Tales of Conversion - Using Ubuntu at Work 542
madgreek writes "Here is a short story about my switch to Ubuntu from XP at work. I have been Microsoft-free for 3 months now at a Microsoft heavy shop. Few people know I am using Open Office and Linux. I create countless documents that people open using Word, Excel, PPT and nobody can tell that they were created using Open Office. From the article: 'When I first started my experiment I was trying to keep it a secret out of fear of attacks from angry Microsoft worshipers (especially from the admins and desktop support). What I am finding out is that most of the folks that I was hiding from are sick and tired of supporting Windows and are proponents of Linux. Several of them are using Linux at home. One of the guys I talked to has Vista and XP installed on his laptop. He swaps out the hard drive when switching between OS's.'"
Applications are more important than the OS (Score:4, Interesting)
Ubuntu is still far behind Microsoft Windows, when it comes to Windows compatibility.
Re:Applications are more important than the OS (Score:5, Insightful)
While i agree that linux isn't ready for most business desktops and certainly isn't ready to the general public, that kind of logic escapes me. why SHOULD linux be focusing all this effort on being windows compatible? isn't the purpose to escape windows? it's also majorly retarded to sit there and proclaim linux is somehow inferior because windows is compatible with itself.
Re:Applications are more important than the OS (Score:4, Insightful)
Since Windows is the dominant OS as of today it is only logical for another OS to have some form of compatibility with Windows. An example would be applications for OSX or Linux that are used for XYZ, XYZ should/would like to make sure the application for Windows that is similar to XYZ can open XYZ files and also save them. This is only common sense, with your logic it would be like Apple only designing the iPod to work with Windows.
I think you maybe don't understand the purpose of compatibility. It's not about escaping Windows or Linux or OSX, it's about making sure whatever OS person "A" uses can create and share things with person "B" who uses another OS.
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Just because Windows is the dominant OS does not mean that we should therefore use it as an industry standard. Standards need to be developed for the industry as a whole, not just as Microsoft sees fit. This is partly why Microsoft has such control is because people just roll over and accept what Microsoft does as stan
Re:Applications are more important than the OS (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm like that at home. I haven't even looked at Linux for home because I know that, regardless of any other problems, it isn't usable because it doesn't support the software I want. I am not going to compromise my computing experience, it's a tool, and I'll use what makes it do what I want the best, which is Windows in this case.
Well this holds true in many cases. You can't expect someone to realistically switch to your platform if you can't offer them apps that they need. Also it needs to either be that app, or one that is just as good. You can't start demanding compromise. You can't tell a professional graphics artist that GIMP should be "good enough" and they "don't need what Photoshop has." That's lying to them and to yourself. You can't expect them to make a switch unless you are offering something that's at least as good, and probably better.
So really, it is a big problem Linux faces right now. In so many settings, it simply doesn't offer the apps that people need and thus can't be considered, regardless of other merits. One real way to solve this would be total Windows compatibility. If you could execute any Windows app under Linux, well then there's nobody who uses Windows that won't be able to get all their apps. Then the argument is purely about technical merits, cost, familiarity and so on. I'm not saying that's the only way to go or even the right one, but it is a legit thing to consider. People need certain apps. If you can't offer them those apps or something very much like them, you aren't a contender, regardless.
Re:Applications are more important than the OS (Score:5, Interesting)
I don't know for others, but myself I'm getting tired to hear about Photoshop everytime switching from Windows to Linux is mentioned. Does anybody know what is the market penetration of Photoshop? 50%? 20%? 3%? of Windows users? Thanks!
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Windows is a proprietary software product. Much of what goes on under the hood is completely unknown - enough information has been reverse engineered for some interoperability (cf. Samba, ndiswrapper), but expecting any product to ever be as "Windows compatible as Windows" is asking for the moon.
Re:Applications are more important than the OS (Score:4, Insightful)
db
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Running Windows software out of the box is perhaps the most obvious way to get ahead--it's how Windows beat out OS/2!
