the point was, and what I came out with was "all three have good points, all three have bad points." Which pretty much anyone who's worked with all three at one time or another will say. There are things that XP is better at, or at least the only option. There are things that Mac OSX is better at. There are things that (fill in a Linux distro here) is better at. To me, an analysis should start with "What exa
Re:Can I fill in? (Score:3, Interesting)
Better yet, what did you do with the bootloader to make it fail? Did you try to configure something offbeat? Did you submit a bug report? Or did you just come and bitch on
Re:Can I fill in? (Score:2)
Probably the same guy. Probably a troll. Definately a jackass.
Re:Can I fill in? (Score:5, Insightful)
Dude. Seriously. Not helping.
Installation problems always have and always will be key areas that users complain about. Users think of Macs and Windows machines as "easy" in that respect, because the OS ships with the machine. They've completely forgotten how they used to have that kid next door come over to install Windows for them in exchange for a few bucks or some homemade cookies.
A more complete analysis would show that Linux needs the crucial "early adopters" in the home market who are willing to put up with its faults to have the latest and greatest. Those early adopters would then drive sales of OEM Linux machines.
Unfortunately, Linux has already experienced quite a few cycles of early adopters. Every time it fails on the follow through. Whether it be support for the distro ending (e.g. JDS), a breakneck upgrade cycle (e.g. Mandrake/Mandriva), or just plain user unfriendliness (e.g. user can't upgrade to latest package X from the repository because they need to upgrade to the latest OS version), users end up becoming frustrated with Linux and leave. The vendors take notice of this and drop support for their commercial Linux software. Thus Linux loses popular support until the next cycle.
I've talked about this many times before. Linux distro providers need to decide if they're really trying to target the home desktop or not. If they are, they need to stop targetting the workstation market and make something that really blows the home market away. Linspire is pretty much the only distro that is taking this step. It's too bad that they've got their technology wired all wrong. Perhaps Ubuntu can do it, but it will need to nail both the OEM Linux market, as well as user's needs going forward. Given that much of their success and failure is still dependent on areas farther back in the pipeline (e.g. GNOME), only time will tell if Ubuntu becomes a serious contender in the home.
Re:Can I fill in? (Score:3)
Re:Can I fill in? (Score:5, Informative)
If you upgrade package a package that depends on some library "libfoo" that also has a newer version out, there's a chance that all of the other packages that use "libfoo" will need updated as well. This is because OSS tends to do a huge amount of software reuse. Windows and MacOS [X] software doesn't do that to the same extent.
The reason you can't just upgrade thet first package and not libfoo and all the others is that it will completely break things. Instability is what you'll get if you're extremely lucky, but it's far more likely that all those programs will crash as soon as you try to run them, because you're using an incompatible older library.
The good news, though, is that Ubuntu only makes minor security or stability upgrades within a release. You won't see a package go from version 1.5 to 2.0 within a given Ubuntu release, specifically because it's newer and less tested. If there's an upgrade available, you can rest assured that it's extremely unlikely to break anything -- these are minor, well-tested updates. If an upgrade is available, take it! You may be at risk if you don't. The updates you see are guaranteed not to be bleeding-edge.
(NB: This isn't true of all distributions, but it is true of Ubuntu.)
Re:Can I fill in? (Score:2)
Re:Can I fill in? (Score:2)
Read his thread before judging (Score:5, Informative)
Re:OT- Re:Read his thread before judging (Score:5, Informative)
The way he linked to evidence of his own jerkishness as if he thought it defended him, I think the guy really might honestly need therapy.
Re:Read his thread before judging (Score:5, Insightful)
I disagree. He seems to be a real asshole. He's rarely openly aggressive, but he starts out being really annoying and passive-aggressive, constantly slams Ubunto for no good reason (as it turns out, his hardware was broken), and quickly turns to insulting the people trying to help him.
Some choice quotes:
And so on.
I don't like Linux. I use a Mac, and I use Windows at work. I have absolutely no interest in Ubuntu. And I still think he's extremely unfriendly. He's telling the very people who try to help him that they've "reached a new low". Wow.
Remember, he wants these people to help him. They're not paid to help him. They do it out of the goodness of their heart (or maybe they have some leass altruistic reason, but hey sure as hell don't have to help him), yet all he does is insult them and demand a solution which is simply not possible in this here reality.
