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Is Linux or Windows Easier To Install?

Mark Cappel writes: "Joe Barr, a LinuxWorld.com columnist, compares Linux and Windows installations. He expected Windows to be faster and easier since Microsoft has been at it for 21 years. (DOS 1.0 was released 21 years ago today.) It turns out Red Hat is quicker and less manually intensive."

784 comments

  1. Comparison not fair by ThePyromaniak · · Score: 1

    That comparison is in no way fair...they should have to take out the 10 times windows makes you reboot

    1. Re:Comparison not fair by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

      Exactly! The Sony Recovery CDs (note plural) are not supplied by Microsoft.

      Microsoft's standard install does not prompt you to install the plethora of third party utilities (like the virus utility mentioned), etc, that Sony ships on multiple CDs as a value-add.

    2. Re:Comparison not fair by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Informative

      Microsoft's standard install also does not include MS Word, which was listed as a pro.

    3. Re:Comparison not fair by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Wait until he has to install Red Hat on really old hardware. It hangs !!! Try IBM thinkpad (486) 750ce, old Toshiba T6600c (486) and some of the CompactPCI PII. SuSE was the only one that seem to install.

    4. Re:Comparison not fair by 13Echo · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I agree too, but you must remember one thing. All of those components go into making a stable, secure, and reliable Windows installation. Windows is *not done* when you pop the disk in, set up time zones and users, and run. Great care must be taken to get the system ready to go, and install all of your other apps. Drivers are almost *never* current on a vanilla Windows installation. Viruses are going to be a big threat, so you have to nail that one down. A firewall is essential (not the XP firewall, either).

      In most respects, a modern Linux distribution will do all of that for you the first time. Red Hat has a bit more stuff than most distributions, but it really is quite less than what you find on a "recovery CD" when you do a standard Red Hat install. Slackware is great for me. Though it takes a bit of know-how to partition your HDs, and get the X server configured, it can still be faster and easier to do, if you are an experienced user.

      After that, you can probably install something like Slack in a half hour - 45 minutes. It takes about 15 minutes to configure the video, sound, and a few other things. I can't say that I was ever able to install Windows 2000, download drivers, install and tweak them in that amount of time.

      There isn't anything wrong with Windows 2000... It is good software in most respects. But the old arguments about Linux being to combersome, and slow/difficult install processes are over. Something like Lycoris makes it even easier, if you can believe that.

    5. Re:Comparison not fair by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      And what a shock - Red Had supports 1/10th the hardware that Windows supports. Sorry red hat!

    6. Re:Comparison not fair by rehabdoll · · Score: 1

      Just slipstream SP3 with the win2k install files - and you'll have a fully updated win2k system in notime.

      Just reinstalled Win2k yesterday (i was bored) - it took me perhaps 10 minutes before win2k was up and running in the default config. The only thing lacking was an appropriate video driver. 640*480 blows.. add another 5 minutes.

    7. Re:Comparison not fair by FyRE666 · · Score: 3, Informative

      I agree it's not fair. The guy was obviously using at least a cable modem/DSL to download updates for one thing. I recently reinstalled W2K on a machine for a friend whose machine had contracted a virus (there's a surprise). After all the normal reboots I had to go search for drivers (he'd lost the original driver disks from various upgrades) and then take on the HUGE amount of security patches.

      How on earth they expect a modem user to download at least 50MB of patches is beyond me! Luckily I have ADSL so it only took a few hours to finish the reinstall, on a modem, I doubt I'd have bothered with "SP3".

      Another thing the tester didn't mention was the problems involved in setting up a non-admin user account to work with 3rd party software. Flash, Fireworks and many other apps were throwing up all kinds of errors due to the user acct not having enough access to the registry, directory permission problems etc. Sort these last points out took at least another hour and would probably cause most people to just say "the hell with it" and run as administrator (with the inevitable re-infection at some point)...

    8. Re:Comparison not fair by ScubaS · · Score: 1

      While I agree that Lycoris definitely can simplify the task, a user would still need to know alot about what they need when configuring the kernel, learning file permissions, etc. likewise i don't think linux is at all ready for the average user. its like aliens and UFOs, if they were here most people wouldn't be ready to accept it despite the grandoise claims about it. (though the media has done a good job of making it a point that many users are looking into a cheap alternative)

      An impressive article would have been "Is Linux or Windows Easier to Use?"

    9. Re:Comparison not fair by Teknogeek · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The bias is pretty obvious, and having installed Windows XP and Red Hat both, I'd have to say that the actual install of XP was, in the end, simpler.

      Of course, Linux is (at least right now) not designed for the level of ease-of-use that XP was...Microsoft basically 'dumbed down' Win2K. (How else would you explain the Fisher-Price color scheme?)

      That said, Linux still has potential...but we're our own worst enemy as acceptance goes. The more we insist on being able to tinker with each and every nuance, the more intimidating Linux becomes to the computer newbie.

      (And let's not even get started on the Linux zealots.)

      --
      I mod down anyone who uses M$ in their posts. I like to live on the edge.
    10. Re:Comparison not fair by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You *NEVER* have to configure the kernel. You never have to recompile it. With Lycoris, it makes it even more of a braindead process (not that it is a bad thing though). There is nothing that you need to know about permissions that it does any differently than Windows 2000/XP when you use Lycoris.

      His point had nothing to do with (is this ready for the average user). As far as I am concerned, the reply from you was nothing more than a typical (Linux is too hard) whine, from someone who probably never even uses it.

    11. Re:Comparison not fair by 13Echo · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Well, one of Linux's biggest benefits (and downfalls) is being so modular, to a sense of having all distributions compatible (at least 99% compatible). There will always be those "geeky" distributions, and those easier distributions, I think.

      When you "Linux is (at least right now) not designed for the level of ease-of-use that XP was" I have to disagree in many respects. Saying "Linux" when explaining this is being a little too broad. Granted, installing software from CDs is easier in Windows, unless you use somethings like Lycoris's Iris , which makes it simple. Other than that, what is more difficult? I keep asking people these questions, and they always reply with comments about recompiling the kernel, permissions, etc... Things that aren't even an issue in many modern, desktop oriented distibutions. Doesn't that satisfy the basic needs of most casual computer users, that only use the web/email/word processor?

    12. Re:Comparison not fair by truesaer · · Score: 2
      One observation...I've noticed a lot of people point out that Windows doesn't install all the other apps you want such as office software etc. while Redhat, etc. do.


      But, if Windows did do this, people would scream evil monopoly.


      Anyway, the installtion competition is pointless, win2k and XP install very quickly with almost no user intervention beyond setting the time zone. I have set up fresh installs of both in the last 3 months, with no issues. One was winXP on an OS free walmart machine, the other was 2k on an oldish dual 750Mhz celeron server.


      Red Hat is just about as easy, and consumers almost never install OSes anyway. So who cares???!

    13. Re:Comparison not fair by ScubaS · · Score: 1

      Let's not make assumptions. I've never personally used Lycoris in particular however I do recall recently a freind who has been a Windows user since forever who was asking for my assistance. If Lycoris was really that easy to use, I don't think he would have asked me how to configure and compile the kernel. While I'm on the subject I should add that Linux doesn't like Adelphia's USB cable modem. Now he's a happy Windows XP user.

      It's not that it's too hard or too crappy to be using for a home desktop, it's just well, i guess it is crappy. Sorry if I hurt your feeling!

    14. Re:Comparison not fair by MoneyT · · Score: 2

      Still, nothing beats OS X for an easy install. I'm not trying to start anything here, but seriously, Linux would be worlds easier to install if it came in a nice neat package like OS X does. Granted, I haven't played with the latest Red Hat, but I can't tell you how many times I've wished I could just pop the Linux CD in, click install, have the computer restart for me (or even easier, just start from the CD) and with 4 clicks and a password, be on my way to a nice full install with a grand total time of 15-25 minutes, including configuration. That truly is the one thing Windows and Mac OS have over linux, one nice neat package.

      --
      T Money
      World Domination with a plastic spoon since 1984
    15. Re:Comparison not fair by Com2Kid · · Score: 1

      or even easier, just start from the CD

      Funny thing about Win2K install, if you aren't careful, it'll keep on booting from the CD again and again and again and unless you go into the BIOS and manualy change the boot order you could spend awhile wondering why windows isn't completing setup. (especialy if the person doing the install is of the type who doesn't read the screens and just keeps on clicking OK, they might not realize that they are going in circles!)

    16. Re:Comparison not fair by joshuac · · Score: 2

      ---snip
      Funny thing about Win2K install, if you aren't careful, it'll keep on booting from the CD again and again and again and unless you go into the BIOS and manualy change the boot order you could spend awhile wondering why windows isn't completing setup. (especialy if the person doing the install is of the type who doesn't read the screens and just keeps on clicking OK, they might not realize that they are going in circles!)
      ---snip

      Either you do not know what you are talking about, or you are trying to spread fud. If the CD is left in the drive, Windows 2000 puts a prompt on the screen that says "press any key to boot off the cd". If no one presses a key after a few seconds, the windows installer exits and allows the machine to boot off the hard drive as usual. No loops.

    17. Re:Comparison not fair by JPriest · · Score: 1

      I would say installing Mandrake is easier than installing windows, but I would also say that installing an entire distro is WAY easier than some of the Linux apps. Now if only we had a better packaging system.

      --
      Saying Java is nice because it works on all OS's is like saying that anal sex is nice because it works on all genders.
    18. Re:Comparison not fair by Com2Kid · · Score: 1

      Either you do not know what you are talking about, or you are trying to spread fud. If the CD is left in the drive, Windows 2000 puts a prompt on the screen that says "press any key to boot off the cd". If no one presses a key after a few seconds, the windows installer exits and allows the machine to boot off the hard drive as usual. No loops.

      Which is a nice, unless you have the CD set first in the BIOS, in which case sometimes shit happens, and sometimes it doesn't. I have seen win2k go in circles without any buttons being pressed on boot.

    19. Re:Comparison not fair by d2002xx · · Score: 0

      And they didn't count the time to install VisualStudio, since they installed "Development Tools" for linux.

    20. Re:Comparison not fair by martyn+s · · Score: 1

      By the way, it's spelled "appz".

    21. Re:Comparison not fair by nandoz · · Score: 1

      redhat isn't linux (it has many completely propritary utils, slack is getting outdated and win2k has plenty of things wrong with it (even the final build was lacking drivers for the most common devices). The idea of setting up an operating system automaticly is a farce, anyone worthy of using their machine should spend the time to do right. Like for intance securing the box, how long does that take you?

    22. Re:Comparison not fair by Ravenn · · Score: 1

      Quoth the moron:
      Either you do not know what you are talking about, or you are trying to spread fud. /Quoth

      I recently had to do an install of 2k, and I was disappointed by the lack of input. I kind of like to choose what goes into my system. Win9x allowed me to choose items, like which games, accessibility options, etc. Win2k just asks for the timezone.

      I walked away to get a coffee, and came back to find myself at the beginning of the install! I at first thought that it was a dud, and sat through the process again, and then watched. It finished, and reboooted from the CD a third time. I took the CD out and manually rebooted to get past that issue.

      Then, I swapped the drive from hda to hdc. I replaced my Debian as hda. And now I only access Win2k through WINE, and only because I had to install M$Office for study. (Oh how I despise access...)

      Having no user input is great, if you are ghosting a PC or want 300 identical systems. As a single user, I like choice. I own a 3.2GB hdd, and had to borrow another 2GB for the M$ install. 1.6Gigs later, there's not much space on that sucker. My primary drive runs fine, with OpenOffice and lots of other apps, and I use the same amount of space, including storage of basic info.

      Ravenn

      --
      Of all the things you can accomplish by screwing up your face and swearing into a dark room, sleep is not one of them.
    23. Re:Comparison not fair by styrotech · · Score: 1

      I want to know why they can't make floppy disks do they same thing.

      The number of support calls that begin with something like "What does Can't find NTLDR mean?" when the user left a floppy in the drive during a reboot.

    24. Re:Comparison not fair by messiertom · · Score: 3, Interesting

      "One observation...I've noticed a lot of people point out that Windows doesn't install all the other apps you want such as office software etc. while Redhat, etc. do.
      But, if Windows did do this, people would scream evil monopoly."

      Well, let's see: if RedHat coded and produced all of those utilities, and/or (most importantly) gave you no choice but to include them in an install, I would scream evil monopoly at them too.

      "Anyway, the installtion competition is pointless, win2k and XP install very quickly with almost no user intervention beyond setting the time zone."

      My computer shipped with WinXP on it. I used it for a while, but then I decided it was time to create a few ext2 partitions at the end of the disk. So, lacking a version of PartitionMagic non-destructive partitioning that worked with NTFS, I used DiskDrake to create them destructively. I come out of the gates installing WinXP.

      Mind you, I've (re)installed Windows 98 probably dozens of times on my old laptop. So WinXP installation was painless. But there was plenty of user intervention besides timezone config, like modem/network config (which *could* be a pain in the ass for a clueless user) (there were more, the specifics just don't come to mind this late). There was a flaw though, it set my 'system partition' to be I: instead of C:, which got me pissed at the beginning (because I couldn't change it and was never prompted during install about it), but I gradually got used to it. But it doesn't end here.

      I installed Mandrake Linux 7.1 (yes, an old version of Mandrake, but I couldn't find anything newer laying around) to the partitions at the end of the disk flawlessly. Everything went flawlessly; it even set up GRUB to boot into Windows if I felt like it. I hacked around in Linux for a while, and decided to go to Windows for some gaming.

      Boy, was it a suprise when XP freezed at the splash screen. I figured at this point that it was an mbr problem, so I go into the Windows Recovery Console and run 'fixmbr' and 'fixboot'. This of course overwrites the MBR (luckily I made a boot disk for Linux). No luck booting into Windows.

      After some snooping around, I find that Windows has apparently remapped I: to C: out of the blue, which of course made Windows sit in the corner and pout and not boot.

      So I sigh deeply, search for the XP cd, and reinstall. Everything goes as before. I find my Mandrake 8.2 CDs and pop CD1 in to install it over 7.1.

      Lo and behold, Mandrake tells me that my partition table is corrupted! Yippee-kiyay! So I restore it, and all looks well... but upon mounting them I get some problems. Undoubtedly, XP has fucked up my hard drive.

      In a rage, I just wiped my hard drive clean and installed 8.2 over it all (33.9GB home directory, w00t). Off-topic, but it was probably one of the better decisions I've made in my young life.

      I wouldn't call any of those shenanigans Windows pulled on me simple and easy.

    25. Re:Comparison not fair by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      having used different versions of redhat -6.2 -7.2
      I find it's getting easier all the time , I certainly find it beats the hell out of a win98 install as there's no reboots and of course the equlivant of office 2000 is installed as well , if you choose - on average for a full install it's about 35-40mins - including drivers etc
      windows takes another 20-30mins after an install to do this , not including s.ware

    26. Re:Comparison not fair by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      10 minutes!? Do you have a 650MB disk? The formating alone takes about 10 minutes for me

    27. Re:Comparison not fair by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Exactly,

      They should also try it on a system which doesn't have a disk-drive.
      Oh did I forgot to mention I had to recompile Suse 7.3 kernel to allow me to install without one!!!!
      Wheeee dad, just add the following code and you will be good to go.

      I run Suse Linux 7.3, Windows 2000 Server and XP and found them all to install fairly easy ......

      And why the f*ck do I even bother writing this.
      Ah well it keeps me off the streets :)

    28. Re:Comparison not fair by JPriest · · Score: 1

      Let's ask Google

      appz = about 455,000 results
      apps = about 2,030,000 results

      =)

      --
      Saying Java is nice because it works on all OS's is like saying that anal sex is nice because it works on all genders.
    29. Re:Comparison not fair by mentin · · Score: 1
      I would say installing Mandrake is easier than installing windows

      Come on, any idea of "ease" of Mandrake installation is dead after its setup asks "How much security do you want?" with 4 or 5 levels from more-secure to less-secure, with no explanation how this will affect the operating system.

      Do you expect novice user to be able to give a reasonalbe answer to this stupid question? Do you expect anybody but full-time Linux admin to be able to make sane decision? Should this be askes at all (full-time admin will run his perl scripts after setup anyway)?

      --
      MSDOS: 20+ years without remote hole in the default install
    30. Re:Comparison not fair by JPriest · · Score: 1

      I would have to look, but think there are only 3 settings (low/med/high) the highest is recommended if the system is being used a server, leaving only 2 other choices for someone wanting to try it out a desktop, either of which will work. More detailed information on what exactly is being changed would be useful at that point in the install, but it would also make it more cryptic for the newbie when power users can check the FM after install and update the setting form Mandrake's control center.

      --
      Saying Java is nice because it works on all OS's is like saying that anal sex is nice because it works on all genders.
    31. Re:Comparison not fair by dswan69 · · Score: 1

      installation. Windows is *not done* when you pop the disk in, set up time zones and users, and run. Great care must be taken to get the system ready to go, and install all of your other apps. Drivers are almost *never* current on a vanilla Windows installation.

      This is no different to installing any version of Linux - or do they have some magical way of spiriting the latest drivers into the install?

    32. Re:Comparison not fair by pipo_clown · · Score: 1

      Well, let's see: if RedHat coded and produced all of those utilities, and/or (most importantly) gave you no choice but to include them in an install, I would scream evil monopoly at them too.

      Don't lie!

    33. Re:Comparison not fair by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't think messierton is.
      The point is, if M$ included M$Office etc. with Windows and forced you to install it, that would be monopolistic behaviour.
      The same would be true of Red Hat, however, the utilities it provides are not made by Red Hat and you are not forced to install them.

    34. Re:Comparison not fair by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You may want to try to figure out who manufactures your hard drive. Sometimes, programs can write bad data to a drive, and trick other software into thinking that the drive is bad.

      It's just a suggestion. I cranked my machine up a bit too much, and was getting memory errors and stuff. I corrupted the data on my drive. IBM had a program that fixed it for me (the OS was claiming that the drive was bad - Windows 2000). I think that a lot of people returned "defect" drives for this very reason, when in actuality, the OS killed it. It seems to be something that happens with NTFS partitions.

    35. Re:Comparison not fair by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The main problem I can see with his comparison is that he is using sony restore CD's not an actual Windows CD.

      I'm not trying to stick up for windows in anyway - I personally wouldn't use it for anything - every box I have is running either linux or freeBSD - but it's not an equal comparison if your comparing red hat's official release CDs against sonys restore CDs.

    36. Re:Comparison not fair by iONiUM · · Score: 2

      In all my years of using Microsoft products I've only got 1 virus and 1 trojan, both i realized before i ran them and removed them.

      I think you make Microsoft products out to be worse than they are, but of course, that's to be expected - this is slashdot. Windows 2000 drivers can all be obtained from windows update, along with all the security fixes. I understand how in some respects linux installations are fast, but you're also not getting a lot of things (ie. DirectX, GeForce4 support, etc..) whereas with Windows 2000 I'm almost guaranteed it'll work (not well mind you) even without updating drivers.

    37. Re:Comparison not fair by arkanes · · Score: 2

      Well, in fairness, when I reinstall redhat (actually switched to debian now, which is way cooler, but lack of pretty pictures in installer make it bit less user-compatable), since I'm using an old set of CDs, up2date -u has to download well over 200 megs of updates(!).

    38. Re:Comparison not fair by Oztun · · Score: 2

      appz is to apps as
      virii is to viruses

    39. Re:Comparison not fair by Shalda · · Score: 1

      Another thing the tester didn't mention was the problems involved in setting up a non-admin user account to work with 3rd party software. Flash, Fireworks and many other apps were throwing up all kinds of errors due to the user acct not having enough access to the registry, directory permission problems etc. Sort these last points out took at least another hour and would probably cause most people to just say "the hell with it" and run as administrator (with the inevitable re-infection at some point)...

      Typical Linux FUD. Microsoft improves security and gets flamed because poorly written software no longer works.

      Of course, the whole article was deeply flawed, particularly in that it was an OEM install of Windows, not Microsoft standard. Let's not forget either, that Win2k is now about 2 years out of date. A better comparison would have been against a retail version of WinXP.

      How on earth they expect a modem user to download at least 50MB of patches is beyond me! Luckily I have ADSL so it only took a few hours to finish the reinstall, on a modem, I doubt I'd have bothered with "SP3".

      Fortunately, Microsoft also has a new Critical Update delivery system that can quietly download patches in the background and let you know when they are ready to install. Gee, that's gotta make life easier for dial-up users.

    40. Re:Comparison not fair by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I use Debian/linux, which has an option of installing over a network (after the base system is running), which means I do have the latest packages, to the point that debian is current.