That said, there is a philosophical disconnect as well. Most people don't have any real trouble with Windows, or perhaps more accurately, don't see what
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I have to ask... (Score:5, Insightful)
Is OpenOffice not 100% compatible with Excel macros?
I ask because I remember hearing that it (or some other open source project) was 100% feature-complete, compared to Excel.
Anyway, 100% compatibility is never required, because you don't use 100% of the capabilities of Excel macroes. What you want is 100% of the features I need (be they parts of Excel macroes or otherwise), and as OpenOffice gets better, more and more people are finding that threshold has been crossed for them.
Even if you have 95% compatibility, it can be enough. Consider if you had to use a spreadsheet once a day or once a month for a few minutes that didn't quite work properly in OpenOffice. I realize many people would instantly abandon ship for MS Office at the slightest sign of trouble, but if it was just the one spreadsheet, you could probably fix it to work in OpenOffice -- or, worst case, you run one copy of Microsoft Office on a terminal server somewhere, and let everyone run Linux on the desktop for everything else.
Well, fucking DUH. I bet Windows is still far behind Ubuntu GNU/Linux when it comes to Linux compatibility, huh, Sherlock?
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The type of spreadsheet I'm talking about, Excel making the odd incorrect calculation is the least of your problems.
Besides, my understanding of Sab-Ox is that it makes spreadsheets an absolute minefield - because spreadsheets make it trivially easy to change things, save it under alternative names and otherwise mess about with the numbers with no audit trail. My former manager has apparently succeeded in making a specific spreadsheet compliant - that was with a team of a fe
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"Paris Hilton looks more like Paris Hilton than any Paris-Hilton look-alike". Still, misses the point: Is Paris Hilton worth looking like, or emulating in any way?
Ubuntu drive partition (Score:3, Insightful)
Moral of the story is: the reason why Linux doesn't have a wide user base is because even though it is supposed to be the distro for noobs, it's still not user-friendly enough for the mass market.
Re:Ubuntu drive partition (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Ubuntu drive partition (Score:5, Informative)
How does Wubi work?
Wubi adds an entry to the Windows boot menu which allows you to run Linux. Ubuntu is installed within a file in the windows file system (c:\wubi\disks\system.virtual.disk), this file is seen by Linux as a real hard disk.
Re:Ubuntu drive partition (Score:5, Insightful)
No - you're reasonably windows savvy. The rest of your post makes that abundantly clear.
Try dual booting between windows XP & Vista & you'll find that your lack of knowledge about partitions was the problem, not linux itself.
it's still not user-friendly enough for the mass market.
By your own account, you didn't actually use linux, just attempted to install it - so you've no basis to make that judgment.
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Why does someone who wants to use an OS for daily offic
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Comment removed (Score:5, Informative)
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http://wubi-installer.org/ [wubi-installer.org]
BTW: If you install Ubuntu the way one usually installs windows eg: Backup umportant data, Wipe Drive, Install, it is just as easy
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That's because you're a troll - a sad, stupid troll at that.
Let me explain it in small words. You're comparing installing windows on a blank HDD, with installing linux on a drive shared with windows.
Installing windows on a HDD with an existing OS & preserving that OS is not easy, certainly not as easy as getting Ubuntu to coexist with other OSes.
By your standards, Windows isn't ready for the mass market (you dumbass).
Re:Ubuntu drive partition (Score:5, Insightful)
*shrug* I don't think anything I say is going to affect Linux's market share, but calling you a sad troll & a dumbass is both satisfying to me & educational to fellow slashdotters who otherwise might take you seriously.
The evidence speaks for itself: Linux can't even capture market share with its software by giving it away for free.
Nonsense. Linux occupies (or dominates) many computing markets (embedded devices, servers).
I don't think its any stretch of the imagination to say linux is the most widely installed general purpose OS (I bet you run it on your router without even knowing). Pointing out it hasn't made much inroads into Desktops (or mobile phones for that matter) doesn't change that.