It's kinda weird how long it took until the others went from being apologetic to calling him what he was.
What an ass.
Re:Read his thread before judging (Score:4, Interesting)
Actually the problem was likely with hdc since the problem was in stage 1.5 meaning that the boot sector on hda was working fine, the problem was in finding stage2 on hdc.
Somewhere on page 4 or so he lets it slip he had to replace hdc before because of problems.
Of course we will probably never know what the problem really was, but it could have been the mobo not talking to hdc properly.
Now if he had of actually responded to people's requests for more information on page 1, they probably would have figured out the problem and found a fix for it (and using "please" and "thank you" on occassion would have helped too). By acting like an asshole and not answering questions from people who were trying to help him, he eliminated any chance of getting his problem fixed.
Re:Can I fill in? (Score:4, Informative)
besides those few things, i found it to be really easy to use and setup. i am not illiterate with computers, and i have used linux before, but i would still consider myself a linux newbie (although it was debian that i used previously, so i know my way around apt).
Re:Can I fill in? (Score:3, Informative)
I've always had a problem with people complaining about the possibility of lilo or grub messing up any existing bootable OS's if something goes wrong. Yes it is a minor pain to go in and fix the boot loader so you can once again boot into all of your OS's. But the thing most people miss is that if you try to install Windows as a dual boot with anothe
Re:Some tips (no flames, honest) (Score:3, Insightful)
If you're not comfortable installing, say, Windows XP, then don't install Linux--that's comfortable installing it, not simply able to, there's a difference. Yes, many Linux distros are (barring any rare problems, like what this guy apparently had) easier to install than XP these days, but ANY installation process can run into problems that put a computer in an unusable state. If you're not comfortable backing up your stuff somewhere where it can't get hurt (CDs, DVDs, a har
Article Text (Score:5, Informative)
Posted by tadelste on Mar 19, 2006 3:44 PM
Lxer.com; By Tom Adelstein
If you think that a Linux advocate cannot make an objective analysis of desktop operating systems, then you need to read this report. You may find yourself surprised with some brutal honesty that leaves out the free software philosophy.
All three desktop operating systems have admirable qualities. Each has some weaknesses. Attending a recent User Group Fair, I had another chance to see them at work. Having used and programmed on each platform provides some unbiased insights.
Background
I have owned several Macintosh computers. I had new world and old world bios machines including several older 6500s, 7600s, etc. that would not take OS X. I also had a blue and white, a beige workgroup server, Power Mac G4s, a Cube, iBook, etc. I remember making the transition from OS 9 to OS X. I liked it.
I used Microsoft from the DOS days to early Windows 2.0, 3.0, 3.11, Windows 95, 98, ME, NT3.51 - 4.0, 2000 and XP. I still have the licenses and media for everything since Windows 3.1. I managed large IBM networks with OS/2 on the desktop and LAN Server 3 as the server. I won't get into my NetWare experience.
I used Solaris, AIX and Linux starting with Slackware 3x. I even ran Red Hat on Sun IPCs, Sparc 5 and 10 workstations. I'm now using SUSE SLES and Pro, RHEL, Fedora, Debian and Ubuntu for daily use on servers and workstations.
Each system has different programing architectures with OS X a little closer to Linux than Windows. OS X uses a UNIX architecture to run its internals. However, the OS X desktop interface does not resemble Linux or other UNICES which depend on X. You can use X on the Mac natively.
Windows has a completely different programing structure from OS X and Linux. Windows relies heavily on its user interface which has evolved over time. Programing involves using Windows shell extensions. XP uses the NT kernel to manage file systems, internals and communication with the graphical shell.
OS X and Linux use completely different schemes with kernel extensions and independent programs running inside the user interface shell. The UNIX shell runs independently in what kernel developers call userland.
UNIX and Linux programmers consider their programing methods preferable to Windows. Windows developers consider the interface extensions easier to use and providing for more rapid application development. Each have merit when you look at them objectively. Of course, Macintosh developers will say that since they moved to the UNIX method that they experience more stability.