      As a counter point, debian is behind in some of the other distobutions in packages, but it has the best upgrade utilities of them all.

      apt-get update && apt-get -y dist-upgrade

      While it's upgrading and installing new packages, you can continue your work without worrying that the system might crash if you have it doing too many things at once.

      -Jeff

    41. Re:Comparison not fair by joshuac · · Score: 2

      Last night while I posted this I was installing Windows 2000 on three seperate machines. I've probably ran the installer literally hundreds of times, for hundreds of different machines. I have _never_ seen it get stuck in a loop. Perhaps you have a bad keyboard that makes the installer think a key is being pressed? If this is the case, do not blame the installer for your faulty hardware.

      ---snip
      I recently had to do an install of 2k, and I was disappointed by the lack of input. I kind of like to choose what goes into my system. Win9x allowed me to choose items, like which games, accessibility options, etc. Win2k just asks for the timezone.
      ---snip

      You most certainly are allowed to choose what goes into the system, as long as you tell the installer you want to choose rather than go with defaults. Or you can create a custom installation script (I use one frequently) to stop and prompt you for _everything_ so you can have total control over what goes into the system. But I bet for 95% of the users, the default options for a win2k install work perfectly.

      ---snip
      Having no user input is great, if you are ghosting a PC or want 300 identical systems. As a single user, I like choice. I own a 3.2GB hdd, and had to borrow another 2GB for the M$ install. 1.6Gigs later, there's not much space on that sucker. My primary drive runs fine, with
      ---snip

      Your install off of a single ~650MB CD used up 1.6GB?

    42. Re:Comparison not fair by joshuac · · Score: 2

      Because you have the bootsector for that floppy loaded, but you are missing a few other system files, such as boot.ini, ntdetect, and (gasp) ntldr.

      Try copying those files over. Windows NT 3.5-5.1 will boot just fine off of a floppy.

    43. Re:Comparison not fair by darqchild · · Score: 1

      I would not say 1/10th. I've used a *lot* of weird hardware. Only on 2 occasions have I found somthing that doesn't work under redhat. 1: I had a cheap-o generic brand web cam. I sold it after i eliminated windows from my house. - This was 2 years ago, i don't know if it works yet. 2: My scanner was unsupported up until 8 months ago. Everything else works. I've no problem with any hardware. So, can the AC name 9 pieces of unsupported hardware, for every piece of supported hardware that i can name?

      --
      What? Me? Worry?
    44. Re:Comparison not fair by FyRE666 · · Score: 1

      Typical Linux FUD. Microsoft improves security and gets flamed because poorly written software no longer works.

      Not FUD, fact - I went through this. While Windows2000 can be set up to be a little more secure from total anhialation from virii etc, it's such a pain most people wouldn't bother. Almost ALL the software I installed on that machine had problems until I manually changed permissions (which probably compromise security so much it's hardly worth having).

      With *nix I'd generally install as root, then each use can run the software, and store settings in their home directory. With Windows I installed as admin, and then the software just stores settings wherever the hell it likes (or tries to). It's a complete mess, and unlikely to help it's "trustworthy computing" [snigger] image.

      How on earth they expect a modem user to download at least 50MB of patches is beyond me! Luckily I have ADSL so it only took a few hours to finish the reinstall, on a modem, I doubt I'd have bothered with "SP3".

      Fortunately, Microsoft also has a new Critical Update delivery system that can quietly download patches in the background and let you know when they are ready to install. Gee, that's gotta make life easier for dial-up users.


      Yeah right - because obviously you'd still be able to fly along on a 56k modem while simultaneously downloading a 50MB (at least) file. I'd forgotten that modems were magic, and background transfers actually didn't use an bandwidth - silly me...

    45. Re:Comparison not fair by mentin · · Score: 1
      the highest is recommended if the system is being used a server

      But it also asks if I want server, workstation or gamer configuration. Why does not it use answer to this more sane question to security settings?

      leaving only 2 other choices for someone wanting to try it out a desktop, either of which will work

      It does not tell me in this dialog not to use highest settings for desktops. I could figure out I don't need highest, but what answer do you expect from your mom? She want more security :)

      If both options will work, what is the difference? Why am I asked at all?

      --
      MSDOS: 20+ years without remote hole in the default install
    46. Re:Comparison not fair by styrotech · · Score: 1

      That wasn't my point - I wasn't clear enough. I know how to make NT boot off a floppy, it's what happens when a non bootable floppy is left in the drive.

      I want to know why BIOS makers can't skip the floppy if the the floppy isn't bootable - they do it with nonbootable CDs after all.

      Also why can't MS make the error message less confusing to nontechy users - it wasn't as confusing back in the DOS or earlier windows days.

    47. Re:Comparison not fair by JPriest · · Score: 1

      Because like it or not most people that use Linux (even sometimes) are usually technical enough to guess on a question like that. Common sense would tell someone that the "default" setting is probably somewhere around medium. To me at least, this seems like a very simple step. I am about 95% sure that my grandmother who uses AOL could handle it.

      --
      Saying Java is nice because it works on all OS's is like saying that anal sex is nice because it works on all genders.
    48. Re:Comparison not fair by Ravenn · · Score: 1

      I actually have decent hardware, and all pretty generic stuff. There should be no issues with detecting it. And so why should I not blame the installer? It isn't doing it's job, therefore it is inadaquite. Linux has a bad rap for being hard to install (hence the article), while windows is supposed to be idiot-proof. So yes, I blame the installer software. None of the Linux installs did that.

      I've installed various OS's at various times, and I don't see why I should create a script for an ordinary setup. If I had some funky hardware, or a specific need for the software, then I would go for it. But I wasn't even able to do more than stick the CD in, switch on, and go. I set the timezone, removed the CD as it rebooted, and that was it until I had finished. No prompts, no options, nothing.

      And if you read my comment, you would have seen that I needed Office as well, which comes to 2 CD's. Uncompressed, that can come to ~1.6GBs of usable data. I had to install the full Office suite, because I don't know exactly what I will be needing, including the help files. Open Office can only do so much, and we had been given documents which pushed the bounderies of what the suite would do. Therefore, OO tended to break with all the unportable "features". Like for a .ppt I did up, I lost the animations from my .gif's when I ported it. My .xls assignment had functions not supported, and the .doc was a nightmare even on the official platform. Access doesn't have any equivalent in OSS, which is generally a good thing...

      Ravenn

      --
      Of all the things you can accomplish by screwing up your face and swearing into a dark room, sleep is not one of them.
    49. Re:Comparison not fair by joshuac · · Score: 2

      ---snip
      Access doesn't have any equivalent in OSS, which is generally a good thing...
      ---snip

      I couldn't agree with you more there. "Access" has a problem merely "accessing" it's own databases when they grow past a certain size, not to mention basic functionality lacking (well, for a flat file database I believe it is pretty competent, but then so is excel).

      ---snip
      I actually have decent hardware, and all pretty generic stuff. There should be no issues with detecting it. And so why should I not blame the installer?
      ---snip

      I'm just really, really surprised you are having this symptom (the cyclical booting off of the CD). There are two countermeasures taken to keep this from happening; one, the bootloader on a windows 2000 installation cd will abort after 3 seconds if don't press a key when prompted to start installation, and two, even if the user is dumb enough to press the key (or something makes the system think you pressed a key, like something resting on the keyboard), the first thing the installer does is check to see if there is an installation in progress already. If so, it transfers over to stage two of the installation process and does not repeat stage one.

      But you say it happened, so I guess I'll take your word for it.

      ---snip
      But I wasn't even able to do more than stick the CD in, switch on, and go. I set the timezone, removed the CD as it rebooted, and that was it until I had finished. No prompts, no options, nothing.
      ---snip

      You actually had the opportunity to do more than that at a few stages of the install; I suspect you just clicked through the "typical" settings for the networking, for example, and it went right through.

      The default applets are tiny, and would be wanted in just about _any_ windows installation. If you are in the less than 5% in a special environment that is better off without them, then yes, you should write a script. If you don't know how to remove them from the default installation process, then you probably should be keeping them in there anyway. If you are in the less than 5% of the less than 5% who will not be using them _and_ not planning on doing any more machines in the future, then alas, you will have to uncheck those tiny little applets after the install has been completed (but yes, I agree, this small target audience of single-install, oddball requirements people are not being catered to by micro$oft. Somehow I do not think Bill is losing any sleep (or marketshare, or money) due to this).

      Also, what you are complaining about is desirable to most people. If the guy who wrote the article had his install go this smoothly, he probably would have had to rate Redhat as second. (otoh, he wasn't really installing "windows" but rather some evil OEM's crazed, bloated setup).

      ---snip
      And if you read my comment, you would have seen that I needed Office as well, which comes to 2 CD's. Uncompressed, that can come to ~1.6GBs of usable data. I had to install the full Office suite, because I don't know exactly what I will be needing, including the help files. Open Office can only do so much, and we had been given documents which pushed the bounderies of what the suite would do. Therefore, OO tended to break with all the unportable "features". Like for a .ppt I did up, I lost the animations from my .gif's when I ported it. My .xls
      ---snip

      Sorry, I assumed we were just talking about the OS install. I won't argue that the "office" apps are tremendously bloated, with features that few people would ever use.

      But...

      When Open Office _can_ do everything MS Office does, has the same amount of clipart, dictionary/thesaurus of the same size, same level of help documentation including code examples for it's built in scripting language, etc. etc., how big do you think an "everything" install of OO will have become?

      I do agree, however, that office is a pretty ugly set of apps, even if you do not count the proprietary file formats and just look at sheer bloat.

      ---snip
      I had to install the full Office suite, because I don't know exactly what I will be needing, including the help files.
      ---snip

      Just a suggestion, you might want to redo this install and choose "install on 1st use" for everything instead.

    50. Re:Comparison not fair by Ravenn · · Score: 1

      Quote:
      You actually had the opportunity to do more than that at a few stages of the install; I suspect you just clicked through the "typical" settings for the networking, for example, and it went right through.

      No, not quite. I just pressed two buttons: On, and the "OK" on the EULA. I had to configure networking, ppp, etc later. I was quite surprised. Impressed at the ease, but upset at the lack of options. I'd say they cancelled each other.

      I'd admit to wanting the real thing as opposed to some commercial variant, though.

      Quote:
      Just a suggestion, you might want to redo this install and choose "install on 1st use" for everything instead.

      Ummm.... That could be a problem with (looks for Borgs)... borrowed.... CD's. I have to install now, and see what can be trimmed later.

      As far as the OSS goes, at least I can grab just what I need, and no more. No bloat, except through choice. One of the (many) reasons I switched in the first place. I don't use Linux because I hate Microsoft (which I do), but because I love Linux.

      Ravenn

      --
      Of all the things you can accomplish by screwing up your face and swearing into a dark room, sleep is not one of them.
    51. Re:Comparison not fair by Anonymous+DWord · · Score: 2

      appz is to apps as
      free is to beer

      --
      "If he thinks he can hide and run from the United States and our allies, he's sorely mistaken." Bush on bin Laden
  2. Linuxworld huh? by blackula · · Score: 2, Funny

    Sounds like a source for unbiased reporting in all facets of the computing world.

  3. Technically... by taernim · · Score: 5, Insightful

    then shouldn't the article be comparing RedHat and Windows installs?

    If he is only testing with Redhat, it seems unfair to lump all of those installs as "faster" than Windows, based on the performance of only one type.

    Just something to think about.

    --
    "PC Load Letter? What the $@#% does that mean?!"
    1. Re:Technically... by Jacer · · Score: 2

      Have you tried the mandrake install as of late? If you think the Red Hat install is easy, mandrake is much easier! My mother could install mandrake, and she can't even remember the url to http://mail.yahoo.com, her login, (or even her damned password for that matter!)

      --
      --fetch daddy's blue fright wig, i must be handsome when i release my rage
    2. Re:Technically... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      mandrake runs so slow on my 200mhz 64mb pc.. know of any easy to install linux distros that would work better?

      also, where can i download that CD demo of suse?

    3. Re:Technically... by xsbellx · · Score: 1

      Definitely have to agree. The install experience is VERY different from one distro to the other, just look at a few others like Debian, Gentoo or LFS.

      Like most /.ers I have installed my share of distributions and there are unquestionably major differences in installs/hardware detection is performed. Some are very easy, some require a fair bit of knowledge about the hardware you have installed.

      The one thing that is consistant across all recent (post 2.2.15) based distros is the strenght of the finished product. I have yet to find a Windows version (pick a version, any version), installed on the same hardware, that provides a better platform than a Linux install.

      --
      If VISTA is the answer, you didn't understand the question
    4. Re:Technically... by ScottKin · · Score: 1
      "...I have yet to find a Windows version (pick a version, any version), installed on the same hardware, that provides a better platform than a Linux install."

      Hmmmm...can you quantify "better"?

      Simply stating that something is "better" without saying why it is better is just as bad as FUD.

      ScottKin

      --
      I don't give a rat's behind about "karma" here or anywhere else. Don't like what I have to say here? Deal with it!
    5. Re:Technically... by NanoGator · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Here's what bugs me: Redhat is on 3 CD's, Windows 2000 is on 1. There's 3 times the chance of something going wrong.

      When I installed RedHat 7.3, turns out disk 3 had a media error on it. Did it let me recover from it? No, it said "you have an error, press OK to quit." No 'retry' or 'attempt it again'. It just died. I had to start the install all over from the very beginning. The Windows 2000 installer is much more graceful in a situation like that.

      Just to be clear, I'm not drawing any lines in the sand between Windows and RedHat, I'm just saying that there are most definitely cases where the RedHat installer could be drastically improved. I lost quite a bit of time on that little endeavour.

      On the flip side, if you install everything across all 3 CD's, you get much more stuff right away than Win2k does. (I.e. Office, etc.) Apples to apples? I think not. However, you're in for a major headache with RH if one of your disks is bad.

      To be honest, I don't see the importance of this. Let's say that Linux installs faster 100% of the time. So? It might save some precious IT time, which is a fine argument. But I don't consider this to be anything more than a pro or a con when figuring out which OS for somebody else to use. The whole venture is worthless if, for example, you install RedHat on a laptop and for some stupid reason or another the DVD player won't play DVD's on it.

      Maybe I'm just reading too much into this article. The differences between Linux and Windows are great enough that install time is not a greatly weighted factor.

      --
      "Derp de derp."
    6. Re:Technically... by ceejayoz · · Score: 2

      I imagine the partitioning screen and the package manager throw a lot of people off...

      I think the main mistake this article made was automatically assuming reboot = "hard". I don't really see the logic here - it reboots automatically, not really much of an inconvenience.

      Also, they installed Win2000... WinXP is more geared towards the "general audience" whilst Win2000 is more of a business-oriented OS intended for install by the techs, not the users.

      Oh well...

    7. Re:Technically... by Apreche · · Score: 2

      I run Mandrake and Win2k in a dual boot. I must say that Mandrake has the best installer for linux I have ever seen. It is easy, graphical, doesn't fail, has lots of hardware support and other good stuff. Mandrake may take less time to install, but Win2k requires less user input. All you need to install win2k is to press enter once, press F* to agree to the EULA, then format/make partitions and select one for the OS. Done.
      For Mandrake you have to select many many things. Half of which are very obvious and easy. One of which is package selection. You can make package selection easy and quick, but to get the most out of linux you need to select individual packages, takes forever, and I have to be there to do it. I can install win2k with 3 minutes of my time and 45 minutes of the computers time.
      When linux AND linux software install as easily and quickly as windows and windows software it will have a chance on the desktop. G-d forbit it could actually maybe install easiER!

      --
      The GeekNights podcast is going strong. Listen!
    8. Re:Technically... by m0rph3us0 · · Score: 2

      Well, if 1 of three disks is bad, you can choose to install packages that dont reside on that disk theoretically, however i have had experience with bad Win2k disks, it doesnt recover more gracefully it just continues to prompt for Ignore, Rety, Skip, if you choose skip your more then likely looking at a situation of random crashing because some file missing, you should really check your media before installing. Data loss is invetiable make backups

    9. Re:Technically... by bmetzler · · Score: 1

      I think the main mistake this article made was automatically assuming reboot = "hard". I don't really see the logic here - it reboots automatically, not really much of an inconvenience.

      What about after Windows boots for the first time? Then the driver CD's come out. And it's install a driver, reboot, install a driver, reboot, and none of that's automatic.

      At least with Linux it gets all my hardware drivers installed during the install. With Windows, drivers are on your own for peripherals.

      -Brent
    10. Re:Technically... by tacocat · · Score: 2, Informative

      I have a single disk for Debian

      I also have a single disk for Gentoo

      Perhaps your Red Hat is too big for you

    11. Re:Technically... by bryanbrunton · · Score: 2



      The partitioning screen and the package screen are for people who choose "expert" mode. You don't have to see those screens if you don't want to.

      That's functionality that has been denied by Microsoft to its users based simply on the fact that they don't want you to have that level of freedom.

    12. Re:Technically... by bmetzler · · Score: 1
      When I installed RedHat 7.3, turns out disk 3 had a media error on it. [...] I lost quite a bit of time on that little endeavour.

      Funny, when I installed Windows 2000, it was disk 1 that had a media error on it. Of course, I'm sure that just like in your case, when I got a good cd, the installer worked. I've always found that it's easier to get a copy of a Linux CD then a Microsoft CD anyways. I don't know, can you even make cdr's of Windows 2k/XP?

      Also, if haven't 3 CD's is a problem for you, I can attest that you can install RedHat with just the first cd. Just like Windows 2000. And you get a basic configuration, just like Windows 2000. So just because you have 3 CD's to work from, shouldn't hold you back just because you like to install from one CD.

      -Brent
    13. Re:Technically... by 0101000001001010 · · Score: 5, Funny

      Wouldn't it be great, if the Red Hat ISOs were put through a hash generating a 128bit number. Then you could compare your downloaded ISOs with that number to see, if they are different.

      Then, after you have burned your CDs, you could let your burning software check for physical errors whilst running the hash once more. That should eliminate almost all errors.

      The only problem that could arise is, if the a corrupt image and a correct one produced the same number. We should avoid this by using a well known hash like MD5.

      All in all my idea sounds so good, I should apply for a software patent right now. I shall christen this technology... checksums!

    14. Re:Technically... by ceejayoz · · Score: 2

      WinXP detected all my hardware - my NIC, my laser printer, etc - just fine without having to use the vendors' CDs. The only time I had to get out a driver CD was for my thumbprint scanner (which Mandrake didn't support either).

    15. Re:Technically... by ceejayoz · · Score: 1

      Denied? Hardly... there's just not a need for it.

    16. Re:Technically... by NanoGator · · Score: 2

      "I don't know, can you even make cdr's of Windows 2k/XP?"

      Yes, you can. My CD with the purdi hologram on it is safely tucked away in case MS pulls some investigation bullshit. It's actually pretty friendly about stuff like that. :)

      "So just because you have 3 CD's to work from, shouldn't hold you back just because you like to install from one CD."

      Err I didn't mean to imply that 3 CD's was 'holding me back'. I was saying that it means there's a much greater chance of something going wrong. It wouldn't normally matter, but RedHat's installer forces you to start over again if something goes wrong. Basically, if one doesn't do the basic configuration like you told me about, they're risking a huge waste of time. That's all I was saying.

      --
      "Derp de derp."
    17. Re:Technically... by ncc74656 · · Score: 2
      What about after Windows boots for the first time? Then the driver CD's come out. And it's install a driver, reboot, install a driver, reboot, and none of that's automatic.

      Typically, the only drivers that need a reboot when you install them on Win2K are chipset and video drivers. Nearly everything else can be installed without rebooting (and nearly everything else is autodetected and installed during setup anyway...the only other driver types I might need to install manually are some SCSI and audio drivers).

      --
      20 January 2017: the End of an Error.
    18. Re:Technically... by r_jensen11 · · Score: 1

      The hard part isn't installing the packages. I agree that it's tedious because you need to find the correct packages for certain programs, and they don't include them all in one(which I understand why, because not everyone wants to waste space on their machines with things they'll never use), but I havn't figured out how to UNINSTALL with RedHat7.2 or 7.3. Does anybody know?

    19. Re:Technically... by bryanbrunton · · Score: 3, Insightful



      No, denied.

      There's just no need from your limited perspective. What if from some crazy reason the guy didn't want to install MS Word or Internet Explorer when he installed his operating system?

      Tssk. Microsoft has got the straight jacket so tight on you, you don't even notice it anymore.

    20. Re:Technically... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      redhat, mandrake, slackware = the only fast and/or easy linux distro installs. not to say its worth installing though, both because the UIs suck and so does the software written for each of the OSes and the lengthy software installs, and the slow hard drive reads, and the lack of decent networking ability, and the lack of drivers, need i go on?