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Ubuntus installer is by far the easiest to use in my opinion, and I know its shared by many people out there - if you got an empty drive or partition for it to set itself up on it does everything you want while you get your coffee.
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No, you are absolutely right. So here is a suggestion: Because you find Windows easier to use, create empty partition using Windows (Windows installation disk for example [I'm assuming it can do this, because you said it is easier to use.]) and once you have the empty partition created, installing Linux should cause you no problems. Simply select the partition, make few clicks and go get coffee. So your prob
Re:Ubuntu drive partition (Score:5, Insightful)
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Re:Ubuntu drive partition (Score:4, Insightful)
Where to begin...
False assumptions:
1. Linux vs. Microsoft market share matters. Most Linux users couldn't give a hoot whether you are using Linux or not. If you can't handle Linux, stay in Windows. No sweat off my brow...
2. Linux has to be compatible with everything Windows but the reverse isn't true. Try the reverse and installing Windows as a second OS and see how far you get getting them both working without special hacks. Try opening an ODF document in Office and see how far you get with a default Office install. Hell, even try something as simple to implement as reading you Linux partition from Windows and see how far you get.
3. That the general user is unwilling to learn new skills hence will always be in Windows. This is the most insidious, and quite frankly insulting, statement I've ever heard out of Redmond. Repeat something often enough and people start to believe it. The "Linux is too hard" mantra is an attack on the intelligence of their users. Not everyone is willing to remain ignorant of that expensive paperweight on their desk.
4. The install process dictates the "user friendliness" of the entire distribution. In general, people don't spend all their time installing an OS be it Microsoft, Linux, OSX, whatever... I installed my OS (Gentoo) exactly once in 2000 and haven't had to do it since. Can you say the same about your Windows install? In short, install process != entire experience. If you can't install it then do as they do in the Windows environment and find someone who can install it. Conversely, you could buy one with it pre-installed just like you did with your Windows box.
What all this boils down to is your Linux shortcomings are yours and yours alone. Millions worldwide have managed to install and use some flavor of Linux yet your failing is somehow the fault of the OS?!?!?! To somehow suggest that the failure of Microsoft to inter-operate nicely with other OSes is the fault of those OSes is the height of hypocrisy.
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Actually, I am. "Market share" is a false measurement especially since it can't really be measured where linux is concerned. So to use it as an advocacy tool is an exercise in futility. Those that do are in for a long haul and even
Re:Ubuntu drive partition (Score:4, Insightful)
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Re:Ubuntu drive partition (Score:5, Insightful)
Let's have a look at the problem from another angle: What if your computer had only Ubuntu, or BSD, or Solaris, or OS X on it and your friend recommended this great new 'Windows' product to you. How easily do you suppose the Windows XP installer would make it to get your computer dual booting?
Does your XP installer disk offer to repartition your disk and fully explain what will happen to your existing partition, along with the risks?
Does the XP installer detect what OSes are already on the computer and incorporate them into the boot menu?
Does the XP installer offer to import settings from the existing OS?
Will it mount all partitions with read/write support?
The argument that Ubuntu or any other Windows-competing OS is inferior simply because it has failed or threatened to fail to leave every brick of the Windows shrine untouched is both stale and lame.
db
There is no time limit (Score:2)
Failure is only possible with a time limit. This isn't like a commercial competitor where they have the capital for one big push and then they fold for lack of funds. Linux isn't going to go away, and it's not going to cease development. And it's going to keep on getting better and better. I think you're arguing based on faulty assumptions.
For that matter, even if we accept that Linux had a limited window of opportunity to
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That's setting the bar ridiculously high if capturing market share is all that's required. For a Windows power user,
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The thing that really kills me about that is this: Suse or Red Hat are deemed Server-side Linux distros and are seen as overly complex by many. The installation procedure will allow you to pin point exactly which segments of which physical disk to u
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You say this because you couldn't get partitioning to work. WTF?