Macintosh
I started with the first Mac configured as a desktop publishing machine. I remember liking it because it cut costs we otherwise spent on type setting and graphics, paste up
For personal use, I used the Mac for graphics, audio productions and developing web sites. OS X made a huge difference since I didn't have to reboot in the middle of working. I also knew my way around UNIX and that allowed me to use Internet applications I hadn't used previously.
I found the developers tools useful. I enjoyed the interface. I found myself exploring more of the system when I purchased "OS X, the Missing Manual". The same book helped me discover ways of using Windows and Linux I hadn't known previously.
Windows XP
I recall using XP for three months without having to reboot it. I don't remember that happening before. I started collecting Microsoft Certs when Windows 95 arrived. I had used Excel 5 and Access to develop financial tools. Later, I became a sysadmin and ran a couple of large NT networks.
XP appeared safe behind our firewall. After three months, my system became sluggish and prone to malware. I did maintenance on the system regularly including defraging the disk, deleting unnecessary files and checking the registry.
I liked XP better than any previ
Karma Whoring (Score:3, Informative)
Re: (Score:2)
So Macintosh is to CHICKEN!!! (Score:5, Funny)
Have you ever noticed that in the scheme of naming meat for the three big land animals is completely broke?
Cow == Beef
Pig == Pork
But CHICKEN is still just CHICKEN ("Poultry" doesn't count as it encompasses all domesticated food birds).
Using this known quirk, we can safely assume, that if all of these Operating Systems were a meat, Macintosh would be CHICKEN!
Re:So Macintosh is to CHICKEN!!! (Score:2, Informative)
Re:So Macintosh is to CHICKEN!!! (Score:2, Funny)
And by extending your logic, I can thus only conclude that NeXT was a TURKEY
Mammal meat vs. other animal meat (Score:5, Informative)
Have you ever noticed that in the scheme of naming meat for the three big land animals is completely broke?
No, the system works as designed. For mammals, the English name of the animal comes from Anglo-Saxon, while the English name of its flesh prepared as food comes from French. See also sheep => mutton; deer => venison. But for species in other classes that extend Chordata, the English name of the prepared flesh is derived directly from the common English name of the animal: duck => duck; pheasant => pheasant; frog => frog legs; tuna => tuna.
Re:Mammal meat vs. other animal meat (Score:4, Informative)
Re:So Macintosh is to CHICKEN!!! (Score:2)
Hmm, I never considered chickens to be big land animals. Anyone know where I can pick up a side of chicken to store in my freezer?
Here's some more for you:
Cow (Bull,Steer/Cow,Heifer/Calf) = Beef = Boeuf ~ Bovine
Pig (Boar/Sow/Piglet,Shoat) = Pork ~ Porcine
Goat (Buck,Billy/Doe,Nanny/Kid) = chevon ~ Caprine
Sheep (Ram/Ewe/Lamb) = mutton/lamb ~ Ovine? Where the hell does that come from? Sheep d
Is this a real number? (Score:5, Interesting)
Have there been any really good studies showing this? I'm aware of a few very small samplnigs that show something like this, but nothing that was statistically significant. I'd be grateful if anyone knows of a good study showing usages. Anecdotally, Red Hat dominates my group of friends -- if we knew about a survey, we'd probably skew it pretty good too.
Re:Is this a real number? (Score:2)
Re:Is this a real number? (Score:2)
Re:Is this a real number? (Score:2)
Distrowatch's Page Hit Ranking has Ubuntu #1 (Score:2, Informative)
Top 5 are:
1 Ubuntu 2711
2 SUSE 1827
3 Mandriva 1542
4 Fedora 1199
5 MEPIS 632
Jonathan
~~~~~~~~
"I really wish I hadn't recommended http://www.justgofaster.com/ [justgofaster.com] driver training to that Spanish twat" - Michael Schumacher
Meaningless to infer usage from those stats.. (Score:4, Insightful)
An analogy would be to look at how many people search for, say, a Ferrari versus how often people search for a Ford Focus. The Ferrari are more interesting and people search for them, but doesn't mean that the proportion of Ferrari drivers to Focus drivers is anywhere near what google search statistics would suggest with this methodology.