    21. Re:Technically... by Ramadog · · Score: 1
      Maybe you should look again. RedHat does supply the MD5 hashes for the iso images.

      ftp.redhat.com

      Also in the mirror site I that I use to get my iso images from. mirror.aarnet.edu.au

    22. Re:Technically... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      well i guess if you were installing your own os you wouldn't need windows to partition for the os now would you, besides if you decide to duel boot later on you can always go to a dos shell and take 2 seconds w/ fdisk..just because you used windows for 5 minutes and didn't reconize anything on it doesn't meen it is crap or too complex, it just meens you are a very impatient pesimist

    23. Re:Technically... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      hehe, for the uninstall i poped in a win98 cd, ran it's fdisk program, and reformatted:)

    24. Re:Technically... by TimMann · · Score: 1

      Red Hat CD's already have this feature built in. The installer has a self-test mode where it will read each CD and compare its actual MD5SUM against what it's supposed to be. I think this is new in 7.3. It's a great feature; we've had way too many problems in the past where we downloaded an ISO image, burned a CD-R, and an error was silently introduced somewhere along the way.

    25. Re:Technically... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't normally reboot after every driver install, I'll do them all at once and reboot at the end.

    26. Re:Technically... by esarjeant · · Score: 2, Informative

      You know what, when you reboot {n} times, that's {n} times that something can go wrong. Think about it from a users perspective; your machine is now rebooting with very little real feedback other than a notice that this is something Windows needs to do.

      Now what? Do you remove the CD from the drive? Should you insert another CD? Maybe Windows needs a floppy to get the system started again ... but you opted to skip that step.

      It's silly. There's no reason for upteen zillion reboots when a modern operating system like Linux can perform the same task in a single step.

      Another interesting quandry for Windows users is what to do when their media stops working. My Win98 CD no longer functions properly, can I just send this to Redmond and get a new copy in the mail? Seriously, what happens when MS stops supports W2K and your original media has a defect. You're not left with many options; once again, open source proves itself.

      When your RedHat CD stops working, you can actually download and burn a new copy to get your install going again as quickly as possible. Try that with a W2K coaster. TBPH, I haven't yet gotten a RH coaster from any copy purchased; my only coasters have resulted from a flaky CDRW drive.

      Incidentally, the same can be said for any new Windows CD. While my older discs are getting flaky, new copies of Win98, WinNT, W2K and XP have all been flawless - I've only ever seen people have problems with pirated copies of Windows.

      --

      Eric Sarjeant
      eric[@]sarjeant.com

    27. Re:Technically... by krmt · · Score: 2

      I can't speak for gentoo, but I know that Debian depends on a net install if you want a full system from one CD. The whole of Debian 3.0 is huge, with tons of packages. One CD isn't enough for a much more than a basic install of Debian.

      --

      "I may not have morals, but I have standards."

    28. Re:Technically... by 1010011010 · · Score: 2

      if, for example, you install RedHat on a laptop and for some stupid reason or another the DVD player won't play DVD's on it

      I agree. It IS a stupid reason. Ask Hollings and Biden ("the Disney Duo") about it...

      --
      Napster-to-go says "Fill and refill your compatible MP3 player", which is a lie. It's not MP3. It's WMA with DRM.
    29. Re:Technically... by xsbellx · · Score: 3, Insightful

      You are quite correct, I was remiss in not expanding on what "better" is.

      So in no particular order:

      Better is not requiring reboots for unknown reasons or because an application crashed.

      Better is ability to vet an application installation prior to installtion. (Querying an RPM, expanding a .deb, reading a configure script.)

      Better is the ability to use tools to, at the very least, begin problem determination.

      Better is the ability to use a CLI, GUI or both.

      Better is having a genericly installed system that is functional, while at the same time being able to exercise fine-grained control over any aspect of the system that I deem significant.

      Better is having a choice of server type applications.

      Better is multi-user system. Can two remote users concurrently run Word?

      Better is not being forced to use a binary system configuration file.

      I hope this sheds a little light on what I think is required for a "better" system. Sorry to stir up a hornets nest with technical equivalent of Coke or Pepsi.

      --
      If VISTA is the answer, you didn't understand the question
    30. Re:Technically... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      actaully... in mandrake if a package is corrupt it fails and you cant instally any of its dependancies but at least your system is still consistent.. and you can just get those rpms and install them later..

      under windows you press ignore/skip/fail/whatever it skips the file and you're in for fun fun fun windows instability...

      oh and when you get a fresh non corrupt cd of win.. you're going to have to do a FRESH reinstall... yay..

      hahaha sucker..

    31. Re:Technically... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Same with FreeBDS!

    32. Re:Technically... by MisterBlister · · Score: 2
      What if from some crazy reason the guy didn't want to install MS Word or Internet Explorer when he installed his operating system?

      Last time I checked, MS Word wasn't part of the base OS install for any version of Windows. Too bad, really, it would be quite a value-add to the OS.

    33. Re:Technically... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      sarcasm? huh? what?

    34. Re:Technically... by ochinko · · Score: 1
      Maybe you should look again. RedHat does supply the MD5 hashes for the iso images.
      And maybe you've already realised that the parent poster was well aware of that, and you'd like to kick yourself for not getting the joke.
    35. Re:Technically... by mcrbids · · Score: 2
      To be honest, I don't see the importance of this. Let's say that Linux installs faster 100% of the time. So?

      Obviously, you've never run a computer store. We went to great lengths to avoid the 4+ hour time it took took to setup a system. We'd build a system with all the software, then carefully regedit the system to remove all the license keys, then make an image of the hard drive and duplicate from that image.

      We went to great lengths to make sure that new systems were compatable, and drew up migration strategies from our better image copies.

      It's quite a hassle, but the end result is that we could have a new system built and software installed and the system ready to hand to the customer in under an hour, though we usually let them burn for 24 just to make sure they seemed solid.

      From the standpoint of system integrators and VARs, this can be a very big deal, especially when you remove the $50 MS tax...

      --
      I have no problem with your religion until you decide it's reason to deprive others of the truth.
    36. Re:Technically... by Analog+Penguin · · Score: 1

      *Sigh*.

      If you build it, they will come, but they won't necessarily know how to get in...

    37. Re:Technically... by stickyc · · Score: 1
      Whoa, what Win2k distro do you have?

      You forgot the software key (20 characters), time zone/country selection page (1 button), network type (basic/custom - 1 button), Computer name/Domain/Workgroup Name (~25characters) and at least 1 other dialog...


      That being said, It still takes me 8hrs to set up & troubleshoot a linux box the way I like versus 3hrs for Windows (including Office & DevStudio). Must be the practice :)

    38. Re:Technically... by cwebster · · Score: 2

      yes, but a cd/disk is all you need to get a full debian system. Network installation.

    39. Re:Technically... by Arandir · · Score: 1

      I've got two floppies for FreeBSD...

      --
      A Government Is a Body of People, Usually Notably Ungoverned
    40. Re:Technically... by Jucius+Maximus · · Score: 1
      "Have you tried the mandrake install as of late? If you think the Red Hat install is easy, mandrake is much easier!"

      I am using the Mandrake 8.2 7-CD powerpack bought in the store, and I agree that the install is VERY easy. It is also much easier to maintain than 8.0. The equivalent of windows update built into rpmdrake is an great step forward, especially for command-line fearing newbies.

      Just click on 'download updates' and wait for the update list to be downloaded. Select what you want and click next and it will be downloaded. Ths util is still raw, as the progress meters don't work and you should be able to resize the windows. But overall it is a huge step.

    41. Re:Technically... by Saeger · · Score: 2
      if you choose skip your more then likely looking at a situation of random crashing because some file missing

      Not likely. Most of the data in any OS install isn't the critical stuff, it's the bloat. You'd have to be somewhat unlucky for a kernel bit to get corrupted vs a giant background image, an unused driver, etc.

      e.g. 'sndrec32.exe' is corrupt on my XP CD, but it's not critical.

      --

      --
      Power to the Peaceful
    42. Re:Technically... by NanoGator · · Score: 2

      "under windows you press ignore/skip/fail/whatever it skips the file and you're in for fun fun fun windows instability..."

      That 'whatever' feature you're ignoring is 'Retry'. If RedHat had that nice little 'Retry' feature that MS has had since Dos 4 (and probably earlier than that), then I wouldn't have been in the reinstall mess I got into in the first place. Bad checksum in Windows 2000 = pop a different disk in and hit retry. That's the way RedHat's install should work but doesn't.

      I'm glad Mandrake understands that. I'm concerned that the Linux Community in general is requiring too much prerequisite knowledge of GNU. If it's so painful to do stuff like this, how could they possibly expect to topple Microsoft? It's not about stability and bug fixes, it's all about the end user experience. That's what Microsoft got right and that's why it's as big as it is today despite the legitimate problems with stability and security.

      --
      "Derp de derp."
    43. Re:Technically... by NanoGator · · Score: 2

      "You know what, when you reboot {n} times, that's {n} times that something can go wrong. Think about it from a users perspective; your machine is now rebooting with very little real feedback other than a notice that this is something Windows needs to do."

      I maintain Windows 2000 machines for a living. Ive never had a problem like that happen. Not saying it's impossible, but it's not likely. Windows 2000 is rather friendly about hardware and does it's best to maintain at least some usability. The flip side of the coin is that Windows gives you a nice easy way to tell you what's working, what isn't, and why under Device Manager. I was unable to locate anything like that in Linux. I'm not saying it wasn't there, Im only saying I couldn't find it. Pretty sad, really. Im sure there was some badly spelt command I could have typed in to find it. Frankly, I find it appalling that people think Linux can replace Windows, but one has to memorize a bunch of text based commands to maintain it.

      You bring up an excellent point about replacement media. Microsoft's licensing is shitty. They think that if you buy a computer with Windows pre-installed, then the license is only for that computer. If you build a new computer from scratch, destroy your old one, and install that copy of Windows to the new one, then you are violating the license.

      That is a lousy way to extort money out of people.

      --
      "Derp de derp."
    44. Re:Technically... by NanoGator · · Score: 1

      That's a fair point, thank you. :)

      (Sorry, nothing interesting to add, I just wanted to make sure you knew I appreciated your post.)

      --
      "Derp de derp."
    45. Re:Technically... by ppanon · · Score: 1

      Any rpm management tool. Command line would use rpm -e <package name>. I think there's gnomerpm for gnome desktops and I would expect there would be a similar tool if you're using KDE.

      P-A

      --
      Laissez lire, et laissez danser; ces deux amusements ne feront jamais de mal au monde. - Voltaire
    46. Re:Technically... by bryanbrunton · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      Too bad you didn't read the article. It really increases the intelligence of your posts.

      MS Word was required by _that_ OEM install of Windows.

    47. Re:Technically... by redtuxxx · · Score: 0

      Co-incidentally I have just done a re-install of my RH7.3 box with self-compiled gnome2 and exim

      Took about two hours, most of which spent waiting for rpm's to install

      (reason being wierd things were happening, and in todays climate better safe than sorry)

    48. Re:Technically... by brsmith4 · · Score: 1

      I have one DVD w/ SuSE 8.0 (or 7 CD's if I choose). If im gonna piss and moan about having to pop in cd's every once and a while, then I just use the DVD. Besides, its faster. If all of these beefy distros would switch to DVD, we can all be on one disk for at least a little while longer.

    49. Re:Technically... by nolife · · Score: 1

      The Windows 2000 installer is much more graceful in a situation like that.

      Dude, a bad disk is a bad disk. It doesnt matter if it your 1st disk, your last disk or anywhere in between. If the installer needs it then it will fail. To make a blanket statement that Windows would recover from this is simply not correct. It depends on what part or files that the installer could not access. Same with your HD. Sudden development of some bad sectors is not good for any OS. A blanket statement that one OS could recover over another is this situation is not accurate. It depends on what was in those sectors!

      If I had a bad third disk and I needed that for the install, I would have simply downloaded another one. The only place you will find a W2K ISO is from a 0 day list in 45 RAR files.

      --
      Bad boys rape our young girls but Violet gives willingly.
    50. Re:Technically... by NanoGator · · Score: 2

      "Dude, a bad disk is a bad disk. It doesnt matter if it your 1st disk, your last disk or anywhere in between"

      Umm, if you have another disk available, it should be able to read it and say "ah, here we go again". What RedHat did was say "oops, I found an error. Well I can't do anything useful here, good bye."

      --
      "Derp de derp."
    51. Re:Technically... by davie · · Score: 3, Informative

      You're comparing the install of an OS with a couple of cheesy little editors, a browser, a broken mail client and a couple handfuls of system management utils with the install of a complete Linux distribution including professional-class programmer's editors, development tools, multiple browsers, multiple shells, RDBMSs, the Apache Web Server, Perl, Tcl, Tcl/Tk, Python, X, the GIMP, Office apps, etc.

      Most distributions allow you to select a default install that doesn't require selecting any packages, if that's what you prefer.

      --
      slashdot broke my sig
    52. Re:Technically... by krogoth · · Score: 1

      What's the difference between windows and Linux? I don't have to disable a hard drive in the BIOS to boot Linux.

      --

      They that quote Benjamin Franklin on liberty and safety deserve neither.
    53. Re:Technically... by laserjet · · Score: 2

      wow. that one flew *way* above your head.

      --
      Moon Macrosystems. Sun's biggest competitor.
    54. Re:Technically... by NanoGator · · Score: 2

      "What's the difference between windows and Linux? I don't have to disable a hard drive in the BIOS to boot Linux."

      Sounds more like the difference between your computer and one that's set up properly to me.

      --
      "Derp de derp."
    55. Re:Technically... by ScottMaxwell · · Score: 2
      To be honest, I don't see the importance of this. Let's say that Linux installs faster 100% of the time. So?

      The importance of this isn't just the installation time, it's the installation experience, including the hassle and confusion involved with installing each OS. Lots of people have complained that Linux was difficult to install, often using this as a reason not to try it or a reason why "Linux will never be ready for the desktop." One of the author's points is that, compared to Windows, Linux is no longer so hard to install after all (indeed, in many ways, it's clearly easier and smoother). Whatever the difficulty of installing Linux was supposed to prove in the past, this is an argument to the contrary.

      So people who used to bash (no pun intended) Linux for being difficult to install will have to find something else to complain about. And then we'll fix that .... [Insert "Step 3: Profit!" joke here.]

      --

      ``Life results from the non-random survival of randomly varying replicators.'' -- Richard Dawkins
    56. Re:Technically... by Grell · · Score: 1

      Hmm, could it have been Abiword?

      The recovery (learned through painful experience) is to go to individual package install instead of taking it in groups and you deselect the package that gives grief.

      I do agree w/ you however that a package that completely fscks your install (whatever package that maybe) shouldn't be on any cd.

      Maybe thats why I went back to mandrake, they just seem to pay more attention to the contrib parts of the distro. *

      Grell
      * as always I could be wrong, your mileage may vary...

      --
      ...when it gets down to fundamentals, do what you have to do and shed no tears. Dr. Matson in Tunnel in the Sky
    57. Re:Technically... by MsGeek · · Score: 5, Funny

      OK, here's my experience. Same computer, four hard drives in cartridges.

      1.) Red Hat 7.3 "Valhalla". 30-40Min. install. All hardware detected.
      2.) Lycoris Build 44. 15-minute install. All hardware detected.
      3.) Windows 98SE. A miserable hour of rebooting, futzing with drivers, ultimately disappointment as I was never able to get the OS to recognize that, yes, the IDE lines could do UDMA mode.
      4.) Windows 2000. Abortion in the middle of the install as the W2K hardware probing routine tickles a known bug in the Xpert 2000 AGP video card and locks everything up tight as a drum. Pondering the irony of the name of the video card as I also ponder its replacement.

      Final score: Linux 2, Windows 0. And I'm a fsckn MCSE, I'm supposed to know how to fix this crap!

      The long version of this article will show up in Low End PC (http://www.lowendpc.com/) when it finally gets finished moving to a new server.

      --
      Knowledge is power. Knowledge shared is power multiplied.
    58. Re:Technically... by MisterBlister · · Score: 1, Flamebait
      Too bad you didn't read the article. It really increases the intelligence of your posts.

      In any case you're blaming Microsoft for Sony's fuckup then. So fuck you, bitch!

    59. Re:Technically... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Uhhh.. if your a MCSE why didn't you fix this 'crap'?

    60. Re:Technically... by MsGeek · · Score: 2

      I know how to fix the 98SE install...I have all the drivers downloaded and ready on a CD-R. However, I don't want to screw with it until I replace the video card.

      As far as the 2K install went...since I don't have a spare EEPROM with the unbroken ATI Xpert 2000 code on it, (I have to send it up to Ottawa, CAN) I'm stuck.

      The Windows installs will eventually be fixed. I might even put XP Pro (!) on this thing instead of 2K Pro because it has a better chance of picking up the chipset and onboard Intel NIC. The CPU is a 733MHz P3 I've got 512MB of RAM and the HD I set aside is a 20GB one, it can handle it.

      This puppy is either getting an All In Wonder 7500 or a Radeon 8500LE and the TV Wonder card that's sitting in my Pile O' Parts now.

      --
      Knowledge is power. Knowledge shared is power multiplied.
    61. Re:Technically... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You could still have a good ISO and just a bad burn. Or, perhaps a damaged cd over time.
      Just a thought

    62. Re:Technically... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      my Windows 2000 install:
      Hmm... Matrox G550? No, manual install.
      HP DeskJet 895CxI?...no, manual driver install.
      Promise Ultra133TX2?...manual driver install.

      The true test, changing networking settings.

      Windows 2000: Change network settings. Not as bad as NT, but still too many changes require reboot.

      Linux: SIGHUP the "service". ...and Hardware "activation". Somehow, this is going to come around and bite people hard. The gun nuts do have a bit of a point ahd history on their side. Look at who is criminalized first: the people who register "dangerous" things with the government to be legitimized, because they're the easiest to track down, and they justify harsher things for the "criminals" who have not registered.

    63. Re:Technically... by nasty_penguin · · Score: 1

      Didn't you optimize your harddrives with the hdparm package. Look for a file called /etc/sysconfig/harddisks and uncomment the setting of environment variables that set the various harddisk optimizations.

      If this file is not there you need install hdparm package.

      The nice thing about linux is that problems are easy to solve.

      --
      And remember, today is the first day of the rest of your life.
    64. Re:Technically... by nasty_penguin · · Score: 1

      What, you are to stupid to type the following command;

      md5sum -c md5-checklist #

      --
      And remember, today is the first day of the rest of your life.
    65. Re:Technically... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So you have a problem with your Windows install CD, but you made a copy of it first. Great. You pop out that bad original CD, and pop in that backup copy you made. And you still get Abort, Retry, Ignore. Hmm...

      What to do now?

      Microsoft has been very GOOD at convincing people to take the Blue Pill without even presenting it as taking a pill at all, much less a choice bewteen a Red pill and a Blue pill.

      Linux is the Red Pill.

    66. Re:Technically... by NanoGator · · Score: 2

      Yeah I see your point. Switch to Linux, end up living in a world that's inhospitable to humans. Heh. Good metaphor!

      --
      "Derp de derp."
    67. Re:Technically... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Gee that web site isn't slanted to the neo-nazi right is it?

      What a fairy tale web site.

    68. Re:Technically... by Anonvmous+Coward · · Score: 2

      Ouch!! That was a good one!! heh.

    69. Re:Technically... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, but unless you know exactly what file the error is in and know that you don't need it, your entire install is suspect. Windows crashed... is it because windows is a POS? Or because of that corrupt file?

    70. Re:Technically... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > The partitioning screen and the package screen are for people who choose "expert" mode. You don't have to see those screens if you don't want to.

      You do if you have an existing Windows setup and want to wind up with a dual boot Linux + Win system.

      Any of the other setup modes assume RH will use the entire disk, and repartition accordingly.

    71. Re:Technically... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Please see your doctor immediately, your humor transplant has died.

    72. Re:Technically... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yep, or stay in the fake, happy world all the while being drained of energy for the masters...

    73. Re:Technically... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > It's silly. There's no reason for upteen zillion reboots when a modern operating system like Linux can perform the same task in a single step.

      It has to do with the way Windows installs files that are in use; they get a new name (xxxFoo.whatever -> xxsFoo.whatever.1), such files get renamed to the correct names at the next bootup as a "step 0" operation setup by the installer.

    74. Re:Technically... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > To be honest, I don't see the importance of this. Let's say that Linux installs faster 100% of the time. So? It might save some precious IT time, which is a fine argument. But I don't consider this to be anything more than a pro or a con when figuring out which OS for somebody else to use.