Tell you what -- if you want to compare apples to apples, buy a Dell with Ubuntu pre-loaded. Or, if you're cheap, borrow a Geek to install it for you on a spare computer.
Then actually try it out -- yes, USE it, don't just try to install it. Actually, if you got as far as
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The Windows installer has less documentation than the Ubuntu installer. It *can't* resize a partition, and it has absolutely no online help. It makes no attempt to dual-boot with another OS. It can't share partitions betw
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Would you have then binned windows and claimed that it clearly wasn't ready to be a desktop for the mass market? Would you have found much help to these dual boot questions in the Windows online help? or in the Windows for Dummies book? Its almost comical to even think about it!!
Dual booting OSes i
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Funny how Linux people dictate MORE than Microsoft ever done to its users. Specially when someone is asking "Why can't I" usually he/she gets the answer "You don't need to" instead of actual help.
And funny how he actually "can handle" "this" with windows and not L
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Why don't you try comparing the flexibility and utility of disk druid that is included with many distro installers to that of the XP installer. You can do much, much more with disk druid than you can with the XP partitioner. The Vista partitioner has even less power.
What escapes so many people is that knowledge is helpful when it comes to using your computer whether its Windows, Linux, or OS X. The more you know about how to use it, the more us
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Actually, most new machines I see have a recovery partition. That's what I didn't want to mess around with. And no, there was no automatic partitioning option. I assure you, the following did NOT take place:
"Ubuntu has detected Windows XP installed on this system. If you would like to create a Dual Boot setup, click 'Create Dual Boot System' and Ubuntu will automatically partition your drives for you." Click.
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Sorry but... (Score:3, Insightful)
As long as you are the only guy in your company who does things "your way" as opposed to "their way", as long as you use OSS yourself but adapt it to MS software when used for any collaborative purpose, you are helping nobody and doing nothing but wasting time and being an extra pain in the ass for the sysadmin.
Neither Microsoft itself nor it's dominance is impacted if the whole company uses it's software on the main basis. You can be the black sheep and avoid MS stuff, but look: you STILL have to synch with that MS server, STILL have to produce documents in MS format, STILL have to synch with MS print servers... And so on and so forth. Neither MS's grip on the company (be it the technological slavery, the lack of following standards, or the money going down the MS drain) are reduced by your activism.
Not only that, but you completely and utterly defeat the purpose of using OSS if you are forced to adapt to MS on every single turn. What's the advantage in open document format if you have to produce all documents in Word format anyways? As much as MS formats are bad, even you have to admit that MS software does a better job at following THEIR OWN formats than you can do at following THEIRS.
If you want to be truly MS free, get your company to drop MS. Get EVERYONE to kick the habit. Work to reduce or stop corporate-level contracts with MS. Make open standards the CORPORATE basis, instead of using OSS as a slave to closed source. THEN, and ONLY then, will you actually make a difference, and only then your actions will actually have some result instead of being a waste of time.
Yes, you made your point that you can have a rose grow in the middle o a pile of turd... But guess what, as nice as the rose smells, it won't make the turd stink less unless the said turd is removed.
Chickens and Eggs (Score:2)
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If, however, you chose oss because you feel more comfortable with it or need to run a particular software that doesn't run on Windows *and* your company doesn't oppose it, go nuts and t
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I'd say you're less of a pain. You've got a secure system, so the admin doesn't have to worry about patching you -- you'll patch yourself if necessary, easily enough. You won't have spyware issues or program conflicts, meaning he won't have to come over to your computer to clean up the mess you've made.