XP is a Bad Development Platform? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:XP is a Bad Development Platform? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:XP is a Bad Development Platform? (Score:4, Informative)
First, I can't recall the last time I needed or wanted to redirect output to a file from a command line app while I was doing development. Perhaps it's because I do a different kind of development than you do, but regardless, I would hardly classify XP is a bad development platform over something like that. Even so, you're completely wrong as it's very easy to pipe output [microsoft.com] in XP.
Search through source file relies on 3rd party solutions, and few of them have the ability to work with regular expressions.
Huh? Aside from the fact that hitting F3 in Windows will bring up a find dialog that can search the contents of files, Visual Studio (and virtually every other IDE that runs on Windows) has the ability to search with regular expressions [microsoft.com].
Re:XP is a Bad Development Platform? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:XP is a Bad Development Platform? (Score:2)
Can you give me a more specific example?
Basically, the Windows tools are designed to be good at cranking out MDI applications
Huh? Windows tools are great at cracking out all sorts of applications. Why would you think that "MDI applications" are somehow the target of Windows development tools?
Re:XP is a Bad Development Platform? (Score:3, Interesting)
Really? Windows has excellent development tools (almost all 3rd party tools run on Windows, and Visual Studio is usually considered one of the best if not the best IDE for development).
*cough* Ok, I'm not going to get into a debate about VS with you. It's been about two yearsa since I used it and it may have changed. But my residual opinion of it is vastly different from yours.
Having said that, I don't think Windows is a good development environment for the very non-scientific, non-quantifiable reason th
Re:XP is a Bad Development Platform? (Score:2)
Re:XP is a Bad Development Platform? (Score:3, Informative)
Windows is a developer's nightmare. You point at the MS IDE, but it is not that good, and at the best possible light, it is still very small, lacking most of the tools that make a developer's life easier. Windows API is terrible and Windows lacks laguages. Despite the fact that you can always install some more compilers and interpreters, installing stuff at Windows is HARD, and well, you need to install them, on UNIXes they come by default. Windows also lacks shared libraries and toolkits.
And you'll always
Re:XP is a Bad Development Platform? (Score:5, Insightful)
That's debatable...
almost all 3rd party tools run on Windows
No, most don't. You need an emulation layer to run the most flexible development tools; those found in UNIX. Because windows lacks basic automation powers outside of normal user processing, the developer has to write "helper programs" that on UNIX are already written, to do basic transformations.
No pipelines, no universal application interface, I'd say windows doesn't have any of the things that I use regularly in my development.
The interop argument is silly. If you're writing code for interop you can do it just as easily on Windows as any other platform.
No you can't. It's certainly much easier to build and develop on a unixish system than on a Windows system.
My schism tracker project builds automatically for Win32, x86/Linux, and ppc/MacOSX all from the same source tree, all in parallel, and at one point, all from the same machine.
I do not see for a minute how it is even possible to do this on Windows unless I either (a) do an awful lot of work, or (b) use a UNIX environment on Windows and do slightly less than an awful lot of work.
If you're writing stuff for Windows, you have the support of some of the best frameworks available today.
If you mean to say, writing software _on_ windows gives you access to some of the best frameworks available, I have to tell you you're wrong. Most Windows frameworks have very poor accessibility outside of C++, or possibly VB.
If you mean to say writing _targetting_ windows gives you access to some of the best frameworks available, I still have to say you're wrong. The win32 frameworks don't mesh well with any other systems' development model.
Sadly, that seems to be intentional...
Re:XP is a Bad Development Platform? (Score:2)
Re:XP is a Bad Development Platform? (Score:2)
Re:XP is a Bad Development Platform? (Score:2)
Re:XP is a Bad Development Platform? (Score:2)
Apart from the fact that it doesn't mean anything, the little Python or Perl things I write every now and then are much easier to write in Unix than in Windows (for one thing I'd first have to add Perl and an editor to Windows plus all the basic utilities one takes for granted).
Programming in Windows might be better for all kinds of things but it certainly isn't the ultimate answer. Unix systems are certainly more developer friendly (with a much cleaner system API) even i
Re:XP is a Bad Development Platform? (Score:2)
It only makes you sound like a retarded muppet when you mix those up consistently.
I apologize to any retarded muppets I may have offended when comparing parent to you.
Why leave out the "free software philosophy"? (Score:5, Insightful)
Like people who care about such important things have a terribly contagious lethal disease.
