CThinker wrote:bob wrote:CThinker wrote:bob wrote:CThinker wrote:krazyken wrote:Spock wrote:
OK, Linux or the MAC is for you then
And then, half your chess programs won't run at all.
That many really? I haven't found one that won't run on my Mac yet.
You have to hack around Fritz and 64-bit Rybka to get it to run on Wine. Who has time for that?
Its not politically correct to criticize Linux, but the reality is, its a total crap for the average user. Of the more than 500 distros, a tiny few is usable at all, by geeks.
The average user who has bought a Linux pre-installed on a netbook, returns it and exchanges for a Windows one. The consumer rejects Linux, totally. When netbooks first came out, they were "all" sold with Linux, but very few bought them. Now, almost all that are sold come with Windows. Windows pushed Linux out of the market in the only market that Linux is supposed to be good at - free OS on a cheap hardware.
If all one would do is browse the web, Ubuntu 'might' be usable. Now try installing Flash to watch youtube. Goodluck. "sudo aptget" what? Netflix? Edit raw photos with GIMP - not even doable, even if you could forgive the awful interface and crashing. Play Crysis anyone?
What is Linux good at then? If you can program, then its for you. It runs gcc well. It will surely run a chess engine that has a source code.
So you want an "easy to install" windows, that comes with lots of "easy to install" viruses? Lots of "easy to crash" system applications?
I've installed windows XP on multiple machines. Fedora 10 installs easier and faster. And (gasp) stays up for years unless you choose to take it down for a hardware upgrade or whatever...
Windows is horribly designed to allow the nonsense it allows.
It is not me who wants the easy-to-use and just-works environment. Its the world. That is a fact. Linux has less than 1% desktop use. Given that Linux is free and Windows cost a lot, something is definitely terribly wrong with Linux.
Someone gives you free food, and instead you opt to pay for another (expensive) food, simply says that it must be a terrible food.
Ive been a Linux user since 1993! Back then, X was not yet ported to Linux. Everything fit in 6 floppy disk. You multitask with virtual consoles (alt-1, alt-2,...). I have Ubuntu now, and it still sucks, as much as it did in 1993.
I'm sure you love your Linux. You know how to program right? Of course.
Let me give you another fact on Unix/Linux rejection by the non-programming IT world.
Before the year 2000, the server world is totally dominated by Unix. Windows server had zero market share. When Windows 2000 came out, together with Active Directory, the IT community celebrated. Finally, a server for the non-geeks.
In 2008, Windows Server had 70% market share. That's from 0% - 70% market share in 8 years.
You jumped too far forward too quickly. You do realize that 10 years ago windows was by far the most common server platform? And that over the last 10 years linux has eaten into that to reach the 30% point to day (and still growing). Care to guess why? Performance. Plain and simple. Linux scales far better on SMP boxes and clusters, the system is so much more reliable that we won't even mention windows in the same breath, etc...
Desktop World: Linux, 0% to <1% in 20 years. What a total flop!
Server World: Linux/Unix: 100% to 30% in 8 years, and still dropping.
That's off. Linux is not "dropping". It is climbing. So much that Microsoft has had to take notice. You ought to try to buy a large cluster from Dell and ask them to ship it with windows installed. Won't happen.
How do you configure Linux Servers? "Edit config files". Try enabling PXE on a Linux server. You have to edit at least six config files. What exactly should you put on those text files? Good luck. On Windows Server - one check box. Yes, one check box.
You should try distros from the last 5 years, not something from the 90's. I don't "edit config files". I run one of several dozen configuration utilities. Set up printers. Set up network. Set up file systems. And it is a lot more intuitive doing it in linux today than in windows.
How do you manage Linux/Unix servers? MIBs? That archaic MIBs? That sums up the problem with Linux - zero innovation, zero invention. The Linux kernel itself is a re-implementation of Unix.
Never heard of Rocks? Didn't think so.
Linus Torvalds re-implemented Unix, while Dave Cutler designed and built a totally new OS.
Sorry, but that is dead wrong. Windows NT kernel came _directly_ from a rewrite of DEC's VMS operating system. It is _still_ just as clunky today as it was back then. Shoot, about 6 years ago, Microsoft announced that a couple of their engineers had spent three years and had developed something they called a "symbolic link" in the file system. Ken Thompson had that working in the middle 70's.
I can easily tell you which one is smarter (and way, way richer). I have implemented an OS (Itron) and its a piece of cake. I have not invented one. That is the hard part. Even Apple has abandoned the OS that they invented. They now use BSD Unix, and charging people for it.
The Linux interfaces (confusing, multiple, non-complementing interfaces) is a re-implementation of the Windows interface. And a very bad copy at that. Nothing new, and missing a lot.
"re-implementation of windows."
We live in _different_ universes. Nobody in their right mind wants to re-implement windows. Any more than they want to re-invent the Edsel automobile.
Windows "Server" had 100% market share 10 years ago?
Where did _that_ come from? Not from me. But if you do a simple google search and compare windows vs linux server installations, Linux has steadily gained ground. Particularly in the last couple or three years where the newer kernels simply out-perform windows in real load environments.
Hmmm... interesting to know there is "no centralized update" when we are using that every day.
So, you use Symbolic Links as an example of Windows being late to technology? You obviously don't know the reason why that was even added to NTFS. Unix apps are migrating to Windows. Many customers 'requested' that to help ease the migration. You can't teach these old Unix folks how to do things right, so, yeah, you just give them a compatibility feature.
crock, crock and more crock. Links were added because after 30 years, users said "enough... we want a feature like this so that we don't have to either duplicate files everywhere, or copy them around so that they appear where the app wants them rather than where we want them, etc." Nothing to do with porting from unix to windows. One does _not_ need links to port. Links are a convenience. One that unix has had from the get-go. As is an intelligent process scheduler, good VM management, high-performance file systems, etc...
So, nobody wants to re-implement windows? Tell that to the WINE folks and to ReactOS.
The fact is, Linux is trying to look like and behave like Windows. Taskbar, anyone? UAC? Samba? WINE? You mean, all of these are Linux ideas?
They are linux apps that give users the opportunity to run windows software. Nothing more, nothing less. This isn't the first time this has been done. Dec's alpha gave vax users the ability to use some included hardware to execute vax programs.
Not only is Windows being copied by programmers, it is also the most pirated software. Rather than install a free Linux, people would rather do the 'illegal' task of installing pirated copies of Windows. People go against their morals and avoid Linux. That is how bad Linux is. And that is even after you claim that Windows has viruses. Now, Linux looks even really, really bad.
I don't "claim" that windows has viruses. I "state" it as a fact. We have a computer forensics group here that spends all of their time working with the FBI on this very issue. They work closely with Microsoft as well. They don't deal with linux at all as _we_ don't have these problems and issues.
You can't force garbage on to people. The world is not stupid.
That's right, and the world is getting smarter every year. Linux is gaining, not losing ground.