      The importance of first impressions. Currently, most consumer installs will be done by the consumer. If the install is friendly, the distro starts out with a much higher 'reserve' of user goodwill than if the install is a strain (eg, Debian asking for module names, as if a newcomer will have any such knowledge). Something goes wrong after a difficult install, that setup loses whatever user goodwill it may have had up to that point - while a nice install leaves the user with something to work with.

    75. Re:Technically... by NanoGator · · Score: 2

      Well, if all of the people are in the 'fake happy world', then there's little point in being outside of it. If you take the red pill and suddenly 'awaken to the truth', then you also find that machines are no longer your friends. Sorry, I like getting along with my computer.

      That was definitely a brilliant metaphor for Linux.

      --
      "Derp de derp."
    76. Re:Technically... by anshil · · Score: 2

      Here's what bugs me: Redhat is on 3 CD's, Windows 2000 is on 1. There's 3 times the chance of something going wrong.

      With Redhat you get far more software than the win2k installation, it includes a number of editors, office suits, etc. etc.. I think it's far to need 3 CDs for a set of anything you might want, whilst win2k is the operating system with some things sodlered directly into it.

      If you make a Redhat minimum installation you should also need only CD 1.

      --

      --
      Karma 50, and all I got was this lousy T-Shirt.
    77. Re:Technically... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Were you born retarded or were you in an accident?

    78. Re:Technically... by abiogenesis · · Score: 1

      This sounds interesting. How did you remove the license keys? When you setup a system using that image, how do you restore the keys with the legitimate serials of the customer?

      --

      Donate free food to the hungry at The Hunger site.
    79. Re:Technically... by alext · · Score: 2

      I installed Win2K on a recent Toshiba laptop and there were a phenomenal number of reboots involved. First there were the basic hardware drivers (about 5 reboots for chipset, network - not recognised, video, sound, modem and Toshiba's ACPI addon), then SP2, IE6 and about a dozen pre-SP3 fixes - another 4 or 5 boots ISTR.

      However, the real killer was that one of these fixes stopped the modem from working. Now if you go to Add/Remove Programs, you'll see that each fix is listed separately with its Q number. With my install, there were about 22 of these and, you guessed, after removing each one you must reboot!

      Needless to say the whole thing was a nightmare compared to SuSE 8. SuSE also had the advantage of recognizing my internal network port straight off, so avoiding fiddling around trying to transfer driver files via infrared as I did with Win2K. On the down side, it doesn't work with the internal Intel Winmodem - understandable but still annoying of course.

    80. Re:Technically... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think there is a still-alive myth that says that Linux is overly complicated to install and get up and running. Even my fellow computer science classmates chose not to install Linux because of that. Proving this myth wrong is an important point when paving the road for true OS competition.

      So I'll say it again: Linux is easy to install. Windows is easy to install. It is time to choose your OS from some other criteria, and making people realize this is important. Microsoft FUD has worked for holding on to the myth for so long. This article is anti-FUD. Great job!

    81. Re:Technically... by krmt · · Score: 2

      Yes, I know that, but for people who either don't have a fast connection, or don't have a connection at all, this is a problem. There's a reason why people buy boxed sets of Mandrake or order full sets of Debian ISO's.

      --

      "I may not have morals, but I have standards."

    82. Re:Technically... by MisterBlister · · Score: 1, Flamebait
      Were you born retarded or were you in an accident?

      Fuck you, tubby bitch!

    83. Re:Technically... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The whole venture is worthless if, for example, you install RedHat on a laptop

      I didn't have any probmlems installing RedHat on my IBM A30 laptop. I just slipped the DVD in the drive, powered on and watched it install.It recognized everything from the ATI Radeon Mobility to the DVD+CDRW-combo drive.

      Besides, why would you install from the CD:s if you can get it on a DVD? You -DO- support your Linux-distribution of choice, don't you? ;)

    84. Re:Technically... by Ignavus+Anonymous · · Score: 1

      We used to let one of our non-technical friends, who hasn't had a single hour of computer education in his life, install Red Hat, Mandrake, FreeBSD, openBSD and Windows. -For fun, to see him struggle, but also out of interest which would succeed and where he'd get stuck. Guess what????? He managed to install Mandrake and Readhat, had a lot of trouble with windows (but succeeded mostly, only display & audio drivers were 'forgotten'), and absolutely failed at FreeBSD and OpenBSD, because of the disk partitioning (slicing) procedure. The reason he succeeded at both Readhat and Mandrake: these installations only required the user to press enter a few times and seemingly randomly installs packages, based on available disk space.

      --

      --

    85. Re:Technically... by DunbarTheInept · · Score: 2

      "pop a different disk and hit retry" is a non-trivial task in that it assumes you have another copy of the install media in the first place. Home users installing a new version of Windows (that they previously didn't have) won't be in that situation. Comparing the two OS installs under the case that the install media is broken is rather silly. If you have one copy of the media in both cases you can't get it to work...in both cases.

      --

      Don't label something "offtopic" unless you know the topic well enough to tell what's on topic.

    86. Re:Technically... by DunbarTheInept · · Score: 2

      If you take that metaphor you also get the flip side - that Windows users prefer a comfortable illusion to experiencing reality. That doesn't put them in a good light, you know.

      --

      Don't label something "offtopic" unless you know the topic well enough to tell what's on topic.

    87. Re:Technically... by Gossy · · Score: 1

      5 driver reboots?

      When it says 'Do you wish to restart now?' click no, and it'll then detect the next device, install the driver, keep clicking no ...

      Then when you're done installing all the drivers, reboot.

      Never gone wrong for me anyway :)

    88. Re:Technically... by DunbarTheInept · · Score: 2

      Last I checked, his post said "partitioning screen and the package screen". That indicates he was talking about OS and apps, not just OS.

      --

      Don't label something "offtopic" unless you know the topic well enough to tell what's on topic.

    89. Re:Technically... by DunbarTheInept · · Score: 2
      I think the main mistake this article made was automatically assuming reboot = "hard".
      It implied no such thing. It said it was annoying. And it *is*, because it increases the time it takes to finish the job.
      --

      Don't label something "offtopic" unless you know the topic well enough to tell what's on topic.

    90. Re:Technically... by pipo_clown · · Score: 1

      My mother could install mandrake

      Don't lie!

    91. Re:Technically... by bogado · · Score: 2
      I find it appalling that people think Linux can replace Windows, but one has to memorize a bunch of text based commands to maintain it.

      This is a very common FUD about linux. the problem is that most of people using linux are expert, and because of that they have the option of using the command line interface, witch is realy faster, in many aspects (as longas you have learned hos to use it). Many (all?) linux distributions provide tools so that a user may never ever open a terminal window. The reviwer it self didn't mention any command at all (well he mentioned fdisk, put he opted for that, beginner user would have a point and click choice).

      What do I consider to be easier to install? I would say depends, if I get a clean HD with no OS or partitions defined, linux would be much much easier (DOS^H^H^Hwindow's fdisk sucks badly). But if you get a HD with an older version of windows and a huge C: partition, windows can be installed very easily. Of course you have all the inconvenients reboot and click thrught licences....

      --
      []'s Victor Bogado da Silva Lins

      ^[:wq

    92. Re:Technically... by gorilla · · Score: 2

      What a good idea. You could have a special boot sequence setup, so that you need only boot from the first CD, and type "linux mediacheck", and it would validate all your CD's. Who's going to tell Redhat?

    93. Re:Technically... by ceejayoz · · Score: 2

      ...by about 30 seconds per reboot - and there's only two in a real install (the article used a Sony restore disk, with all sorts of Sony-provided junk as well as the OS)

    94. Re:Technically... by NanoGator · · Score: 2

      "If you take that metaphor you also get the flip side - that Windows users prefer a comfortable illusion to experiencing reality"

      Why? Because life is better in the 'illusion'? They're with nearly everybody else over there? The Earth was basically destroyed, and the Matrix was the best place for them to live. You're telling me I should take the red pill so I can wake up and fight machines on the off chance that they'll be defeated and I can rebuild a devastated planet. Yeah. Right.

      For all practical purposes, the people inside the Matrix are in a better place.

      --
      "Derp de derp."
    95. Re:Technically... by qurk · · Score: 1

      I don't know anything about Debian, but Gentoo gives you three options I believe for your boot cd. Two small ( 50mb) options, and a 120 or so mb option. So technically even if you go with the third option (which has the gcc and system already bootstrapped to save on some compiling time for i686 cpus) your still only technically getting like a fifth of a cd. However I was reading the documentation for Gentoo's portage system and I believe you can package all the programs you have compiled using emerge into a single dir to burn onto cd's, so you can technically define a gentoo install cd as 1/5 of a cd to however many packages you want to compile for your system and however many cds it takes to hold them :)

    96. Re:Technically... by NanoGator · · Score: 2

      Wow! Mod parent up. It's not a popularity contest. Use your computer for what you use it for, and pick the best tools for it. That means some of you don't need to be Linus Witnesses and go door to door trying to get people to convert.

      --
      "Derp de derp."
    97. Re:Technically... by NanoGator · · Score: 2

      Umm did you read that whole setence? You definitely didn't paste the complete sentence. I didn't say that 'its worthless on a laptop', I said it's a problem if you install it on a laptop and the DVD player doesn't work. (Not implying that's the case, just using that as a hypothetical example.) The point I was making was that RedHat is only as good as it is useful. Windows is only as good as it is useful. Mac is only as good as it is useful. Pick one that suits you.

      --
      "Derp de derp."
    98. Re:Technically... by NanoGator · · Score: 2

      "If you have one copy of the media in both cases you can't get it to work...in both cases. "

      Yeah, but at work I have multiple copies of both RedHat and Windows to use. I'm already equipped, I shouldn't have to burn a few hours because RedHat has a shitty installer.

      "Comparing the two OS installs under the case that the install media is broken is rather silly"

      Comparing the two installs is silly PERIOD. RedHat is not a Windows clone. It's a totally different animal. It's gonna work a totally different way. Frankly, I think this article was a thinly veiled attempt to get some Slashdot publicity. Had the benchmark gone in Windows' favor, this article wouldn't have made it.

      --
      "Derp de derp."
    99. Re:Technically... by Anonvmous+Coward · · Score: 2

      Well I guess you got a point. All the 3D rendering I'm doing is really just an illusion. It's not reality at all. Pity, I was making a good living off it. Hmm I'd like an extra blue pill pls.

    100. Re:Technically... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Anonymous Coward Wins: FATALITY

    101. Re:Technically... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ha! I had problems too... On both mine and my mother's boxen, Linux would detect all the hardware, and install everything we needed. But when we tried Windows 2000, the DVD drive, the CD-RW, and some parts of the sound cards would fail to work.

      We had to fork out another two hundred bucks for a CD-RW package, DVD Decoder, firewall, and antivirus software. It was ridiculous.

      Don't get me wrong; now the Win2k box works great. But it cost a total of over four hundred bucks to get it installed. What a ripoff!!!

    102. Re:Technically... by darqchild · · Score: 1

      but sometimes that breaks windows. Part of the reason for the reboot is that the handlers for driver installaion don't clean up properly, and often impede the install of the next driver

      --
      What? Me? Worry?
    103. Re:Technically... by darqchild · · Score: 1

      Better is not granting a software company complete access to your computer in exchange for security patches.

      Better is not having to agree to a contract to use your software.

      Better is being able to redistribute your software with few restrictions.

      Oh what the hell.. I'm probably just a linux bigot.

      --
      What? Me? Worry?
    104. Re:Technically... by Jacer · · Score: 2

      OEM sucks shit, roll your own, and you don't have to worry :)

      --
      --fetch daddy's blue fright wig, i must be handsome when i release my rage
    105. Re:Technically... by MrBoring · · Score: 1

      In my case I still haven't fully installed Linux. I'm still fighting the Unix greybeards who love to make modem installation and setup a real pain. And no, it's not a winmodem. Oh sure, there's plenty of documentation, but that's on the web. I guess I should use my *working* Windows 2000 box to get the information to set up my non-working Linux stuff.

      Oh, and don't forget the pain it was to set up my simple HP Deskjet. I finally got it to work after I guessed the appropriate driver to use. I still don't know what features I'm lacking though. Maybe I need to spend 3 weeks reading HOWTO's and attending RedHat Certification courses to set up my printer and the rest of my computer.

      On Windows, I may have to enter a CD key, but that's because its a commercial package and they're trying to prevent theft. I understand the timezone stuff (which I have to enter into RedHat as well). So those dialogs make sense to me. At work, I recently got a new machine, and Windows was able to figure out it's own network connections out of the box. I gotta love Bill Gates! True, I had to reboot a couple of times, but I understood the questions being asked! *And it worked!* ** And no, it doesn't crash on me!** Linus, on the other hand wants to make sure I first become some sort of network engineer to figure out his OS, though. But I'm sure it works great and toasts bread after I get my PhD in Linux.

      Oh yeah. But Linux is oh so easy to use and set up.

    106. Re:Technically... by Slime-dogg · · Score: 1
      The flip side of the coin is that Windows gives you a nice easy way to tell you what's working, what isn't, and why under Device Manager. I was unable to locate anything like that in Linux.

      Mandrake provides a utility called HardDrake that is very useful. It does the equivalent of the device manager. Also useful is the KDE Control panel. It shows you all of the identifier strings on your PCI bus.

      One of the most impressive tools that I've seen, however, is LinuxConf. That proggie is the bizomb.

      Other distros provide their own version of device manager. SUSE has Sax, Redhat's got something else. They're all really easy to use too.

      The amazing thing is that most of these are just front ends for configuration scripts. If you want to customize something, it's all right there for you. If you want to configure X to use YY display driver for ZZ resolution, but a different display driver for a different resolution, it lets you. I have yet to see Windows allow any freedom in that respect.

      --
      You need to restart your computer. Hold down the Power button for several seconds or press the Restart button.
    107. Re:Technically... by Slime-dogg · · Score: 1

      Yes, it was a brilliant metaphor.

      If you lived in the 'real' world, it's unlikely that a sentient program is going to hack your body.

      Micro$oft never accounts for that.

      --
      You need to restart your computer. Hold down the Power button for several seconds or press the Restart button.
    108. Re:Technically... by DunbarTheInept · · Score: 2

      I wasn't the one claiming Windows users prefer illusion, you know. It was the person I was responding to who implied that and didn't even realize he had done so. I was just pointing it out to him. I didn't say I actually agree with that notion - just that he was implying things I don't think he realized he was implying.

      --

      Don't label something "offtopic" unless you know the topic well enough to tell what's on topic.

    109. Re:Technically... by DunbarTheInept · · Score: 2

      The sad thing is you probably really believe what you posted with complete sincerity.

      --

      Don't label something "offtopic" unless you know the topic well enough to tell what's on topic.

    110. Re:Technically... by DunbarTheInept · · Score: 2

      If I lived in a world where my reboots got done in thirty seconds I might agree. But in *this* world, reboots are an annoying waste of time that take a lot longer than thirty seconds.

      --

      Don't label something "offtopic" unless you know the topic well enough to tell what's on topic.

    111. Re:Technically... by NanoGator · · Score: 2

      Yep, you Linux zealots are so 'in the real world'. It's cool how installing a niche OS can up your status with people. That's great cos I can't afford an SUV.

      --
      "Derp de derp."
    112. Re:Technically... by NanoGator · · Score: 2

      The sad thing is that you're getting sad over a silly debate. Heh.

      --
      "Derp de derp."
    113. Re:Technically... by evilpenguin · · Score: 2

      You are forgetting about OEM "rescue" CD-ROMs. A lot of these do not do a typical Windows install. They throw a filesystem image on the harddrive that is preconfigured and has a bunch of software packages included. Sometimes this includes Office, Quicken, MSWorks, whatever.

      It's wrong to blame Microsoft for such a setup, however. These choices are up to the OEM.

    114. Re:Technically... by dingo23 · · Score: 1

      You mean that I ran md5sum against the ISOs, and again against /dev/cdrom after I'd burnt each of the CDs, for nothing??? :-)

  4. System Restore by bobgoatcheese · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Does anyone else think this review would have been more fair if he had used a retail win2k pro disc instead of using the Sony system restore cd's?

    --
    How's my typing? Call 1-800-eta-shut
    1. Re:System Restore by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ha Ha. Tell me another good one.
      If this is a new laptop?? The poor sap with a plain jane
      W2K disc would have to go to the Sony site to download
      funky drivers. Even windows doesn't like winmodems!!
      From my experience in labs where I had to wipe the base
      install off the system and then install the whole range
      of Windows operating systems off of MSDN disks, I can
      tell you for sure that Windows is VERY difficult to
      install. All of the OEMS have rigged hardware that
      requires a seance to get to work. Honestly. I end up
      downloading all kinds of crap from a bunch of 3rd
      party hardware companies.
      If the OS is older than the hardware, drivers can
      be difficult for both windows and linux.
      If the Linux install recognizes the hardware, you are
      set. Otherwise you may not have an option.

    2. Re:System Restore by ceejayoz · · Score: 2

      Good point - alot of the complaints in the article seemed to be caused by the OEM's bundled software, not the Win install.

    3. Re:System Restore by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Windows Retail takes well over hour and soo many reboots. Linux takes less than 20 minutes and requires less user input.

      Mind you gentoo takes much longer since its built from scratch and custom to your pc. Too bad windows can't do that.

    4. Re:System Restore by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      Absolutely! I install RedHat and W2K all the time.

      The W2K install from a real W2K disk is cake. This is true right up to the point when you start hitting the Windows Update site. At that point, the nasty picture painted by the review is accurate.

      Now as to the RH7.3 install. Man that is crap!
      OK, so I am anal enough to want to want to select individual packages. Welcome to dependency hell.(Abandon hope, all ye who enter here!)

      OK. OK. I could just close my eyes and select the "Install all the crap needed to resolve the dependencies for all the programs I don't want anyway" option at the end, but I sorta want to save a little space on the HD for real software (not just 7 different news readers for my server box (where no one is going to read news anyway)).

      Both installs have good and nasty bits.
      RedHat does a reasonable job detecting hardware.
      W2K does a flawless job (on the sytems I use) detecting hardware.

      You have to understand more to make the right choices in a RedHat install, but if you know more, the actual steps are fairly painless. (except configuring individual packages)

      All in all. A totally biased review. What did you expect, given the source.

    5. Re:System Restore by OutRigged · · Score: 1

      I totally agree.. How can he base a review off an OEM restore disc, that includes lots of 3rd party software..

      More then half of his complaints about the Windows install, are because of the OEM software.

      --
      RaGe
      We're all just noise on the wires..
    6. Re:System Restore by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No.

    7. Re:System Restore by reallocate · · Score: 1
      Absolutely. My own experiences installing Win2K Pro from the retail Microsoft CD is nothing like his. In particular, no "blizzard" of windows, and no sales pitches, and certainly no prompt to install Word. Aren't PC vendors packaging their own system restore CD's? After all, installing an OS is not the same thing as restoring software to the state it was when the vendor shipped it.


      The last RedHat install I did was 7.2, and it was really quite nice. Slackware's install is also very smooth, if you have the appropriate skills and knowledge.

      All -- Windows and Linux -- install routines that I've used fall down when they can't get an accurate picture of the hardware. Then they have no choice but to depend on the user to know the hardware. Even if novice users know the right answers, there's every chance that they'll be flummoxed by questions about color depth, screen resolution, networking, etc., to say nothing of printers, which continue to be evil little devices.

      --
      -- Slashdot: When Public Access TV Says "No"
    8. Re:System Restore by arkane1234 · · Score: 1

      Well, one upside to Linux is that the system restore disk usually consists of:

      tar -xvjpf /mnt/cdrom/restore-08-01-2002.tar.bz2 -C /mnt/sysmount

      or something along that route if you use bzip2 to compress your tarball before burning it to cd.

      --
      -- This space for lease, low setup fee, inquire within!
    9. Re:System Restore by NumberSyx · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Does anyone else think this review would have been more fair if he had used a retail win2k pro disc instead of using the Sony system restore cd's?

      Personally I think he was cutting Win2K alot of slack by doing it with the restore CD. Think about it, a standard worksation install of RedHat 7.3 installs alot of software that does not come standard with Win2K. At the very least you'd need to install Visual C++, Office and a couple of those MS Entertainment Packs after you finished with the OS install, to get anything near what RedHat installs.

      --

      "Our products just aren't engineered for security,"
      -Brian Valentine,VP in charge of MS Windows Development

    10. Re:System Restore by FyRE666 · · Score: 2

      If anything w2k had an easier time. Since he was using the manufacturer's CDs, they'd also come with the correct drivers, tailored for that system. The standard w2k install has pitiful hardware support, and would require a lot fo time spent trying to navigate the horrendous Flash abominations that are hardware manufacturer's websites...