That sucks big time and sounds like a-moral freaks who would sell their moms (not that I buy that point of view, but it sure as hell sounds like it).
Re:Why leave out the "free software philosophy"? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Why leave out the "free software philosophy"? (Score:2)
If you want to always get work done, there is an argument to be made for using free (as in freedom) software.
Re:Why leave out the "free software philosophy"? (Score:2)
Precisely (Score:3, Insightful)
What I find with free software is I'm asked to make major, major compramises, and that the people pushing it seem to think I should be happy, and even thankful, to do so just because it's free. I particularly get in to this with audio apps. I have a numbe
Re:Precisely (Score:3, Interesting)
I understand where you are coming from, and in your case you are making intelligent economic choices about what software you want to use (i.e., it is worth the money to pay for legitimate copies of audio software). The development of the "attitude" you are addressing is, however, based on somewhat different circumsta
Re:Why leave out the "free software philosophy"? (Score:3, Insightful)
Some people just want to get their work done without having to count how many machines they've installed ProTax2007 on, or document it when the vendor says they're coming round for an audit. Some people just want to get their work done without having to trawl through a 25-page EULA for every piece of sof
Silly review... (Score:5, Insightful)
Another cheap shot at everybody's blood pressure (Score:5, Interesting)
It seems like once a day there is an article like this that provides no real content, but may inspire limited skirmishes between hotheaded zealots. No doubt some of them are on these medications.
Or maybe the editors just like to see the ants fight after they shake up the bottle.
Franklin Hoenikker, is that you?
Moo (Score:4, Insightful)
I may despise Windows, but i'll never say it isn't a good OS. If you want to make money, it's better for development, and development tools are easier. Like AOL, UI is key to Microsoft, and many, if not most, developers want that. Plus, tools for the braindead like VB and it's ilk are in abundance with help files, technical support, and addins. It's debugging is usually superior to Linux because it goes line by line, making it an excellent tool for the beginner.
I like Linux, and Linux is robust. I am learning to use C with a friend right now, and we login to my Debian box via SSH to get it done. But one thing is for sure, it ain't as easy. (Which is half the reason i want it that way, but that's another story.)
Linux is more secure, if you know what you are doing. To the average idiot, buying Windows and Symantec's security suite is ten times better. It works out of the box, it has support, and is updated for viruses.
But the "reviewer" didn't even get into overall usuability.
Windows is better, hands down because everyone knows it, it's UI is beautiful and easy to use to most people, there is a great deal of software support for it, and games are written for it. If you are willing to spend money, there's nearly nothing you can do with Linux that you can't do with Windows.
For the techy, however, Linux can be better in that it is control, speed, and reliability. Futhermore, debugging tools such as having the source, using strace, or having knowledgeable people in the newsgroups or mailing lists that speak Geek and are overall familiar with the techy nomenclature, can be a boon and a welcome diversion from the ignorance found amongst Windows support personell.
But, for the non-techy trying to save cash, or the techy trying to save time, the "other" OS may be better.
So much for my opinion. But (in my opinion!) it's alot less biased than his.
Is Ubuntu #1 ? (Score:2)
Right tool, for each job (Score:2)
I don't usually (but sometimes
Doesn't have a what?... (Score:5, Informative)
No... I'll simply say...
Re:Doesn't have a what?... (Score:3, Interesting)
The Gimp is a decent tool. There's better free software on the Mac, and none of it runs Photosho
Linux Page Layout Programs (Score:4, Interesting)
I don't do much in the area of Framemaker or Pagemaker, but most desktops will do fine with the functionality present in OpenOffice.org Draw
A better substitute, IMO, would be Scribus [scribus.net]. But OO.o is pretty decent for what's included.
Re:Doesn't have a what?... (Score:3, Funny)
But Linux is a monolithic kernel [fluidsignal.com]... doesn't that mean that Photoshop should be part of the kernel?
Re:Doesn't have a what?... (Score:4, Interesting)
2) Pagemaker is a LOT better than Draw for, say, laying out a newsletter. Yes, yes, LaTeX... but why learn a complicated system when there's an easy one available?
3) Dia may do for planning your network, but Visio is good for a lot of other things. Just because you only want it for one thing doesn't mean that's all it can be used for...