And if you convince enough co-workers to switch, he'll have to learn a bit, but then he gets to admin Linux as well as Windows -- at a certain point, the extr
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2) Even if it doesn't help anything at the office, you can help OSS interoperate better with MS networks and applications by finding and reporting bugs. Even if you could change the company, you probably couldn't
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Furthermore, there's no point in walking anywhere unless you can walk right around the world. So until someone gets around to draining those nasty, inconvenient oceans, you might as well just sit
Good in theory (Score:3, Informative)
However, at work I use Windows XP. The office I work in relies heavily on Nortel VPN + Outlook + Exchange for e-mail and calendar/scheduling access. Not to mention the application I'm working on is strictly for Windows (despite being written in Java, go figure). Most of the GUI code is WORA but there's some middle layer issues that will come up if not run on a win32 machine.
Too bad, I guess.
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I'm not sure, but I think this is a solved problem. I don't know if Kontact can connect to Exchange itself, but it can certainly connect to an open alternative, so we've got to be close, right?
Can't help you with Nortel VPN, though there are more than a few VPN projects for Linux. You may or may not be able to make Linux talk to it. You certainly could (in theory) create an OpenVPN server (there is a Windows client), but that would probably not go over well with management, especially gi
It's not that uncommon (Score:2)
Also, that powerpoint replacement in OO works, but it's heavy, much heavier than pow
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OpenOffice still has lots of problems ... (Score:2)
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Documents look different if you use different fonts. If you install either the MS true type fonts, or the Redhat freedom fonts, then the formatting issues go away. Excel macros can be a problem for some people, in which case Gnumeric is a better option. These points are well known to anybody who cares.
Elitist BS..... (Score:2)
Its a dog eat dog world - look at the most powerful gov in the world and if you can't see that, then you need new spectacles
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It's relatively easy to change your preferences so you won't even see anything from the Linux section.
Alternatively, you could skim the headline and move on to the next story, instead of coming here and trolling about it.
Then it wouldn't have killed you to actually read TFA and see that it's got nothing to do with hating Windows or Microsoft. Someone tried Linux, looks like it worked for th
Fantasy (Score:2)
Then I can only assume that consistent formatting is not an issue with you and your co-workers. But it is with me, and my experience sharing files between MS Office and Open Office is uniformly negative.
Word processor and presentation formats are messy , and even the best filters make nasty mistakes. And Open Office filters are hardly the best.
Getting away from the Microsoft
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Good luck with support.... (Score:2)
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Did it end up being harder to support the Cisco VPN for the Linux guys than it would have been to simply run two VPN solutions?
(Also, I think there is a Linux server that will talk to what Windows and Macs consider a "VPN" -- there is some feature of the OS that allows you to setup a VPN connection.)
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For me, it's easy - I tell them that 802.1x is what is required, give them the deta
No, not really. (Score:2, Informative)
1. Xorg crashs and takes out my ssh connections. I just cant have this issue happen to me. When I have multiple connections using putty on xp, explorer might crash, but my applications don't. (This is my main complaint, x crashs, all your apps die.)
2. Cisco VPN, my god what is it with IT using certs signed
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2. No ideas. Why can you not do a fresh install for Linux? Is this a policy issue rather than a Linux issue as such?
3. You can write scripts for Kmail with DCOP. There are other scriptable mail clients as well. Of course Exchange integration is another matter, but that does not seem to be your problem.
4. Tweak your settings. I have had people who had to move from Linux to Windows complain about Wind
This guy is an exception, but an important one (Score:2)
I enjoyed this article and it's related ones. I use Linux and MacOS at home with great enjoyment, and often wish I could run Ubuntu at work. Sadly, I develop ASP.NET solutions, and am completely dependent on Visual Studio to run flawlessly.