    11. Re:System Restore by MoThugz · · Score: 1

      First of all, the reviewer is a moron. Of all the methods of installing Win2k to the system, he uses a Rescue CD set. If I handed him a bootable self-executing Norton Ghost image restoring CD then he'd probably say that the Win2k is the easiest OS ever to install!

      Now as you said...

      Personally I think he was cutting Win2K alot of slack by doing it with the restore CD. Think about it, a standard worksation install of RedHat 7.3 installs alot of software that does not come standard with Win2K. At the very least you'd need to install Visual C++, Office and a couple of those MS Entertainment Packs after you finished with the OS install, to get anything near what RedHat installs.


      That's just the precise reason why Red Hat is becoming the more and more like the Win2k bloatware that it so-call "competes" with. The only reason you'll need a C++ compiler on a MS platform is when you're a developer. Unlike on the GPL/GNU Open Source platforms of Linux, you don't need to compile almost everything you download yourself.

      MS Entertainment packs? Man... we don't need those on default windows installs, there are REAL games/entertainment software available on the windows platform! I can't say I've seen something worth playing on Linux though. Just face it, as a gaming platform, Linux sucks.

    12. Re:System Restore by Riachu_11 · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I've installed Win 2K, and I didn't have nearly as many problems as he did. Only had to reboot 2 or 3 times and never changed CD's. (Duh, only one CD.) One problem I did have is Windows not liking my network card, but a reboot fixed that.

    13. Re:System Restore by kputnam · · Score: 1

      Agreed. I just got done re-installing Win2K on a computer and I didn't have the HP Restore CD so I had to use the normal retail CD. It ended up I had to go to HP's website to download NIC, display, and sound card drivers... but the HP Restore CD would've included them. Who knows what the case would've been with the computer in the article though.

    14. Re:System Restore by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree entirely. Linux is a terrible gaming platform. Please, if you're a gamer, stay the fuck away from Linux. Thank you.

    15. Re:System Restore by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Agreed. I just got done re-installing Win2K on a computer and I didn't have the HP Restore CD so I had to use the normal retail CD. It ended up I had to go to HP's website to download NIC, display, and sound card drivers... but the HP Restore CD would've included them."

      And in what way is this is different from the legions of devices not supported under Red Hat Linux by default?

      If one buys devices that they know are supported by the manufacturer, they will likely have a smooth install. With MS you look on their WHQL and RedHat their supported hardware section.

    16. Re:System Restore by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The reviewer is stupid and full of FUD.

      Every time I've installed Windows 2000, it's been a breeze. Sure it takes time to update through the Windows Update crap, but that's not necessary to have a usable system. The installation is surely superior to anything Linux offers in terms of being easy and robust, however Linux offers much more.

      I REALLY dig the compression feature in NTFS. Suddenly you have 90% more space.

      Btw, did anyone else notice the reviewer first installed a service pack for IE 5.05 and THEN he installed IE 5.5? Talk about waste of bandwidth!

      Anyways, this is a complete waste of time as everything is subjective opionion. I know what I know for sure, so do others. In such pointless arguments, we just argue about different things!

    17. Re:System Restore by QueefChief · · Score: 0

      Why is that too bad? What do you really think you would gain from it?

      --
      Get BannerBlind for Mozilla and block those slashdot ads!
    18. Re:System Restore by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I was also entertained on how he decided to install IE 5.01 SP2 and then IE 5.5 while anyone with a brain knows that if you just download the latest version of the software it will have all the previous updates in it, but I guess that would have gotten rid of one of his many complaints for installing windows, that are just his made up by his linux addled brain instead of accual problems with a off the shelf windows install.

    19. Re:System Restore by wobblie · · Score: 1

      You would need to install roughly $5,000 worth of commercial software to get what redhat installs.

    20. Re:System Restore by NumberSyx · · Score: 2

      This was my point exacty, which MoThugz missed entirely. A stock install of Win2K is useless. That is unless all you need is Solitaire, WordPad, Internet Explorer and Outlook Express. I have always said, I will switch to Windows when I can get Windows 2K Server, Visual C++, Office, SQL 2K, IIS, licened so I can install them on as many systems as I like for no additional charge, on a 6 CD set for $49.99. I'd go up tp $99.99 if it included source code and the tools required to recompile it all (anybody who thinks MS uses Visual C++ to compile thier own software is fooling themselves).

      --

      "Our products just aren't engineered for security,"
      -Brian Valentine,VP in charge of MS Windows Development

    21. Re:System Restore by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Lots of optimization

    22. Re:System Restore by QueefChief · · Score: 0

      Tell that to the Debian folks.

      --
      Get BannerBlind for Mozilla and block those slashdot ads!
  5. WMP by Jacer · · Score: 2

    Finally, the remaining three critical updates could all be installed together: two security updates for IE 5.5 and one for the Windows Media player. Oh man, I never plan on upgrading windows media player. I don't want to give someone permission to root my box!

    --
    --fetch daddy's blue fright wig, i must be handsome when i release my rage
  6. Not a good test by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    This doesn't work as a test to compare the two. The windows install was from a recovery cd provided by Sony. There is no configuration involved in this as it is all done ahead of time. Next time install windows 2000 from scratch.

    1. Re:Not a good test by balthan · · Score: 1

      You could have used the lastest version of Windows to compare to the lastest version of Red Hat. Or, conversly used a 2 year old version of Red Hat to compare to the 2 year old version of Windows you used.

  7. Linux vs Windows Installation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Talk bout gettin the drivers setup for some of hte new sound n video cards, Linux doesnt do all that well when compared to windows.. but I guess that is because Windows has been here for the lay man for a long long time...

  8. Doesn't Matter by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Home users will never adopt Linux en masse. Sorry. Won't happen. Time for you Linux geeks to stop creaming your pants every time some idiotic, useless report like this hits the headlines.

    It's a geek OS. Shuffle off to your corner and play "MineSweeper" on WINE, you losers.

    1. Re:Doesn't Matter by _Knots · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Why play MineSweeper though WINE? Well, aside from the fact that we can. If it's MineSweeper you want, there are several native versions that will be faster, look better, and most probably match your desktop theme(s). ^_~

      As for en masse adoption, ::shrugs:: It works for me. And at least as far as my system goes, it's free (as in beer, and speech). It works for hundreds of thousands, if not millions others, too. Choice and competition is *good*. Homogeneous *anything* other than, perhaps, protocols (at least we agree, mostly, on IP) - even there there's a huge amount of wiggle room (file transfers over HTTP, FTP, raw streams, SSH/SCP, GOPHER, etc, etc, for example). The internet derives its power from the comonality of *one layer* of the protocol stack and the fact that everything else can be twiddled at will without damaging the network. Who cares if a node is Linux, BSD, Windows, whatever, as long as it behaves.

      --Knots;

      --
      Anarchy$ dd if=/dev/random of=~/.signature bs=120 count=1
  9. This comparison is ludicrous.... by Rooked_One · · Score: 1

    With XP, you only have to enter a couple things, namely, the cdkey, your user name, and click what kind of network you are on.

    I havn't installed redhat since 7.0, but I doubt its gotten easier than that. I mean come on.... Windows is built to be easy. Linux is not.

    1. Re:This comparison is ludicrous.... by SirWhoopass · · Score: 2

      Windows is built to be easy. Linux is not.

      Not true. RedHat has spent a lot of time making their installer very easy to use.

    2. Re:This comparison is ludicrous.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hey reboot boy.
      Most of the linux distros are just as easy or easier to
      install than windows.
      When I go back and install NT, W2K, or XP I am aghast
      at the number of goddamned times I am asked to reboot.
      Also hasn't Microsoft figured out how to access
      the cdrom during the install in a way other than forcing
      the user to wait while the install copies several thousand
      files from the cd to the hard drive. I hate this.
      I burned up a cdrom on a laptop during an NT install and
      I was sure that when I first installed XP that Microsoft
      would have figured out a new way to do this BUT noooo.
      We are still doing the same thing after 7 years.

    3. Re:This comparison is ludicrous.... by tuoppi · · Score: 1

      One word: regedit

    4. Re:This comparison is ludicrous.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hey, penguin-lover!

      What do you end-up with after that Linux install? Does it include a fully functional GUI like KDE or Gnome or SuSE, or do you have to additionally install that?

      About the file-copy process: if you have a modern CD-ROM drive, that's a non-issue. These "several thousand files" that you are mentioning are required for PnP support, installing a minimal system to enable the recognized drivers when re-booted to activate those PnP devices, and other things like fonts, accessories, etc., and should not take long if you have a sufficiently-fast CD-ROM drive.

      When you are installing NT, it also requires a "minimal system install" to provide services for the HAL (Hardware Abstraction Layer) and to setup the proper NT environment so the rest of the OS can be installed.

      The previous post is a prime example of FUD generated by the people who hate FUD. Go figure!!

    5. Re:This comparison is ludicrous.... by damiam · · Score: 1

      Two words: gconf-editor, /etc/*.conf

      --
      It's hard to be religious when certain people are never incinerated by bolts of lightning.
    6. Re:This comparison is ludicrous.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      yes then in 30 days you get to call microsoft so they can bless your system....... then try and change some of the hardware of must get MS blessing again.... all hassle and for what??? they take no info when you call. They are just training the sheep so that when they decide you have to trade a kidney to get into your system you will just click through the easy phone interface.

    7. Re:This comparison is ludicrous.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > RedHat has spent a lot of time making their installer very easy to use.

      Mmmm. Yes. Like RH7.0. The installer dies and reboots just after you configure your partitions if any of your disks happen to have a non-native linux partition already on it.

      So, you go to the RH site, download the Anaconda update image, insert the update disk when prompted and guess what? The installer dies with the exact same error.

      They made it real easy!

    8. Re:This comparison is ludicrous.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dumbass. RedHat 7.0 is old news. It's a couple of years old now. Go get a copy of 7.3, Mandrake 8.3 or SuSE 8.0 before I start bitching about Windows98.

  10. It's not a fair question by wizarddc · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Most people who are using Windows didn't install their OS, it came on their machine when they bought it. So practically, when someone buys a PC, they spend no time installing their OS. Just a thought.

    --
    Th
    1. Re:It's not a fair question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      Here's another thought - the thought of my shooting a load all over you mom's asshole. Yeah, I'm giving her a glazed leather cheerio right this second, as I type this in fact. What a skanky cunt, but who else am I gonna get a $5 butt fuck from? I love crack whores. I just wish I didn't have to pick away three days worth of encrusted shit before I slid it in her quivering baloon knot, but the price is right!

    2. Re:It's not a fair question by Xzisted · · Score: 1

      Yeah...but considering how awful windows is, how many of those people have had to go rooting around in that box-O-disks that came with said computer so that they can do a format/reinstall. Oddly enough...I have never had to do that with my linux installs.

      --

      Honesty may be the best policy, but apparently by elimination, dishonesty is the second best policy.
    3. Re:It's not a fair question by slickwillie · · Score: 2

      Unless they ever had any problems and called M$FT support. The standard support call goes su\omething like this:

      MSS> How many times ahve you rebooted the computer?

      Hapless User> I lost count.

      MSS> Try it one more time.

      HU> What if it still doesn't work.

      MSS> Then re-install Windows.

    4. Re:It's not a fair question by bafreer · · Score: 0

      I agree 100%. All of my friends (who are fairly computer-savvy) run windows. I didn't give reinstallation a second thought when running windows, it just came with the territory: Gaming, so long as I give it my quarterly reinstallation. What I find so puzzling is that so many people dread the thought of reinstalling, even when they have no valuble data. How many people will cripple their systems, and then buy a new one instead of reinstalling? Even reinstalling Win98 can make it reasonably ok (please don't flame - in reference to strictly windows users).

    5. Re:It's not a fair question by BrookHarty · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Actually a friend of mine works for M$ Support, and hes not allowed to tell the customer to reinstall the OS. He has to fix the problem with registry edits, dll's, or re-install the application.

      I was always joking about the "Re-install" M$ support line also.

    6. Re:It's not a fair question by starX · · Score: 1

      Even still, you need to factor in the time it takes to get a new virus definition, install a firewall, etc. And all things considered, most windows users don't do this. The question is plenty fair, but for average joe-I-got-windows-preloaded-user, the install is never really done, it has been half-done by the distributer, and the user doesn't realize that anything has been left undone.

      The problem, as you say, is that they spend no time installing their OS, and so their OS is never properly installed.

    7. Re:It's not a fair question by Spoing · · Score: 2

      While true for the initial installation, I bet the number using recovery disks makes up for those who don't install at all.

      --
      A firewall can not protect you from yourself. Turn off what you do not need. Do not use the firewall to do your work.
    8. Re:It's not a fair question by Arandir · · Score: 1

      But recovery disks aren't the same thing as the shrinkwrap disks. I greatly suspect that recovery disks have a simpler install than the originals. On my friends computer, his recovery disks are nothing more than hard drive images. He can reinstall Windows and MSOffice in ten minutes.

      --
      A Government Is a Body of People, Usually Notably Ungoverned
    9. Re:It's not a fair question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...and when something goes wrong, they call their "free" support, only to discover that support only covers stuff from, say, Dell or Compaq. If the HD is going bad, ya gotta spend moo-lah to get it fixed and/or actually learn something about what you're using. When OS's can be installed remotely, and when every aspect of your computer can be inspected remotely, even say, the bios settings, then we "might" have a situation where a person can be an idiot and still user their machine. Lets nevermind the security risks...

      Until then, I have also found Linux "easier" to install than Windows, and also easier to recover from if something goes south during the process. But of course, I usually don't have to call tech support either...

    10. Re:It's not a fair question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You obviously know what you are talking about. Tell me, does it get lonely for you? You really should try to get out more. Its not good for your pasty white skin to hide in the basement all day eating ho-ho's while waiting for your new super-duper-fix-all-my-problems-development kernel to compile (mebbe that will work with the next version).

    11. Re:It's not a fair question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oddly enough, I've never had to do that with my Windows installs either. Oddly enough, all of my hardware works great with Windows (it was detected and configured automatically during the 25 minute install - that beats recompiling the whole frickin kernel just to get a sound card to work). And oddly enough, I never have to reboot my windows machine either.

      And guess what? Since I'm not a pear-shaped, acne-faced loser nerd like you, I actually have a life outside of /. and irc also.

    12. Re:It's not a fair question by anshil · · Score: 2

      Most people who are using Windows didn't install their OS, it came on their machine when they bought it. So practically, when someone buys a PC, they spend no time installing their OS. Just a thought.

      Of course it isn't fair. But over years and years the windows advocades told us how nasty linux installs are, and how unsuitable it is about windows installs, etc. they always only concentrated on installs. Silently many agreed that linux itself runs quite fine and effective once it's installed. So all the distro concentrated a lot of energies on the installs, and surprise what happened today? Linux installs are even easier than windows installs, I know this from personal experience, installed a dual win98/Suse Linux boot on a laptop, guess which install was straight awawy (Suse Linux) and which install was a bitch to do (win98 required a lot of manufacturer extra drivers, than refused to use the CDROM, etc.) And what tell us the advocades today, okay guys the install procedure you improved so much, well it isn't that important after all.

      --

      --
      Karma 50, and all I got was this lousy T-Shirt.
    13. Re:It's not a fair question by poot_rootbeer · · Score: 2

      Oh come on. We're all anti-MS zealots here, right? Everyone knows that you have to RE-install Windows once or twice every week!

    14. Re:It's not a fair question by legojenn · · Score: 1
      Linux installs are even easier than windows installs, I know this from personal experience, installed a dual win98/Suse Linux boot on a laptop, guess which install was straight awawy (Suse Linux) and which install was a bitch to do (win98 required a lot of manufacturer extra drivers, than refused to use the CDROM, etc.) And what tell us the advocades today, okay guys the install procedure you improved so much, well it isn't that important after all.

      You can probably mark this post redundant, but hardware does play a factor in the install. I have a Windows 98/Slackware 8.1 dual boot on my Dell laptop. It has an aftermarket PCMCIA network card in it Linksys DFE something or other. When I reinstalled Windows 98, it seems to have had no trouble with it. Slackware 8.0 required an upgrade to the 2.4.18 kernel and a recompile. (I used Windows 98 to get the kernel onto the harddrive.) Slackware 8.1 just required a recompile. Sound is a pain in the a**. I put the call for the modprobe on the soundcard in rc.local because if it's in rc.modules, it won't work. I still have not managed to get the auto shut off on slack to work, though Windows 98 will shut the machine off properly. I have managed to get the autoshutdown on my Slackware desktops fine, so it's a problem in the hardware somewhere.

      Anyhow, where was I after this self-indulgent tirade? Oh yeah, basically, I just accept that things are more difficult with Linux, and really not that much more difficult. What does it matter anyhow? Most people are capable of rising to the level of their challenge.

      Despite things being a little more difficult in Linux, I still use it 75% of the time (Unless I am working on schoolwork or something, I won't bother rebooting it into Linux if the computer left on.). I would probably use Linux more than that if I didn't live with a 10 year old who always reboots the PC into Windows so he can play Flash 6 games on www.neopets.com.

      --
      I make a reasonable middle-class wage by going to work and not spamming blogs with scams.
    15. Re:It's not a fair question by evocate · · Score: 1

      If Microsoft didn't make it so hard for OEMs to ship a box without Windows, someone could by a PC with Linux pre-installed. Monopolization shouldn't count towards ease of installation.

  11. Wow! by nEoN+nOoDlE · · Score: 2

    Linux installation wins over Win2k in Linuxworld.com? What a shocker! This article is biased within the first 3 paragraphs stating twice in a condescending way how MS makes you read and sign the EULA in the beginning of the installation. Big deal, Microsoft wants you to know what you're getting yourself into. Also, what does clicking "I accept" in the beginning have anything to do with ease of installation?

    --
    Don't trust a bull's horn, a doberman's tooth, a runaway horse or me.
    1. Re:Wow! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Some people have a serious problem with agreeing to a gag order if they simply want to update their software...weird, huh?

    2. Re:Wow! by houseofmore · · Score: 0

      Why don't you give it a try? You'll end up with the same results.

    3. Re:Wow! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I guess you missed what you agreed to do in paragraph 216. Still, one newborn is no likely to be missed...

    4. Re:Wow! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If Microsoft were interested in us knowing what we were getting, their EULA would be more like the old Borland "Common Sense" EULA, with only a few bullet points.

      But instead, it is difficult to read. Since it is so legalistic, there are too many legal terms that have legal meanings that are far different then their typical "common sense" face value definition is.

    5. Re:Wow! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The EULA is completely, 100% unenforceable. They have no way of knowing who (or even what) clicked "I agree". A contract is not binding on the ten year old you should have installing your apps for you.

      Here's the REAL eula:

      By placing your product in a retail store and accepting my money for it, you agree that it is mine to do whatever the hell I wish with it. You also agree that any EULA you may force me to click during the installation of MY software that I paid good money for is only a joke and not meant to be taken seriously by anyone. You also agree that I am free to make as many copies as I wish for use on as many machines as I wish, and may give these copies away if I so please, so long as I do not contravene copyright by accepting money for the software.

      A clickthrough is even less binding than a verbal agreement. At least with a verbal agreement there are two witnesses to the deal.

      -steve
      springfield fragfest

  12. Red Hat Linux most certainly IS... by Micah · · Score: 2

    easier to install than any version of Windows I have ever installed! I mean BY FAR! Not trying to be a troll, I'm serious.

    Windows makes you reboot two or three times. RH doesn't (only once at the end, then you boot into a ready-to-go system).

    Windows often doesn't install drivers for video/sound cards, or even Ethernet cards. But assuming the card has a driver for Linux, RH has always set it up for me during the install, no problem.

    Software -- with a fresh RH installation, you already have most of the software you need, ready to go. Office suite, e-mail programs, servers, plenty of games (far more than come with Windows).

    The ONLY particularly difficult part of installing RH is the partitioning, and even that is getting easier with each version.

    1. Re:Red Hat Linux most certainly IS... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is rebooting difficult?

      People are giving Windows a hard time because the system reboots during setup. It may be less elegant but it doesn't make setup any more difficult..

    2. Re:Red Hat Linux most certainly IS... by intermodal · · Score: 1

      for the average joe computer user (the kind who buys a prebuilt computer from a major OEM on purpose just because they want it from somewhere famous they "can trust", heavy on the quotes) won't do their own partitioning, and Red Hat will take care of partitioning for these. Partitioning windows isn't any easier than it is for red hat...in fact red hat is much easier to partition with than any version of windows, especially for custom setups like dual boot or seperate home or data directory or wtf you want. Partitioning is only going to be an issue for power users, who sadly are the only ones who are seriously looking at linux thse days unless they have a l33t linux friend who installs for them anyway...