4) OK, can't argue with this one. The only advantage to Access is that it's more universally available on the Windows platform, and I don't see that as much of an advantage.
5) Wouldn't know about PDF Converters, since I mostly don't bother with PDF.
6) Writing my congressman doesn't help me play a movie tonight, tomorrow, next week, or probably even this year. People want immediate solutions. Let's keep working on the long term, but I'd like to watch my movies legally now, thanks very much. Of course, I have a DVD player, and a decent TV, so I don't really care whether my computer can play them.
The simple fact is that using Windows or MacOS X is EASIER if you don't already know linux. I use linux as my primary daily OS, but there are still things I end up going to Windows for, because they just work better. I prefer Visio to anything I've found in linux, and I'd rather be able to play my games without having to hope WINE is up to the task.
Re:Doesn't have a what?... (Score:3, Interesting)
6) Writing my congressman doesn't help me play a movie tonight, tomorrow, next week, or probably even this year. People want immediate solutions. Let's keep working on the long term, but I'd like to watch my movies legally now, thanks very much. Of course, I have a DVD player, and a decent TV, so I don't really care whether my computer can play them.
Y'know, we bitch about this one quite a bit, but the fact is that software decoders must be legal on some level, or they wouldn't exist for windows either. And
Re:Doesn't have a what?... (Score:3, Funny)
I am sorry we were not able to provide you with a free copy of photoshop. I know that you won't be satisfied until somebody gives your everything photoshop does, the exact same as photoshop does it for free. In the mean time there is GIMP. MOST people find it adequate for everything they need to do.
"Pagemaker is a LOT better than Draw for, say, laying out a newsletter. Yes, yes, LaTeX... but why learn a complicated system when there's an easy one available?"
I am sorry we were
Kinda disappointed at the "brutal honesty" (Score:3)
That stupid "It's the hardware" argument. (Score:5, Insightful)
That said, once AGAIN we see that same stupid statement. It's taken as a tautology that Apple's stability is due to it's hardware. From the article:
"Macintosh OS X runs on a limited number of hardware devices which allows Apple Computers to offer a stable and high-performance product overall. Apple's entry level products such as the Mac mini provides a low-cost, high-value multimedia platform."
Bull. While that can't do anything but help, I don't buy it. I think Linux has proven that you can run an operating system on a very diverse set of hardware (that is, the same hardware Windows runs on) and be entirely stable enough to run for months without issue (Windows has gotten there, for the most part). OS X is stable not because there are only 3 pieces of hardware it runs on, but because it was well designed and well built, based on a stable and mature architecture (BSD). It's perfectly stable (from what I hear) when installed on generic Intel computers that it was never designed for.
Besides, what does OS X run on? It runs on Powerbooks, the Minis, PowerMacs, iMacs, iBooks, and the G4 Cube, and more. Each of those has numerous different revisions (often amazingly different, as the difference between a G4 PowerMac and a G5 PowerMac, or a 12" Aluminum Powerbook and a 15" MacBook Pro). In the year I have owned a PowerBook there have been 3 revisions, along with the MacBook Pro. That's one year, one computer line. Not including the different sizes (12", 15", 17").
When will people stop blaming OS X's stability on the hardware. When will they start to blame it on good design. Give Apple a fair shake.
Besides, if the hardware thing was true, OS 8 and OS 9 should have been MUCH MORE stable because they only ran on those few pieces of Apple hardware, while Windows XP should be much LESS stable because it runs on so many million different types of computers.
About the tax software (Score:5, Interesting)
My 2006 taxes took me about 100 minutes to complete from start to finish- by hand- without a program. The only thing I needed a calculator for was the sales tax thing (for the love of god could they have made it more complicated-- multiply the base amount by something like 1.337?).
Besides you only use tax software once a year as it is. Most people who would be interested in free software won't make enough that tax software would matter anyway.
Personally, I think the -government- should be required to produce a generic "C" program or web page that calculates your taxes according to the tax code and if it is wrong, you only pay interest- no penalties. Tax collection is a government function- it's insane that we have these huge industries built around calculating your taxes.
Sure-- 10% of the population would still need accountants and so on but 90% really don't need these things.