However, I do not see our IT department even considering adopting Linux here. They have the money to support the licenses (we're academic, saving us some), and apart from the Mac users, everyone uses Windows at home. However, what happened here with Firefox shines
Missing the point (Score:5, Insightful)
- "Open Office is not 100% compat with MSOffice"
- "My Visio docs cant be used on linux/other-non-MS-os"
- "I cant connect to our exchange servers without Windows"
- "Our company intranet requires active-x controls"
- "Yada Yada Yada, etc, etc, etc, ad-infinitum, ad-nauseum"
- "And therefore, linux is no good, and will never catch on until it does this and that, and anything else that Windows makes possible"
None of these arguments demonstrate anything lacking with Linux. The ALL demonstrate how very badly your organisation's IT policies and strategies has backed itself into a corner and locked itself so deeply into a closed and proprietary architecture
If Linux has a hard time co-existing in your current infrastructure, then that should be a huge red flag that there is something seriously wrong with the way you are operating, and the strategic decisions that have been made in the past. If your organisation doesnt have the agility to adapt to what is happening now in the wider world - then its only a matter of time before that lack of agility is going to hit you hard like a speeding train.
Thats all well and good if you are happy to thrive in isolation, like some extended family of inbred hillbillys far from civilisation, but in the meantime, the rest of the world will be passing you by. If thats where you want to be in 10-20 years time, then stick to what you are doing now, and ignore the obvious. Blame it all on linux if that makes you happy.
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There are many comments on here presenting the sort arguments such as :
- "Open Office is not 100% compat with MSOffice"
- "My Visio docs cant be used on linux/other-non-MS-os"
- "I cant connect to our exchange servers without Windows"
- "Our company intranet requires active-x controls"
[...]
None of these arguments demonstrate anything lacking with Linux.
On the contrary. If, by Linux, you really mean "Linux and the apps that run on it", then something lacking is exactly what each of those things demonstrates.
Take the corporate intranet example. We have various web pages that do rely on ActiveX, for useful things. What alternative do you propose based on Linux and your browser of choice?
We also use many of the automation and customisation features within MS Office to streamline our document creation and review process. Again, what alternative do you pr
Admin people (Score:3, Interesting)
Also if your job suddenly requires the use of some software you can't run then you'll be stuffed.
Re:Admin people (Score:4, Insightful)
Wait wait wait! (Score:5, Insightful)
Some quotes from your sig:
Ok, now please go ahead and educate us on bias.
db
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Re:Wait wait wait! (Score:5, Funny)
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Using Linux is not like being gay. Strangely enough there aren't many people calling for your blood when you don't use a particular OS. It's only when you try and force what you use on everyone else that they get testy.
Most people don't care - or even notice. But that's not to say nobody cares. You have to be careful about who it is doing the caring.
I've seen Microsoft fanboys dismiss Linux (and Unix in general) as well as MacOS just as completely as the whiniest of Mac fanboys or fervent of Linux zealots dismiss Windows. Technology zealotry is very much alive in all aspects of the IT world. And when IT decision makers are also the Windows zealots, anyone who wants to use something different has a hard path ahead of
Tomorrow on Slashdot (Score:4, Funny)
Tension Mounts As Eleventh Hole Is Plugged
Re:why does this sound overtly bias? (Score:5, Insightful)
However I don't like it. It just doesn't work for me. So it's hopefully going to make someone happy through eBay while I get a Dell and stick Linux on it.
As for Windows, I still use it for games but never really get to see much of it (just the start menu and the games sub menu) and I find its interface rather confusing. My copy is licensed bought directly on-line from microsoft. I wouldn't use it for working though because like MacOS I probably would have to fight it to do what I want. Besides I have no idea what software is available (apart for the few games I follow) and I couldn't care less.
All this talk of bias is mostly people finding something comfortable and finally finding an environment that works with them instead of against them. For me it was a customisable X11 desktop (KDE currently) with all the nifty Unixy tools, for others it may be MacOS or even Windows. The lucky ones get to gravitate towards the environment that works for them. The others are stuck with whatever was forced upon them in the beginning.
The ones that fight their machine every step of the way are the ones that show no bias.
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If someone observes people continually praising Linux and yet their own efforts to get it to work for them have failed, then it's a common reaction to despise the fanboys/zealots who can see no wrong. Hence, by going after them, they appear to be pro-MS. There's no middle ground in some people's eyes.