      --
      In SOVIET RUSSIA... erm...NSA AMERICA, the Internet logs onto YOU!
    3. Re:Red Hat Linux most certainly IS... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >Windows often doesn't install drivers for video/sound cards, or even Ethernet cards. But assuming the card has a driver for Linux, RH has always set it up for me during the install, no problem.

      I've never had or seen a modern windows version that didn't properly install video/sound and Ethernet drivers.

      RH does install the drivers, but if you don't cofigure it with DHCP you have to enter IP addresses for you machine, your network, your broadcast and your DNS.

    4. Re:Red Hat Linux most certainly IS... by MicroBerto · · Score: 2
      It may be less elegant but it doesn't make setup any more difficult..

      That is, unless, it doesn't return to where it left off before the reboot...

      --
      Berto
    5. Re:Red Hat Linux most certainly IS... by be-fan · · Score: 2

      Redhat certainly does have a lead here, given that it has tons of help info in the left hand pane, and the setup tool is graphical, while Microsoft's is text-menu based.

      --
      A deep unwavering belief is a sure sign you're missing something...
    6. Re:Red Hat Linux most certainly IS... by shades66 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I agree totally..

      I re-installed WinME on my pc the other day as well as Mandrake 8.2 on a seperate partition (new hard drive for those wondering why I was re-installing..) anyway for windows i had to do the following...
      1. Install ME (with numerous reboots...)
      2. Install VIA motherboard drivers
      3. Install SBlive drivers
      4. Install EPSON 740 drivers
      5. Install NVIDIA drivers
      6. Install Realtek 8139 drivers
      7. Install Office

      with mandrake and using most of the default options I only had to do the following..
      1. Install Mandrake
      2. Install NVIDIA RPM's
      everything else was installed for me (Printer drivers,Network modules,sound modules,openoffice)

      can it be much easier than that? Even my girlfriend could install Mandrake!.

      --
      ---- There are 10 types of people in the world. Those that understand binary and those that don't
    7. Re:Red Hat Linux most certainly IS... by nfras · · Score: 3, Insightful

      assuming the card has a driver for Linux

      Yes, and if it doesn't, tell me that most users won't turn tht Linux disk into a coaster.

      --
      You call me a pedant? I prefer the term "correct"
    8. Re:Red Hat Linux most certainly IS... by A5un · · Score: 1
      RH does install the drivers, but if you don't cofigure it with DHCP you have to enter IP addresses for you machine, your network, your broadcast and your DNS.


      Not true, at least not with RH 7.3. It comes with dhcp setup if you so desired.

    9. Re:Red Hat Linux most certainly IS... by ScottKin · · Score: 0, Troll

      More FUD!!!!

      Let's dissect this FUD-monster, item by item and see what's inside!

      1) No problem there, with the exception that he's installing WinME, which (I must admit) was a lousy product from Microsoft

      2) Did your Mandrake Install contain optimized drivers for VIA motherboards? NO! The VIA driver install is NOT needed!

      3) Did your Mandrake Install contain anything specific for your SBLive! card, like EAX support? NO! It installed GENERIC DRIVERS that support SB and SB-compatable cards with NO SPECIAL ENHANCEMENTS!

      4) Did your Mandrake Install contain any specific drivers for your Epson 740 to allow you to check ink levels, clean the nozzle ports on ink carts or do any color-correction? NO! Your Mandrake Install simply installed GENERIC /dev/lpr or /dev/prn drivers.

      5) Were the nVidia RPMs you installed 3rd-party or actual nVidia Drivers? If it was 3rd-party, what are you going to do when your card dies and you try to get an RMA on it from nVidia and they ask you if you're used 3rd-party drivers on the card?

      6) Since Realtek is only one of the dozens upon dozens of NIC manufacturers out there, it's a no-brainer that MS would not include drivers for it - and installing NIC drivers is so trivial that it appears that you simply included this step to increase the FUD Factor.

      And don't even get me started on that software abortion called OpenOffice!

      ScottKin

      --
      I don't give a rat's behind about "karma" here or anywhere else. Don't like what I have to say here? Deal with it!
    10. Re:Red Hat Linux most certainly IS... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >Not true, at least not with RH 7.3. It comes with dhcp setup if you so desired.

      I didn't say it didn't come with it. I said if you don't configure it with DHCP (like I'm not set up to do), then you have to enter all your own numbers, which is a serious pain if you don't already know what they are.

    11. Re:Red Hat Linux most certainly IS... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually I've installed Windows XP on one of my computers just to fuck around with and the installation is quite painless. I forget how many reboots I had to go through (I don't think there were any more than 2), I booted into XP with all of my hardware automatically recognized and installed right down to the onboard audio/lan/modem stuff. Not bad at all.

    12. Re:Red Hat Linux most certainly IS... by Micah · · Score: 2

      if you don't configure it with DHCP (like I'm not set up to do), then you have to enter all your own numbers

      uh, that's the case for configuring ANY TCP/IP stack! DHCP or manual!

    13. Re:Red Hat Linux most certainly IS... by Reziac · · Score: 2

      Well, in that case you need to update your Windows experience. When I installed XP, I stuck the CD in the drive, filled in the reg'n number, and went away for 20 minutes. Came back to find a fresh login screen, and a query about configuring my ISP. That's all there was to it.

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    14. Re:Red Hat Linux most certainly IS... by Arandir · · Score: 1

      My WinME CD didn't have my video or sound drivers (G450+ and ES1371). I would have made that CD a coaster, but the hologram was too pretty...

      --
      A Government Is a Body of People, Usually Notably Ungoverned
    15. Re:Red Hat Linux most certainly IS... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ummm let me see, have you used linux.

      2) Yes it does have a via driver. All the chipset features are used.

      3) First a generic ac97 driver does not work with the sblive so if was not using a sblive driver he would not have had sound. And second I believe mandrake uses alsa, so yes it supports all the advanced features.

      4) Mandrake does not use the generic lpr printing system. It uses CUPS, you know the same one apple switched to.

      5) Ummm go to nvidia's site and click on drivers->linux. What do you see, could it be linux drivers. Scroll down and you may even catch site of those "3rd party" rpms he was installing.

      6) Why shouldn't they include nic drivers. And no installing nic drivers is not that easy. Try to download drivers without a nic.

      Before you scream FUD check your facts

    16. Re:Red Hat Linux most certainly IS... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You were using WinME, that product has been discontinued by Microsoft. Next comparison: Windows XP vs. Mandrake 7!

    17. Re:Red Hat Linux most certainly IS... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      um check this for a moment, how long ago was ur version of linux completed and how long ago was winme completed? I believe winme was 2 or 3 years ago...so that means all the drivers that ur distribution of linux has they've had 2 or 3 years to play catch up and add in those newer drivers. Don't compare older software with newer software. As well, try comparing it with a modern day OS that includes those drivers like say...windows xp or windows 2000.

    18. Re:Red Hat Linux most certainly IS... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No offense, but, we're jumping up and down (have been for years) about the amount of programs rolled into Windows because it stifles competition. We can't have it both ways. Personally, I think they should strip down the whole system and be done with it but that's a totally different subject.

      Anyways, both OS's have their place and both OS's will continue to creep into eachother's space. WinWhatever will continue to get server share while Linux (and free *NIXs in general) will continue to creep into userland. After almost 11 years of doing the Linux thing and NT thing, I'm done with the fighting. They both have their place and as long as we all have competency on both, we can help other people make the right decision. Sometimes it'll be Windows, sometimes it'll be Linux. I honestly feel it's time for all of us to really sit down and think with our heads instead of our hearts. ... and now, back to the program ...

    19. Re:Red Hat Linux most certainly IS... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      what the hell are you talking about??? windows interrupts installation with all kinda of shit, like 'globalization', 'time zone settings', 'what area code are you in' and all sorts of dialogs in the middle of setup so you have to SIT IN FRONT OF THE COMPUTER FOR THE WHOLE TIME!

  13. 'Installing' isn't everything by Tk42! · · Score: 1


    (not flamebait)
    Regardless of your point of view, Joe L User just wants to get online, and its a lot quicker to get (for example) ATT's dial-up software running and Joe L User online to buy little sutffed piggies from ebay. Why is this study even done?

    1. Re:'Installing' isn't everything by neroz · · Score: 1

      The "Study" was done, because the main thing that Windows users coming to Linux complained about for a long time, was how hard Linux was to install. We're now past that hurdle, on to the next...

    2. Re:'Installing' isn't everything by ceejayoz · · Score: 2

      We're now past that hurdle, on to the next...

      Says Linuxworld.com - would you trust a similar study saying Windows is easier from "ILoveWindows.com"? The article is hardly biased...

    3. Re:'Installing' isn't everything by ceejayoz · · Score: 2

      hardly unbiased... whoops :-)

    4. Re:'Installing' isn't everything by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Err...read the article. He didn't _just_ install, he also configured his internet connection.

    5. Re:'Installing' isn't everything by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, you're past the hurdle of Redhat being easier to install than an overbloated OEM version of Win2000.

      Sony's in the business to make money. Your HDD crashes, you send your computer to them for a reinstall, they make $. Unlike RH & MS with their installers, Sony's goals aren't to make their utilities easy to use.

    6. Re:'Installing' isn't everything by neroz · · Score: 1

      Try installing Redhat 7.3 or Mandrake 8.2 from scratch, then do the same with Win2k/XP as you all suggest. The installers these Linux distros use make it _VERY_ easy, my mother has actually installed Mandrake 8.2 before (honest). The article may be biased, but it has been known for quite a while that "user friendly" Linux distros are easier than, or at least as easy as Windows to install.

    7. Re:'Installing' isn't everything by pipo_clown · · Score: 1

      my mother has actually installed Mandrake 8.2 before (honest).

      Could your mother please help me with fdisk?

      Don't lie!

    8. Re:'Installing' isn't everything by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't know aboyut Red Hat, but to get on teh internet through a DSL line in win98 requires the ISP's installation software in a process that took over half an hour (not including the hardware installation, just software).

      Getting XP connected to the DSL line through the home network took all damned afternoon (they changed where the networking is configured).

      Mandrake was moron-simple to install and required no other software. The install asks what kind of connection and gives 4 choices, and just WORKS.

      Windows is a pain in the ass. Linux has passed Windows for ease of use.

      -steve
      springfield fragfest

    9. Re:'Installing' isn't everything by neroz · · Score: 1

      "defaults"

    10. Re:'Installing' isn't everything by ceejayoz · · Score: 2

      I have installed Mandrake 8.1. It was still harder IMO than WinXP. They're getting pretty good, but it's still not quite there...

  14. Windows..? by FuzzyMan45 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    This is a comparison of installing windows and linux. It seems to me that it looks like it's comparing a sony operation system restore and linux. The REAL win2k install (without things like mcaffee) only takes (if memory serves) 3 reboots also and no cd swaps. In my opinion, this is not a very professional article/study/benchmark and should be taken with a grain of salt.

    1. Re:Windows..? by spongman · · Score: 3, Flamebait

      grain of salt? the guy's a fucking moron. firstly he should be installing XP, a consumer OS for a consumer girlfriend (not 2K, never designed to be installed by consumers), secondly why did he upgrade 3 different versions of IE? why not just install 2Ksp3 which includes IE6. dumbass. then, he should know an OEM setup from the real thing, no wonder he got a whole bunch of adverts for stuff, and a blank admin password. has this guy never installed a REAL version of win2k before?

    2. Re:Windows..? by gmack · · Score: 2

      It only takes 3 reboots if you don't use windows update to upgrade your system to the latest. If you do add another 6 or 7 reboots.

      If you don't I hope you don't ever intend to either accept email or web browse.

    3. Re:Windows..? by FuzzyMan45 · · Score: 1

      actually..with service pack3 that's only one reboot...and maybe one more for IE6.

    4. Re:Windows..? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are ignoring requests from the install to reboot.
      end of file copy phase. 1 reboot
      after that I have had to reboot SEVERAL more times.

    5. Re:Windows..? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Operating systems (windows included) are not designed
      to be installed by clueless consumers.
      trust me.
      After that XP and W2K are not that much different.

    6. Re:Windows..? by Verizon+Guy · · Score: 1

      I can't believe that it took me scrolling 1/2 way down the page to come up on a post that actually made some valid, credible sense.

      --

      Aw, fuck it. Let's go bowling. - The Big Lebowski

    7. Re:Windows..? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      since when does SP3 include IE6?

      i upgraded a few boxes to SP3 today and I'm still at 5.5.

    8. Re:Windows..? by sheldon · · Score: 2

      I suspect he's talking about new CD images being shipped by Microsoft to OEMs which include IE6 into the base Win2k code.

      I haven't seen one of these yet, but it wouldn't surprise me if they existed as Microsoft has always done this in the past.

      Of course the stupid thing is, they don't normally ship these CDs in the retail boxes. You get the same Win2k CD that was released in 2/2000 without any extra CDs with updates. :(

    9. Re:Windows..? by Com2Kid · · Score: 2

      Of course the stupid thing is, they don't normally ship these CDs in the retail boxes. You get the same Win2k CD that was released in 2/2000 without any extra CDs with updates. :(


      A-freakin-man, I ain't TOUCHING SP3, I'd rather get my ass owned by some script kiddy then hand my box over to MS. . . . .

    10. Re:Windows..? by scrytch · · Score: 2

      > not 2K, never designed to be installed by consumers

      eh? I've installed win2k numerous times, and found it dead simple, even with weird hardware. hell, even win2k server was a cinch. even easier than freebsd, which i could probably do in my sleep by now. NT4 OTOH was ... not fun.

      --
      I've finally had it: until slashdot gets article moderation, I am not coming back.
    11. Re:Windows..? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In that case, you're a fucking moron. Installing any operating system and connecting to the internet without installing all the latest patches (yes, that includes linux) is fucking stupid.

    12. Re:Windows..? by Rinikusu · · Score: 2

      I dunno, SP3 fucked my machine in a big way. Could not get wireless up (error message something about not enough resources.. on a dual PIII 750 w/512 megs RAM, and no hardware changes upon install). The good news was that SP3 was neatly add in add/remove software, which I used, and everything is now back to normal.

      --
      If you were me, you'd be good lookin'. - six string samurai
    13. Re:Windows..? by sheldon · · Score: 2

      Let me guess, you believed the FUD that /. was spreading about the SP3 EULA?

      Go read it again, it does not say what they claim it said.

  15. Hardware Config by alanjstr · · Score: 2

    Having reinstalled Windows many times, I know what makes it better for me: automatic hardware detection. Most of the right drivers and all that gets me up and running fast. It can be pretty easy to create an unattended installation as well.

    1. Re:Hardware Config by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Automatic hardware detection??
      Look we are happy you can install windows on the your
      home machine or the ONE type of computer you have at your
      work. Whoopty shit.
      Linux has automatic hardware detection, not for the spankig
      brand new hardware but on most hardware that is a few months old
      linux picks it up easily.

    2. Re:Hardware Config by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Red Hat's installer does automatic hardware detections as well. According to the article, he had a fine time getting drivers working on Linux and Windows.

    3. Re:Hardware Config by Com2Kid · · Score: 1

      Linux has automatic hardware detection, not for the spankig
      brand new hardware but on most hardware that is a few months old
      linux picks it up easily.


      Nice thing about windows, even if Windows does not recognize your stuff, it likely can at least tell you what sorta stuff it is and either install minimal functionality drivers for it or give you some hint as to where to go to get the actual drivers for it.

      w00t.

      There are /some/ things though that Win2K /SHOULD/ have built in support for that it doesn't, such as generic BT chipset TV tuners.

    4. Re:Hardware Config by jonadab · · Score: 1

      > Having reinstalled Windows many times, I know what makes
      > it better for me: automatic hardware detection.

      Automatic hardware detection if you don't mind having no
      working ethernet card and 640x480x8bpp graphics at 60Hz
      (i.e., much visual pain). The majority of systems I've
      installed Windows on, I've had to visit at LEAST two
      manufacturer websites to get working drivers (please,
      don't talk to me about the drivers on the CD that the
      manufacturer ships with the hardware, grumble), and the
      video driver is almost always one of the two, meaning
      you have to spend five or ten minutes trying to navigate
      a corporate website (heaven help you if it's one of the
      major OEMs that make you jump through six hoops just to
      FIND the downloads section) using a painfully bad display.

      I've never had that problem with Mandrake. Just tell
      it what video mode to use, and it _does_ it, no flak
      about needing a $#@! driver. Granted, I've only installed
      Mandrake on about four systems (verses Windows on lots
      more systems than that, sometimes numerous times on the
      _same_ system), but the ethernet and video have in my
      experience always been correctly detected automagically.

      Now, granted, soundcards (especially onboard ones)
      and software modems are more of a problem under Linux.
      But to say that Windows does "automatic hardware
      detection" is a pretty generous assessment. It TRIES
      to do automatic hardware detection... _sometimes_ it
      actually gets it right. On the whole, Windows is more
      likely to detect your soundcard and modem, and Linux
      is more likely to (correctly) detect your graphics card
      and NIC. (Okay, so Windows always _detects_ them, if by
      that you mean detects that they exist, but often it
      reports that it has detected "unknown hardware" and asks
      you where to find the driver... I don't consider that
      form of detection to be successful.)

      Still, for easy-to-install, no OS can beat the BeOS.
      BeOS has some problems (like, the company that created
      it became insolvent, for example), but it had the ease
      of installation thing *nailed*. Way ahead of its time
      on that front, BeOS was. Shame about what happened to
      the company.

      --
      Cut that out, or I will ship you to Norilsk in a box.
  16. comments by lingqi · · Score: 2

    I can not speak for RedHat because I have never installed it. but i have done solaris a couple times and have to say that UNIX installs are, or, *SEEMS*, a lot easier for people who are familiar with terminologies like "root", "/opt", and somesuch. Or at least not as frightening.

    I just want to say that "easy" is a very subjective idea, and any results need to be taken with a grain of salt. I would not be surprised if a MCSE find UNIX / LINUX installs very difficult, not because it's difficult per-se, but rather simply the scared and don't know what's comming mentality

    --

    My life in the land of the rising sun.

    1. Re:comments by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think RedHat is easier than Solaris. But I don't have any quantifiable metrics, just my general impression after having done each a few times.

      The first time I did a SCO box it took me about 6 tries and it was really scary. I think having a guide or recipe to follow make the first time with a new O/S a lot easier, it would almost make up for a lack of actual experience - if it was well written and concise w/o all that technical mumbojumbo that modifiable l users don't get anyway.

  17. Who cares? by Maxx · · Score: 0, Troll

    Who the hell cares and why would you install windoze anyway?

    1. Re:Who cares? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because not everyone gives a crap about Linsux?

  18. Faulty Comparison by numark · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This test has one serious fault in it that I can see. The tester didn't use a stock W2K disk on a clean system, he used a Sony restore disk, which is a lot different than what Windows 2000 would normally be installed as. A lot of that time installing Windows could be attributed to the restore disk installing all of the myriad programs that come with new computers

    Sure, I truly believe that Linux can come out on top with new installs. But do we really need to bias test results in our favor, and then expect corporate users to take us seriously? If Linux users want to show the superiority of the OS, they need to present fair, unbiased tests that are indicative of real-life situations, instead of twisting tests around in subtle ways.

    --
    Want Slashdot headlines on your site? Try SlashHead
    1. Re:Faulty Comparison by a_n_d_e_r_s · · Score: 1



      Yes, but thats what mom and pop has when their disk dies ...

      Since that is the default that one get to reinstall the software - if MS thinks it better for the end users to have restore disk then it should be easier to install - should it not ????

      MS should not want mom and pop to use a harder way to install the software after a hardware crash - or should they ?

      --
      Just saying it like it are.
    2. Re:Faulty Comparison by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe, but if mom and pop is the comparison baseline, I don't think mom and pop are going to take to Linux too well when their usability criterion is "will it (magically) get me onto the Internet?"

    3. Re:Faulty Comparison by R3 · · Score: 1

      "Yes, but thats what mom and pop has when their disk dies ..."
      Or, when their disk dies, mom and pop usually return their PC to their friendly CompUSA or BestBuy store and get a replacement for either the disk or the whole unit, with the Windows magically preinstalled on it.
      I recently met an elderly couple who didn't even understand the concept of hard disk, yet successfully used their PC for the last 4 years.
      Potential Linux users? I think not.

    4. Re:Faulty Comparison by drsoran · · Score: 3, Insightful

      This test has one serious fault in it that I can see. The tester didn't use a stock W2K disk on a clean system, he used a Sony restore disk, which is a lot different than what Windows 2000 would normally be installed as. A lot of that time installing Windows could be attributed to the restore disk installing all of the myriad programs that come with new computers.