I'm moving pretty aggressively towards opensource software and mildly aggressively towards linix. It won't be because of the cost- I can buy a complete windows system at Fry's for $369 - slap in a hot video card and a cool quiet power supply and match 90% of the score of any single card $1800 system on the plant. How they do this when the operating system alone costs me $99 and the bloody hardware in the computer is worth over $369 purchased piecemeal is beyond me. Microsoft must be giving the OEM folks OS's for almost free.
No- the reason I will leave windows (and not go to mac) is because of DRM.
It's MY COMPUTER. Unless they are going to BUY it for me and give it to me free, I'm not going to give them money for a system that is going to snoop and report on what I'm doing, tell me what software I can and can't run, and tell me what content I can and cannot play.
Sure- I may have a $379 special version of whatever windows is out there the rest of my life- I also might have a PS2 or XBOX for the same reason- to play games (Tho there is a ton of MAME content out there these days for linux).
Re:About the tax software (Score:3, Interesting)
I'd like to point out that the brazilian governament offers a free (as in beer) program to calculate our taxes, and deliver them using the internet. It comes in two flavors: a
No, we just think he is a tool, also (Score:3, Insightful)
Very few people actually use windows- you ask them what kind of computer they have, and you'll hear "Dell" or "Packard Bell" or "Gateway" - maybe even an "IBM". These people have no idea what they're using or if anything might do what they want better.
Leaving out the fact that this is Free software is trollish- if you don't qualify any comparison with "This is what the people who actually have to use it want to use", then you're just feeding this FUD machine that zero-charge software equals lower-quality- because OF COURSE there's something available for Windows that isn't available for my Free operating system.
Doesn't mean I miss it in the slightest.
And by the way, I have no problems using tax preparation software on Linux, or converting things to and from PDF. I also have no problems watching DVDs legally- as my DVD player and software predate the DCMA.
I have no interest in Visio, Framemaker or Photoshop, or rather any other software that doesn't want me to use it. I may be interested in performing some of the tasks that are possible with these programs- but I've already got adequate Free software, that works and does things the way _I_ want to.
apps (Score:5, Insightful)
The correct - and more important - distinguisher would be that XP provides the only hosting choice for a large number of applications.
We all, and Bill Gates and even Wallstreet know that if all software available for Windos were available for OSX and Linux as well, with no difference in price, support or ease of installation, Windos market share would drop faster than you can possibly sell your M$ shares. Not to zero, some people just use whatever is there or don't know any better, but users are already moving to OSX in droves despite the app count disadvantage.
Re:apps (Score:5, Interesting)
"The fact is, Apple hasn't gained markeshare over Windows since OSX was introduced in 2000."
Market share is the same? That's odd, I can find articles that say otherwise. Do you have articles that say your point? Check out the table on this page [methodshop.com]. Apple's share is growing. It's not meteoric, but it going up. Or by "not growing" do you mean "hasn't gone up 10 points"? I switched, I know many others who have, and I have been asked by many people interested in switching.
"The fact it, most companies are not going to switch to OSX for the simple cost of ownership. [...] Once you switch to OSX, you have to buy a whole slew of applications for it as well, which compounds the cost."
OS X is cheaper. There was an article not too long ago that I read that said that for a business, a Mac costs $1500-$3000 less than an equivalent Windows desktop when you add in all the time with security updates, virus protection you have use, spyware protection, etc. This was for 1-3 years. That means the Macs PAID FOR THEMSELVES, not just the difference between the PC and the Mac. As for the apps, big deal. You are a Photoshop shop? Instead of buying CS 3 (or 4 or whenever you upgrade) for the PC, buy it for the Mac and make the switch then. Office is there too. Most programs are there. Give it a try. And with the Intel transition, it won't be long at all before you can run legacy or custom code under WINE at full speed just like under Windows.
"Application support just isn't in OSX also because the development environment for Windows is so much easier and more robust then OSX. XCode and Objective C, while free, represents everything that is wrong with Apple, their adherance to old philosophies that are failing, but too much ego is involved to let it go."