Bingo (Score:2)
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I was given an old P-233 Sony, one of the little ones with a 1024 x 480 screen. A drive refresh from the CD produced an unstable Win98 system with an old version of IE that choked on any modern website. A couple of evenings later, it runs Puppy quickly and smoothly from a CF card instead of a HDD, greatly increasing battery life while reducing heat and noise. Runs in ramdisk, only dumping to flash when a session is ending. Even Wifi was quick to set up. So, you see, in some cases,
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I would call myself "pro-Microsoft Software". Mainly because i actually like most of their software, and think that they currently the best Business Desktop and Collaboration products.
That doesn't mean that Microsoft software is perfect, or that Microsoft the company is a good company. There are many idiosyncrasies in their products, mainly to retain backwords compatibility (which is a key point in the Microso
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Re:right tool for the job (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:right tool for the job (Score:5, Informative)
Remember, the more skilled you are at programming, the more linux will suit you because you can modify it to suit your needs. Similarly, the entire working environment is far more easily customised.
So you see, most linux advocates are technically minded people, who use linux for the above reasons, which fulfills the same basic requirements that you have.
Oh, and OSX is nice too but if the frontend doesnt suit you (and it cant possibly, one size never fits all) then your screwed unless you replace aqua with X11, and then you may as well be running linux.
stop the bullshit (Score:3, Informative)
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As for third party addons, shell replacements may exist but they always seemed very clunky compared to changing your window manager on unix. As for changing the filesystems, can you actually boot the OS from a new files
Me too (Score:5, Interesting)
Where I am it's not so bad - however, my (illegal) Xubuntu installation is on an external drive with the Grub RW CD for booting and I can pull the plug (literally) if there's a problem. Originally, I had a linux paritition but I've moved away from that and restored all my partitions to the way they were delivered. Although I use rsync to keep copies of my home directory on the D: drive just in case and I have dallied with the Linux swap on the Windows swap file (still working out the kinks). Xubuntu on an external drive is slow - but it's actually faster than Windows on the main drive.
Anyways, I would have two complaints from the point of view of someone sneaking Linux into the Workplace (Undermining the bastards from the inside!):
1. OpenOffice sucks. Now the response to this is the obvious 'Hey Stupid! OpenOffice isn't Linux'. To which I reply, 'Hey Nutjob! Wake up to the realities of the market you are trying to get in to'. It matters not that OpenOffice is not officially a part of Linux - it is a fundamental part of Linux in a business environment. OpenOffice is not able to handle the full array of rubbish that Microsoft Word produces leading to the inevitable - 'Oh that's strange I looks fine on my computer' {scramble to reissue document using Word in Wine} 'Try that version'. That said Word 97 works great under Wine, so I use that a lot - although I do prefer AbiWord.
2. It'd be nice to have a stealth Windows skin for Xubuntu. Needs to have all those nasty startup screens, skin the GDM, skin the window manager - and the big one, skin Xscreensaver especially so it can load 'corporate mandated screensavers' and ask for the password in a Windowsy way. Oh and some yoke that could be installed so that anyone enquiring from the outside using network tools etc (i.e. M$ Administrator), would be told 'Windows Machine - nothing to see here'.
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For the rest of that, there's XPDE to make it look and feel like Windows, but then I guess you wouldn't want to be using it. You could screenshot Windows and then clip out a chunk of the taskbar and set it as the background on the panel. If you don't mind using a different window manager, I know there are Vista themes for Beryl. There may be an XP one too. Or just say you added a new theme in Windows if your company allows that. I'm
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There is GOOD support out there for groupware systems other than Exchange, and some of those (I think) can interoperate with Outlook. But there's not complete Exchange interaction.
Still, I think it's included on the Kubuntu LiveCD -- or if not that, I can probably find a LiveCD that has it -- so you could try it out for a day, see how well it works? Then again, it probably takes a bit of tech savvy to get it working right, especially on a LiveCD...
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Re:Here's An Easy One: Stop Using Viso for Modelin (Score:2)
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