      That's not really a fault though, that's reality. When you install Red Hat Linux you're getting 3 cds worth of applications. When you install the Win2k disc you're getting the OS, IE, and Windows Media Player and that's about it. No Office suite or games (well, minesweeper probably which doesn't count). To compare RH Linux and Win2k you need to compare them both fully installed with all their final apps in place which is difficult to do as system application configurations vary considerably on the different platforms.

    5. Re:Faulty Comparison by MsGeek · · Score: 2

      I defy you to do the mom n' pop test after installing Lycoris. It WILL magickally get them onto the Internet. Just feed it the IP info and you're good to go. What's more, you have everything you need right there. No need to install anything further.

      --
      Knowledge is power. Knowledge shared is power multiplied.
    6. Re:Faulty Comparison by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What's an IP?

    7. Re:Faulty Comparison by Accipiter · · Score: 2

      If that's the case, then the test is only relevant if you own that particular Sony Vaio.

      Wow. How useful.

      What you're proposing might as well be a comparison between dd and rawrite, and how fast they burn either a fully installed Linux or Windows image to disk. Pretty pointless, if you ask me.

      Though in my opinion, the fact that they used a restore disk negates the validity of the test anyway. If you want to compare a Linux distribution installer versus a Windows installer, then use the goddamned Windows installer. A restore disk is NOT a Windows installer; it's an image writer.

      --

      -- Give him Head? Be a Beacon?
      (If you can't figure out how to E-Mail me, Don't. :P)

    8. Re:Faulty Comparison by gostbustaz · · Score: 1

      The shorter Linux install comes with the "myriad programs" too... So it is a fair comparison. Go from nothing to a fully-functional OS with software to run on it.

      Don't forget the 3-4 times you have to redo the Windows installation because the installer does different things each time you run it - especially XP (of course this could be due to the fact that I've never used a legitimate M$ licensed copy so I wouldn't know if the real thing works or not).

  19. why not win XP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    why is he comparing the 3 year old windows 2000 to a new version of redhat?

    Windows Xp's installation is far less input-intensive as 2000.

  20. A better test by Platinum+Dragon · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I'm a Lunix-loving looser (tm Trolls, Inc.), but I think this could in no way be called a proper test.

    A better test:

    2 identical stock computers, fairly recent but not top-of-the-line hardware
    1 copy of Windows XP
    1 copy of the latest version of Red Hat, Mandrake, or other selected distribution
    2 clueless users
    2 clueful users
    1 administrator to wipe the machines after each test
    1 instruction manual per OS
    No gurus
    4 runs - one with the cluebies doing Windows, one with Linux, and one of each with the clued-in pair.
    Neither user can help the other; both are isolated

    We know Joe's a Linux advocate. Let's have a real test.

    --

    Someday, you're going to die. Get over it.
    1. Re:A better test by garcia · · Score: 2

      would those two "clueful" users know fdisk?

      That would make the test a REAL test.

      That's the main complaint of anyone I have known who has installed Linux. Most people have not a clue about partitions or setting one up (nevermind fdisk's archaic, horrid interface).

    2. Re:A better test by Platinum+Dragon · · Score: 1

      Fortunately, the better distributions include easier tools than fdisk as a primary option for Joe Clueless User.

      No, I'm thinking of a pair of users not quite at the level of an administrator who can fart Perl scripts on a good day, but someone who knows the difference between root and Administrator, someone who knows what a partition is and has even set one up, in any favoured OS.

      --

      Someday, you're going to die. Get over it.
    3. Re:A better test by DevNull+Ogre · · Score: 1

      Have you ever used RedHat's Disk Druid? Smooth like butter.

      And letting the installer choose on its own is fine for people who don't want to care about how their disk partitions are laid out.

    4. Re:A better test by garcia · · Score: 2

      maybe b/c I am a "clueful" user I find DD hard to use than fdisk. In fact, it really fucking pisses me off to use DD.

      Maybe I am just too old school.

    5. Re:A better test by kyjello · · Score: 1

      Although this would make for an interesting test, I feel it would be hard to find 2 clueless users that are equally clueless.

      --
      kyjello is too damn smooth to make a signature.
    6. Re:A better test by arkane1234 · · Score: 1

      I don't know about you, but the last time I've ever used fdisk under dos was back when I installed win98. Every version of Windows (even NT 4) told you what was available very nicely and asked you where you wanted your system. It also gave you the option in case you didn't know wtf was going on to just hit a key to wipe everything and let windows do it's thing.

      As far as Linux, we're talking redhat... it has an interface made specifically for that, disk druid. Hell, it even has what I like to call an "idiot key" where if you don't know wtf your doing it'll just make the partitions for you. (best guess scenario)

      Neither would be the most optimized, but both will get them through it without an issue.

      fdisk is dead to everyone but the more advanced users who need to use it to do partitioning schemes on their own.

      --
      -- This space for lease, low setup fee, inquire within!
    7. Re:A better test by g()()ber · · Score: 1

      Would the clueful users know fdisk?
      Maybe not. But they'd read the help and figure it out.

      Would the clueless users figure out fdisk?
      Not likely. My first look at linux was trying to install Mandrake. I got to DiskDrake. I knew I had to make a partition for all the linux stuff. I even made the jump on my own to use a seperate partition for /boot (My one flash of genius blown on a failed o/s install). Once I figured out what these 'mount point' things were, the 'root' concept dawned on me. But I couldn't get passed there. You, I'm sure, are thinking "duh. you need a swap partition." But I didn't know that. The installer said nothing about it. The help button on the page said nothing about it. It just wouldn't let me click 'next'. I didn't stumble upon that bit of information for another 6 months, during which I ran win2k.

      --
      I am so one thousand three hundred and thirty seven!
    8. Re:A better test by zangdesign · · Score: 2

      Go down to the athletic dorm, social fraternity or sorority, or the theatre department to find your clueless users.

      I can authoritatively tell you that most actors in a theatre department will be pretty clueless about setting up a PC.

      --
      To celebrate the occasion of my 1000th post, I will post no more forever on Slashdot. Goodbye.
    9. Re:A better test by jandrese · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Beware the Fdisk on the windows install disc. I tried using that once and not telling it to eat the entire disc. It did exactly what I told it to, it took about half of the disk, right from the middle. I kid you not, I pulled the disk up in Partition Magic after it was installed and was horrified to discover that the windows installer stuck its partition smack dab in the middle of my disk. I had two quarter sized unused blocks on either side of the windows install. That blew my mind. How could the Fdisk be so stupid? Fortunatly Partition Magic has no troble moving windows paritions around.

      --

      I read the internet for the articles.
    10. Re:A better test by archen · · Score: 1

      + 1 BSD guy who bursts in to the room periodically and says "hah HAAAAH!" just to piss of everyone so they aren't thinking clearly when they install. Then you can see if people can fix what wasn't installed "just right"... which to me would be a more important test.

    11. Re:A better test by kaoshin · · Score: 1

      Corel Linux had an option to do partitioning automatically or manually, and if you chose automatic it would make like a swap partition, and put the rest all under one ext2 partition (yeah I know why thats not advisable, but my point is the functionality of it). I'm not sure about the other distributions, and yeah I know Corel Linux was real buddy, but I thought that was one of the best parts about the installer, and something other distros could learn from. My favorite (debian) included. On the other hand, as a coder I know it is a lot easier to make suggestions than to implement them, and sometimes other things take priority.
      Personally, I had an easy time installing both windows and Linux. The difference was I spent more time recovering windows because the software I needed to run hosed it all the time, where as with debian I only reinstalled because I hosed it myself. The difference now is I learned from my mistakes, and windows still has some huge issues, at least for my uses.

    12. Re:A better test by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Easy, just go to Walmart (Harver Norman in Aus) and get 2 computer sales clerks!

    13. Re:A better test by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Thank you for specifying 'clueless' and 'clueful'. I think a lot of people would have erroneously stated 'smart' and 'dumb', or 'good' and 'bad'. I know a fair bit about computers, but the limit of the knowledge of my car stops with it takes gas and needs oil changes. Does it make me clueless? Yes. Stupid? No.

    14. Re:A better test by laserjet · · Score: 2

      I agree with you. Disk druid may be easier to use, but I used fdisk a lot and have learned to love it. it's quick and easy after you have spent years using it!

      --
      Moon Macrosystems. Sun's biggest competitor.
    15. Re:A better test by Ziviyr · · Score: 1

      I like cfdisk, but last few times I've used it I've noticed it is doing its megabyte to cylinder calculations wrong and I have to do math to give it wrong figures so it'll do what I want.

      --

      Someone set us up the bomb, so shine we are!
    16. Re:A better test by bshroyer · · Score: 1

      Your proposal, while certainly fair, points out the pointlessness in measuring which is OS is more easily installed. To wit:

      Assume for the moment that for the totally clueless users (picture your grandmother) the Linux installation was judged by them to be the easier of the two. It's now ten minutes later, and the box is up and running, and grandma knows nothing about her computer, or what it can do.

      I'd rather have her sitting in front of the XP machine at this point -- she stands a lot better chance of figuring out how to do something useful or entertaining herself under XP, knowing nothing at all about computers, than she would under any Linux distro I've seen.

      So what did we learn, now knowing that Linux is easier for the clueless to install? Nothing.

      For the record, given a choice between Linux, Windows XP, and Mac OS X, I'd choose OS X any day of the week for my clueless grandmother to install and use effectively on her own. But that wasn't the question...

      --
      The cure for cancer is coming: Reovirus
    17. Re:A better test by fiftyfly · · Score: 1

      sure, but instead of 4 potential users, make it 10000 random users. Then we'll talk about statistically significant experiments.

      --
      "Sanity is not statistical", George Orwell, "1984"
    18. Re:A better test by Captain+Large+Face · · Score: 2

      ...and why only Windows and RedHat, why not lump in MacOS 10.2, to get a broader picture?

    19. Re:A better test by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If your grandmother had never used a windows machine either, XP would be equally difficult to her. There's no such thing as an "intuitive" computer interface. What seems intuitive to you is only that because it's similar to what you've used before and are used to.

      She'd just be pressing keys or maybe clicking on stuff (once she notices that moving the mouse moves a pointer on-screen) until something happens, which is the same first-experience in both OSes.

    20. Re:A better test by pipo_clown · · Score: 1

      Why use fdisk when you have Partition Magic? How could you be so stupid?

      Fdisk rules ;-)

    21. Re:A better test by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you're looser than tighten it up! Things are too loose already.

      Or are you one of those losers that can't speell?

    22. Re:A better test by Platinum+Dragon · · Score: 1

      Windows won't install on Mac hardware, Mac OS X won't install on x86 hardware. This is expressly a Windows-Linux test, though an accompanying option for installing Mac OS X on Mac hardware might be an interesting sideline.

      --

      Someday, you're going to die. Get over it.
    23. Re:A better test by Platinum+Dragon · · Score: 1

      Normally, I don't reply to trolls, but something I have to point out...

      The misspelling is common enough that the trolls even include it for kicks, as I did here. I know quite well the correct spelling. I'm actually shocked at the number of people who consistently misspell loser.

      It's not that hard.

      (And this posting time limit just bit me in the arse.... lame.)

      --

      Someday, you're going to die. Get over it.
  21. Windows, by far. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Didn't yet read the article, but I've got to say that Linux has the worst installation processes. I'm a long time unix user (early linux and BSDs). But redhat failed to install on a compaq at work, had apmd issues (constsnt crashes), and a later version of redhat couldn't masnage to change install CDs. Various dists of linux failed. Very pathetic. FreeBSD, no problem. Debian, no problem.. but we didn't try it first. Linux has VERY FAR to go in terms of *reliable installation*. (And then go try and get Nvidia working with X11.. a kernel module compile? Good god folks). We have a lot of work yet....

    1. Re:Windows, by far. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      try again.Sorry but Compaq for whatever reason has given
      me the biggest problems of any type of equipment.
      Right after HP of course.

  22. What happened to his conclusion? by aardvarkjoe · · Score: 2
    I found it rather odd that he had a fairly decent and professional approach towards his description both installs; however, the conclusion completely ignored the installation process and instead was an anti-EULA, M$ is taking over the world rant. It's like he was saying, "The numbers speak for themselves, now, while I've got your attention..."


    That stunt really weakened my opinion of the article. I would really hesitate to use it as evidence in favor of the ease of installation of Red Hat.

    --

    How can we continue to believe in a just universe and freedom to eat crackers if we have no ale?
  23. This article = troll by GoatPigSheep · · Score: 4, Interesting

    First of all, windows2000 is not 3 cd's, it is one. This was not a real install of win2000. This was a use of a propreitary 'recovery tool' supplied by sony. The ads and cd swapping do not occur when you use a fresh install of windows.

    Lets show you what a windows install is REALLY like.

    When I installed winXP corporate edition, here's what happened: I inserted the cd, set up the bios to boot off cd. Once the install window appeared, I had complete mouse support with my usb mouse, choose to do a typical install, waited about an hour for it to complete, let the pc reboot a couple of times, put in my serial number, and that was it. I had complete video, sound, and net support. I upgraded my video drivers, and ran windows update, and that was it. Total install time: about 1 hour 15 minutes.

    --
    GoatPigSheep, the 3 most important food groups
    1. Re:This article = troll by Telastyn · · Score: 4, Insightful

      And if you do that install with win2k pro on a modern system it takes nearly a whole 20 minutes. (40 if you need to reformat the drive)(60 if you need to hunt down drivers, which most people won't)

      IMO it's patently simple to install win2k or RedHat these days, and is a non-issue.

    2. Re:This article = troll by glwtta · · Score: 2

      eh, how often do you get the "real" CDs anymore? this "recovery" nonsense is what most people have to deal with.

      --
      sic transit gloria mundi
    3. Re:This article = troll by binaryDigit · · Score: 2

      That's not the point. He's comparing one OEM OS distro to another but then generalizing the results to the OS's themselves. Linux is easier to install than W2K, uh yeah, right. Why doesn't he get a few "most people" users and have them install it and see which OS is truely easier (at least for the "common" user").

    4. Re:This article = troll by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Install W2K with SP3 already added to the i386 folder.
      Install DirectX 8.1b
      Install IE6
      Install any other random thing from windowsupdate.

      It can be done in under an hour in like 4 reboots.

    5. Re:This article = troll by simeonbeta2 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      First of all, windows2000 is not 3 cd's, it is one. This was not a real install of win2000. This was a use of a propreitary 'recovery tool' supplied by sony. The ads and cd swapping do not occur when you use a fresh install of windows

      Ok, good point. This isn't a truly fair comparison- installing from a *real* Win2k is probably a lot easier. That said, obviously to those who get their computers from sony, this is a real install. I've done a few of these for a friend (courtesy of the HP pavilion's "you don't really get an os with this computer so use our 'recovery' disks" policy) and they are a pita.

      Even given the limitations of the story, i think the punchline is a message to emphasize when talking about linux. People are unneccessarily intimidated by the idea of installing linux.

      I recently installed Mandrake8.1 on my win2k system at home. I was shocked (last linux install i did was slackware about 4 years ago and it wanted to know the dataword size on my machine, how big the clusters on my hd should be, etc). Mandrake not only auto detected my hardware, it automatically detected my adsl connection and installed a PPOE client and connects automatically when i boot into linux. By contrast on my win2k partition i had a 3 cd procedure to get my alcatel modem drivers, the ethernet drivers, and run a custom app (<sarcasm>cleverly<sarcasm> named Enternet) in order to get my connection up and going.

      So am i saying that it's easier to install mandrake than win2k? Not yet, but getting close...I wouldn't rate the article a complete troll


      Simeon
    6. Re:This article = troll by jrcamp · · Score: 1

      I got a real Windows XP CD with my Dell Inspiron 8200. I was impressed.

    7. Re:This article = troll by Indras · · Score: 1

      A little hint from someone who's been installing W2K a lot: get Partition Magic 7.0 and use the boot floppies it creates to make your partitions BEFORE installing W2K. The newest version of PM can create partitions and format them in just a few seconds, while the default formatter that comes with the W2K installer can take nearly a half hour on a big drive.

      --
      The speed of time is one second per second.
    8. Re:This article = troll by Billly+Gates · · Score: 2

      I just had to re-install Windows2000 due to a worm being embedded in a porn asf file that infected my whole system. Anyway it took many hours to re-install my whole system pIII-700.

      redhat 7.2:
      -30 minutes to install and all the apps are included.
      -25 minutes to update the nvidia driver and reconfigure XF86.
      total: 55 minutes.

      Lets look at Windows2000:
      - 40 minutes: cd installation including a reformat of my 40gig hd. However no apps

      - 10 minutes: Had to upload all of my backed up apps and service packs from my server

      - 1.5 hour: Installs of Service Pack 2, Drivers, Gvim 6.1, Active Perl 5.6, adobe acrobat, Palm desktop, apache, etc

      - 30 minutes: Visual c++, Visual Basic, msdn, Staroffice

      -3 hours: worm fixes, Windows updates, IE updates, etc

      All of this was through a high speed line. Lets total the 2 up. RedHat: 50 minutes. Windows 2000: close to 6 hours.

      One thing thing I will point out is that if you decide to install RedHat as a server, you need to apply all of the security patches as well as configure the system like I did with Windows2000. I did not include this since I use my system as a workstation and workstation security is good enough behind my firewall by default unless you load alot of daemons. But in my experience Windows2000 is so insecure that you have to use all of the patches even for a home system. My own system, my brothers and fathers have all been turned into zombies in one form or another. Yes they use unpatched versions of IE 5 and Outlook (shudder) but they are behind firewalls. The firewalls make no difference if the system is insecure. I am sick of seing c:\netstat -an|find "113:

      TCP 113 0.0.0.0 listening
      or
      TCP 666 204.67.23.1 Synchronizing

      You need all of the patches in any win32 system. Anyway another thing great about Linux that the author did not mention is that the apps are included by default install. In Windows you need to install the OS, then install each app. This is what causes alot of time recofiguring a system.

    9. Re:This article = troll by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Gee, sounds like fun. Let's shell out another $40 in licensing...

      Try GNU parted. It'll do what you just said for free. It'll take probably 10 minutes on the web to figure out how to use it, and you won't be out any money. It lets you do way more then Partition Magic, too.

    10. Re:This article = troll by neilb78 · · Score: 0

      Very True! Nice comments. The only thing I'd say (and this could be resolved in newer versions of Redhat) is that the disk partitioning should be easier. Exactly how would I know to create a swap partition the first time I installed Linux/Redhat....it's not like I'm actually gonna read the freakin' manual?

      --
      © 2004 The SCO Group, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
    11. Re:This article = troll by martinde · · Score: 2

      > And if you do that install with win2k pro on a modern system it takes nearly a whole 20 minutes. (40 if you need to reformat the drive)
      >(60 if you need to hunt down drivers, which most people won't)

      If you run all of the updates, it takes quite a bit longer than 20 minutes - you have to reboot at least 10 times. It's actually quite unpleasant. Honestly, for a "real" machine do a fresh install of either OS is a bit of a pain, and it probably always will be. Installing the OS is one thing, restoring your data and customizing the machine is another.

    12. Re:This article = troll by El · · Score: 2

      No, he's also counting the 30+ minutes it takes to download all the recommended security patches off the network, rebooting between each one because it will only let you do one at a time. So I'd say install time is greatly affected by your network bandwidth, as well as CD drive speed. Your milage may differ. In general, Mandrake now seems to ship with support for more devices than Windows 2000, but that's just my experience.

      --

      "Freedom means freedom for everybody" -- Dick Cheney

    13. Re:This article = troll by glwtta · · Score: 2
      meh, maybe it's not the point. I've long said that things like RedHat, Mandrake and SuSe are easier to install than Win2K (and that's not for me - mr l33t haX0r who obviously doesn't know anything about real people - myself, I like Gentoo's install the most - clean and powerful). And whatever else, their installs are friendlier looking and less intimidating. Why is everyone so hung up on this install thing anyway? It's not like MS are trumpeting their install being the best thing ever; it's not like anyone in the target audience actually has to install it; and it's not like any OS that people have to install themselves will ever be popular with the so called "masses"

      oh yeah, the biggest thing most people complain about with gnu/linux installs is package selection - well MS certainly found an elegant solution to that problem. :)

      --
      sic transit gloria mundi
    14. Re:This article = troll by askii64 · · Score: 0

      I've always found that most of the time I don't have to reboot nearly as much as MS wants me to when installing Windows... how? Well, instead of rebooting every time it asks you to (say, for 10 different updates it might ask 10 times), just click Cancel/No, and then once everything is done installing, reboot the machine yourself. Saved me hours back in the '95 days. I've only come across one installer that forces you to reboot, and that's DirectX, which doesn't have to be updated that often.

      --

      -This quite possibly mangled, stupid, demented comment was brought to you by Askii64.
    15. Re:This article = troll by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A little hint from someone with a clue.

      get Symantec Ghost.