There is no application problem. I never had one. The one program I haven't found a replacement for in the very short time I looked? Microsoft Project. I'm sure there are replacements though. And have you used XCode and Objective-C? They are a pleasure to use. Objective-C and Cocoa makes GUI programming SO MUCH NICER than other languages. Have you done much Windows programming? A big GIANT HOG of an application (Visual Studio) to do it all for you and lock you in just as much as you seem to think XCode will. Except XCode is built entirely on top of GCC, a standard compiler. Visual Studio is built on top of Microsoft's compiler.
And XCode is free. Microsoft will give you the compiler, but you have to pay out the nose for the IDE.
"If your serious about Mac programming, then you use CodeWarrior instead of Apple's free tools. Without good software tools, then the slew of shareware and freeware apps that PC users get to use just isn't available on the Mac platform."
Can you back that up with examples and proof? Most people I know are happier with XCode than CodeWarrior. And what "shareware and freeware apps" does the Mac lack? What about all the nice things Macs come with (iTunes, iMail, iCal, Address Book, iPhoto, iDVD, iMovie, Garage Band, iWeb) that Windows computers DON'T?
"I will whole heartedly agree that Microsoft has a lot to fear with Ubuntuu and other Linux alternatives."
Agreed.
"But to suggest that people are adopting OSX in droves is just unfounded."
Wrong again. You just have to remember that compared to an installed base of 200 Million or so, droves can still look small.
"Microsoft will never have to worry about OSX, in fact, with people finding ways of running WindowsXP aond the new Macintels, Microsoft is laughing their way to the bank as PC users buy Apple's to run Windows in a fancy box."
Wrong again. Microsoft has to worry about OS X. They have to RIGHT NOW. Why do you think they are adding so much stuff to Vista? The search (see: Spotlight), the sidebar (see: Dashboard), the 3D accleerated GUI (see: Quartz). It's not Linux th
Re:apps (Score:3, Informative)
I believe you are thinking of IOKit [apple.com] when you say "Quartz is used to sync the microkernel (Mach derivative) with the BSD Compatibility Layer (freeBSD derived) to create an established and elegant interface to the kernel services, etc.".
You should review... Mac OS X System Architecture [apple.com]
Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
Our brutal honesty. (Score:2)
What is this server running on?
Re:Our brutal honesty. (Score:5, Funny)
Well, I dunno what it used to be running on, but right now I'm going to guess it's running on a mixture of molten plastic, metal, and smoke.
Re:Our brutal honesty. (Score:4, Funny)
Oh, like Keith Richards.
Re:Please stop trolling Digg for stories! (Score:2)
sorry, I could not find that story at Digg. Mind passing the link? so that I could post here. :)
What matters here more is the discussion, which is often very thoughtful (like this :-) ) and not the stories or who posted first (digg or /.). Sorry, I respect your low UID, but saw that this was your second comment today on the subject.
Offtopic interesting link: Digg vs. Slashdot [diggvsdot.com]
Re:Please stop trolling Digg for stories! (Score:3, Insightful)
Offtopic interesting link: Digg vs. Slashdot
Interesting site. Unfortunately, it's only a "FIRST POST!" tracker. It doesn't really compare the quality of the two sites. Digg has its ups in that just about everything that you might find cool flies through there. On the other hand, that also means that the noise ratio is pretty darn high. On top of that, Slashdot has a much better comment system. (Though Digg is really trying with their latest Slashdot-ripped-off-thre
Re:Please stop trolling Digg for stories! (Score:2)
True, I agree, and I skim the best of both. It is the people here that make me visit here. With their expertise and different viewpoints, I get to learn a lot.
Re:Please stop trolling Digg for stories! (Score:2)
News sites both having the same story isn't sad, but having to explain that to you is. Please think before you troll next time.
Note to CNN (Score:3, Insightful)
Note to you: please stop trolling Slashdot.
Re:OUTGOING (Score:4, Funny)
What's that mean?
That there's one less competitor in getting that girl to notice you.
Re:Incomming! (Score:3, Insightful)
I mean, Slax is much better in terms of ease-of-use and installation. Not to mention it's a chunk smaller, highly modular and uses a WM that's simply better (bitch at me all you want about Gnome V. KDE. I've used both. My girlfriend (who is nongeek) has used both. We kinda agree which is superior).
I'm just really shocked that KDE gets no representation just 'cos ubuntu's the hot linux flavor of the week.