      Or, for on the cheap, sysprep an install, then have at least a boot floppy with dd and netcat.

    16. Re:This article = troll by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      When I installed winXP corporate edition, here's what happened: I inserted the cd,

      Newsflash: home users, unless they purchased an XP upgrade, where shipped a RECOVERY DISK SET.

      Not a seperate Microsoft Windows system disk. A recovery set of CD's specifically tailored to that bit of hardware.

      This would be exactly the drill a home user would have to go thru to recover from a catastrophic failure.

    17. Re:This article = troll by hyperturbopete · · Score: 1

      yeah, if you have a completely blank installation.

      A realistic installation requires:

      format
      win2k
      reboot
      finishing installation
      reboot
      network driver
      reboot
      grafix driver
      reboot
      service pack
      two reboots during install, IIRC
      norton antivirus or similar (otherwise
      youre asking for it)
      reboot
      office
      reboot

      ok, now you have a decently functional machine
      perhaps you want time management software, etc.

      you probably want a bunch of little utilities too,
      like acrobat, winzip, etc. most of these ask you to reboot.

      Now remember, win2k reboots are not that fast . . . (linux boots faster)

    18. Re:This article = troll by hyperturbopete · · Score: 1

      oh and I forgot the norton antivirus update and the reboot for that too... otherwise no point in having norton : (

    19. Re:This article = troll by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your comparison would have been more valid if you included formatting the drive on your redhat machine and if you had installed an older version of redhat and had to spend time downloading and installing updates.

    20. Re:This article = troll by BJH · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately, parted doesn't handle NTFS.

    21. Re:This article = troll by jrumney · · Score: 1
      Let ME show you what a Windows install is REALLY like:

      When I installed Windows XP home upgrade edition, here's what happened: I inserted the CD, set the BIOS to boot off CD. The installer offered me the option to first clean my system of Windows ME, which I did, since it was a new PC with nothing on there I wanted to keep, and prefered to use NTFS rather than FAT32. Following that, it refused to install, because I didn't have a Microsoft Operating System installed on the PC. So I got out the "System Recovery CD" that shipped with my PC. The installer did not recognize that as a valid Microsoft OS. Luckily I had a Mandrake DVD lying around, and haven't looked back after the flawless install. It detected every piece of hardware, including my aging but still healthy "Windows only" inkjet printer, for which only Windows 95 and 98 drivers are officially available. Try to get that sucker working under XP.

    22. Re:This article = troll by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And if you use WinXP - an OS more designed for the consumer - you just pop in the disk, reformat the drives using QUICK NTFS (takes about 30 seconds for a 20 gig drive), and the machine reboots itself, installs everything, then waits for the CD Key. You type in the CD Key and voila a new Windows XP system.

      Windows Update for XP (and now recently changed for 2000 also) lets you install most things without dependancies also (i.e. except for service packs, you can install everything at once, not in some strange order which requires rebooting.)

      Definately easier than RedHat Update which requires you to sign up for an up2date account, register your computer type, go through their website and make sure your account only has one computer enabled (unless you buy up2date subscriptions) etc.

      Now RedHat is free, so paying for up2date is a good idea, but it still is more complex to set that up, let alone when I used RH7.2 I never really saw a big icon on the desktop or KDE/Gnome menus that said "UPDATE YOUR SYSTEM" in a conspicuous place.

    23. Re:This article = troll by Telastyn · · Score: 2

      Right, but where are all the RedHat security patches or updates? There's at least a half dozen critical updates to commonly used libraries and applications that require recomilation.

      In my experience RedHat boxes are so insecure that you have to use all the patches, even on a home system.

      Does *nix have a great advantage by putting all of the apps in with the OS? yeah, but far too often you have to upgrade or patch them anyways.

    24. Re:This article = troll by Telastyn · · Score: 2

      Updates:

      SP1: reboot.
      SP2: reboot.
      misc patches from windows update.com: reboot.
      IE install: reboot? (don't remember)
      actual OS install: 2 reboots.

      okay, so 6. And like I said, on any MODERN system, where boot times, even for win2k are ~1-2 minutes, this isn't a big deal. It'll take longer than that for Joe User to figure out what RedHat options to choose.

    25. Re:This article = troll by Telastyn · · Score: 2

      Ahem, like I said, on any MODERN system, you have the network drivers and graphics drivers are on the install cd.

      Norton is not required unless you're a moron, and does not require reboot.

      Office is not required unless you're a moron with moron friends that send word docs to you, and does not require reboot.

      a NTP client does not require reboot.

      Acrobat, winzip, winamp, textpad, and general "useful" utilities do not require reboot.

      In my experience Linux does NOT boot faster, it just outputs far more stuff when it does so.

    26. Re:This article = troll by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My brother-in-law installed Win2Kpro on his machine. It went pretty well except he lost his scanner. Nothing worked...he got new drivers off the website, called microsloth and everything he could think of. In the end I got the scanner off him cheap. :) He said it was worth losing a scanner to have a decent OS at last. He went an entire day without a single lockup and was so astounded he never looked back at win 98. Seems a scanner was a small price to pay.

      coldfire

  24. patch after patch after patch by Openadvocate · · Score: 0

    That part I hate the most about installing W2K is not the installation itself. It's all the post installation crap.
    Before you have installed all patches, you have rebooted 20 times. But then again, I don't install W2K very often so the people with Windoze skills might not hit that yes-to-reboot button everytime.
    And their web-update thingy, wouldn't let me install patches in only 256 colors. It was about that time I ended my experiment with checking out W2K, so I exchanged the CD in the drive with FreeBSD which was what the machine was intended for in the first place. And I am still bugged by the fact that we still get so many new machines with Windoze licenses even though we have no use for them.

    --
    my sig
    1. Re:patch after patch after patch by Opie812 · · Score: 0

      That part I hate the most about installing W2K is not the installation itself. It's all the post installation crap.
      ...like having to use Windows.

      --
      I'm not a nerd. Nerds are smart.
    2. Re:patch after patch after patch by kryptobiotic · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure how smart the installers are in W2K or XP but if you hold down the shift key while selecting reboot from the start menu, the system doesn't reboot, only windows does. The fact that you don't go back to the bios, check memory, check removable media, and all that other stuff cuts down the time spent on those 20 reboots.

  25. Yesterday I upgraded two machines by Diesel+Dave · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Debian Sid: 60 MB of upgrades. 20 Minutes including DL.

    Windouche 2000: Sp3 and 3 security patches. 80 minutes and 4 reboots.

    'Nough Said

  26. 21 Years by BryanL · · Score: 0

    If you are going to count 21 years since DOS 1.0 at least end on their most current OS XP.

    1. Re:21 Years by binaryDigit · · Score: 2

      Plus by his logic, you should go back to the original Unix on the PDP to count when the first *nix install was done (as if installing DOS vs W2K have even the slightest thing in common). A truely terrible article.

  27. A forest for the trees by gr3g · · Score: 1

    SuSE has to be one of the easiest installs out there. But I've been using linux since 95 so it's kind of like seeing the forest if your the tree. I don't really expect an impartial article from a linuxworld writer. To be fair I wouldn't expect one from something like PC magazine either, since they appear to be bought off most of the time.

    --
    "It has always been this way and it won't change, god bless the fucked up USA" The Briefs
    1. Re:A forest for the trees by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > SuSE has to be one of the easiest installs out there. But I've been using linux since 95 so it's kind of like seeing the forest if your the tree.

      Unfortunately SuSE's hardware detection is twitchy (didn't set up my cd-rom or mouse properly) and it's only good if you use KDE. Thier installation of Gnome is utter crap.

  28. Windows 2000 is a horrible install by peterdaly · · Score: 2

    As someone who installs RedHat on a regular basis since the 4.2 days, I much prefer the RedHat install. It is easy and fast.

    Windows 2k seem to take forever to install, even on a fast machine. I can do a similarly sized (in data) RedHat install in much less than half the time it takes for Windows 2000.

    I dread installinf Windows 2000.

    -Pete

    1. Re:Windows 2000 is a horrible install by vadim_t · · Score: 1

      The install itself isn't half as bad as the security updates. Seriously, what does a Win2K user do after installing? You have to connect a unpatched system to the net,and spend several hours installing patches and rebooting while hoping nobody will hack your system meanwhile.

    2. Re:Windows 2000 is a horrible install by drsoran · · Score: 1

      The install itself isn't half as bad as the security updates. Seriously, what does a Win2K user do after installing? You have to connect a unpatched system to the net,and spend several hours installing patches and rebooting while hoping nobody will hack your system meanwhile.

      Not a big deal since you're on an isolated network or behind a firewall aren't you? Aren't you?? Is it even possible to reinstall Win2k these days on a live network? I've seen people on open networks setting up brand new IIS webservers with a fresh Win2k install that get exploited before they can even finish downloading the patches. It's almost too comical to imagine. And to think, just 5 or 6 years ago we would have all sat back and laughed at the stupid users when they called up tech support and said "My friend says there is an e-mail virus going around, what can I do to stop from getting infected?" Lo and behold, Microsoft brought us this feature that was only a hoax before!! ;-) Where do YOU want to go today?

    3. Re:Windows 2000 is a horrible install by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He should have also benchmarked NTFS format in setup (easily 45 minutes on a 60gb disk) to mke[2,3]fs, tune2fs -j, or mkreiserfs.

      Formatting in the 2000 install is the longest, XP adds a "quick" format option but it doesn't do any checking before ejaculating all its bits on your filesystem.

    4. Re:Windows 2000 is a horrible install by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      and if ur setting up an IIS machine with windows 2000, u disable any websites hosted by IIS while u installed the updates to it.

  29. Well, not exactly by WebBug · · Score: 1
    Let's start with the executive summary of the article by the author
    I expected Windows 2000's installation would be seamless, fast, and lightyears ahead of upstart Red Hat's by any measure I could concoct. It turns out the Windows 2000 Pro installation is superior to Linux, but in two dubious categories. (2,000 words)

    Reading the text, it turns out that the author actually found Red Hat supperior pretty much across the board. So much for summaries.

    While I'm on the topic, I'd like to see a comparission with Windows XP, I just did four installations of XP and one of OpenBSD. All five were flawless and worked perfectly first time. All completed within minutes of each other and required only minimal interaction on my part.

    My opinion is that Microsoft has improved their installation process many orders of magnitude over the last few years, about time, eh? However, I still find the *nix to be far more secure out of the box and much easier to keep that way.

    Summary: biggest Objection to Windows -- License!

    --
    Later . . . . . . WebBug // I don't really have 8 arms but . . .
    1. Re:Well, not exactly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      WTF. If you understand the install of OpenBSD, you can
      finish up the base install before XP has finished
      copying files to the harddrive.
      But there is still alot to do after the base install
      of OBSD 3.1 . Up to 014 patches.
      zero packages
      x is not set up.

  30. Does it really matter? by bogie · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Linux for the most part became easier to install then windows with Corel linux years ago. That is like 5% of the end user experience when talking about OS's. Its after the install which is really the only part that matters.

    BTW he's lucky he didn't have a Orinoco wireless NIC because with RH 7.3 it can be a real PITA. That alone would have put a damper on his "review". Don't get me wrong I'm a longtime Redhat booster, but it just goes to show how subjective a review on "OS installs" can get depending on hardware.

    --
    If you wanna get rich, you know that payback is a bitch
    1. Re:Does it really matter? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But then my wireless NICs aren't supported at all by Windows.

  31. What about MacOS X? by rjung2k · · Score: 2

    How about a Linux vs. Windows vs. MacOS X installation three-way bout?

    1. Re:What about MacOS X? by WebBug · · Score: 1

      Don't ask much do you?

      OS X won't install on x86.

      Windows won't install on MacPPC.

      However, OpenBSD vs OS X on a MacPPC (G3 PB). the OpenBSD installation is no different than on x86 machines, no surpirse. Takes no longer. Ask no extra questions. It does require some knowledge of the underlying hardware, but no more that you would for x86.

      On the other hand, OS X install from a recent OS X purchase was . . . well, brain dead. Put in the disk, boot from CD, click install, fall asleep for 15 minutes, click "reboot", wait about 68 seconds and voila, OS X is up and running.

      I'd say "no comparison" and I like openBSD, but I use them for different things.

      --
      Later . . . . . . WebBug // I don't really have 8 arms but . . .
    2. Re:What about MacOS X? by PythonOrRuby · · Score: 2

      A comparison could be made. Install OS X on a Mac of some type, then install Windows Xp via VirtualPC.

    3. Re:What about MacOS X? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have installed XP on VirtualPC (both on a Mac and a Windows box ironically). It works, but CHOKES everytime eventually. What a waste of time of an OS.

      Of course my Windows XP says the WDMGR.EXE something-er-other is not a valid update manager anymore and won't update. This all from a fresh install (adding NOTHING) and simply started with updating at Microsoft. Already broken...

  32. Bad Reviewer! by futuresheep · · Score: 1

    This wasn't a comparison of a Windows2000 to Red Hat install, it was a Red Hat vs. Sony System and Application Recovery CD set install, which is a completely different process. The standard Windows 2000 install is MUCH easier than this, and requires a total of two reboots, with no disc swapping.

    1. Re:Bad Reviewer! by gruntvald · · Score: 2

      You conveniently ignore the mandatory patching that is required on a W2K box.

    2. Re:Bad Reviewer! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, That was a poor way to compare the two and if he had done a standard windows2000 install it would have been a whole different story.

    3. Re:Bad Reviewer! by ceejayoz · · Score: 2

      And RedHat never needs patching, right?

    4. Re:Bad Reviewer! by futuresheep · · Score: 1

      Red Hat needs to be patched out of the box as well, up2date is simply better suited for doing so.

    5. Re:Bad Reviewer! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You don't need to reboot Red Hat every time you apply a patch!

    6. Re:Bad Reviewer! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A vanilla W2K install can be horrendous. If the OS is
      older than the hardware, the user will have to search the
      web for 3rd party drivers.
      2 reboots??? You must have been busy on that bong.

    7. Re:Bad Reviewer! by Qrlx · · Score: 3, Informative

      YOu don't have to reboot windows after every patch either. I just installed 28 patches on a new box. After it was done I had to do one reboot.

      All in all, if you do a clean install of 2000 here's how it goes:

      Pop in CD, choose your stuff like disk partitioning, reboot.
      Setup copies some stuff, reboots again
      GUI Setup asks for the product key, and basic setup stuff (date time, network), and reboots
      After that reboot the computer is ready to use. However you will probably want to apply SP2, which will take a reboot.
      After that there are about 35 things in Windows Update you'll want, but you can roll about 30 of them into one d/l and reboot when it's done
      A few updates must be installed separately, like SP2SRP1 and IE5.x SP2.

      Altogether, it takes about an hour and a half and it requires like nine reboots (I didn't count them all).

      Most things, though, aside from new HW drivers, don't need a reboot. Like installing office, that doesn't require a reboot.

      What's the big deal about rebooting anyway? Yeah, its a pain to set up computers manually, that's why they invented RIS and all that stuff. RIS notwithstanding, computers actually reboot in like under a minute these days. It's the copyingn files and setting up plug and play devices which takes like an hour in Win 2000 setup.

      I can't believe, though, that the reviewer is comparing the redhat install to the use of the Product Recovery CD. That's like comparing the time to drive to the gas station and fill the tank with unleaded with the time for the tow truck to come and tow you to the nearest gas station and fill it up.

      I love analogies, they're like metaphors only less so.

  33. what about... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What about which one is easier to un-install? let's see how quickly M$ opens' it's closed fist!

  34. linux vs. windows by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I like Linux just as much as the next /. reader but if you see what are the default applications that are installed in Redhat, you'd have to disagree. I mean, come on, there are at least 5 or more mail programs as an example. Customization is everything in Linux. That's why it is better than Windows(besides the stability).
    But have you ever gone through every package to sort out what you do and do not want in the install(for RH at least). It's takes a bloody long time.

  35. The install "logo-rhythm" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Here is my ass
    Which you may kiss.
    Take time and aim well
    You don't want to miss.

    For if you aim low
    And your lips they do fall
    Then you will find
    You'll be sucking my balls.

    If you aim high
    Despite your true heart
    Sucks to be you
    Now you're eating my fart.

    Thank you, thank you very much. I'll be here all week. Please tip your waitstaff.

  36. FreeBSD is the easiest by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I've installed Windows, linux, and FreeBSD and FreeBSD is by far the easiest to install. All I had to do was stick in a boot floppy and the installer pulled everything it needed off the net!

  37. macos by bcrowell · · Score: 3, Interesting
    The interesting comparison is with MacOS, which is by far the easiest OS I've ever installed. I don't recall it taking more than 30 minutes, and I've never had a single problem, or even had to read any documentation. Of course, Apple has the advantage of controlling the hardware. Some of the hassles and failures I've had with Linux installs had to do with unusual hardware.

    Why compare with Windows? The interesting thing about Windows is how long it takes to erase.

    1. Re:macos by Maniakes · · Score: 1

      Maybe its just good design. BeOS, which was developed in part by ex-apple people, manages to install in 10-15 minutes on just about any system, without control of the hardware. The only problem I've ever had with it is lack of drivers.

      I used to do QA for Be, so I've installed BeOS hundreds of times, on clean systems, on top of older versions of BeOS, on top of other OSs, and on a new partition alongside MacOS, Windows, or Linux.

      --
      A legparnasom tele van angolnaval.
    2. Re:macos by binaryDigit · · Score: 2

      Maybe its just good design. BeOS, which was developed in part by ex-apple people, manages to install in 10-15 minutes on just about any system, without control of the hardware. The only problem I've ever had with it is lack of drivers.

      Two problems with your statement. The length of the install is totally dependant on what's being installed. BeOS came with hardly anything in terms of end user apps, of course it didn't take very long to install. Plus, unless we're talking about > 2hrs, most people won't care about the time. After all, doing a 15 minute install 6 times doesn't really save you any time. Better to have a _clear_ install that helps you from doing something stupid (swap partition too small, doh!) so you only have to do it once. Most eggheads "know" how to install so they can install almost any OS quickly (not 3 cds and 2hrs+ like the bozo who wrote the article) and the "average" user usually doesn't do an install at all anyway (unless their system got munged by a virus).

      Second issue is lack of drivers. One of the things that makes WinXX take a while to install is it's initial execution of most of it's primary drivers in the beginning (load driver, driver load fails, guess they don't have that hardware, next).

    3. Re:macos by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Right. Where can I get MacOS for my x86 box?

    4. Re:macos by SN74S181 · · Score: 1

      You can't.

      Therefore, it takes an infinite amount of time to install MacOS.

      MacOS loses, hands down.

      Personally, I think NetBSD is faster than any of the above. Though you don't get much beyond bare X11 and the Tab Window Manager in the default install, you at least get that much more control over what does get installed on your system.

      And it installs on Intel and Apple Hardware, all the way back to an SE/30. What current Apple software product will install on an SE/30??

    5. Re:macos by Pointdexter · · Score: 1

      Why compare with Windows? The interesting thing about Windows is how long it takes to erase.

      A:\>format c: /u

      --
      Party Time: Excellent
    6. Re:macos by jonadab · · Score: 1

      > Why compare with Windows? The interesting thing about Windows
      > is how long it takes to erase.

      Not very long if you use fdisk.

      Seriously, though, with Windows 9x the (very significant)
      amount of pain it took to install was relevant, because it
      needed to be periodically _re_installed. With NT, it really
      doesn't matter so much, because almost everyone is going to
      be working with an OEM install.

      --
      Cut that out, or I will ship you to Norilsk in a box.
  38. Linux! by TheKubrix · · Score: 0, Redundant

    Linux wins hand down, regardless of distro (unles your completly new and confused), I say this mainly because first you have to install windows 95, then windows 98, then windows 98 SE, then locate all or most of your drivers and patch that beast up, whereas linux for the most part is kept up to date with its distros and does all this for you. And getting you windoze box on the net won't be easy either as the default browser is IE 3, now how in the hell are you gunna upgrade that POS when even microsoft doesn't support IE 3 for its website, much less other sites where you need the drivers! ....so mainly because of versions, drivers, and patches, windoze is far more complex and a pain.....

    1. Re:Linux! by Hex4def6 · · Score: 1

      Nonsense.
      If you're using the UPGRADE version of windows, sure, you'll need the CD, but often it allows you just insert the previous version of windows, and continue installtion. Also, windows update is an incredibly usefull resource. You let it scan your PC, and you download all the patches in a bundle, with no user intervention needed.

    2. Re:Linux! by moltensilicon · · Score: 1

      Well, the majority of users Linux is trying to win, people like you seem to call them "new and confused"

    3. Re:Linux! by arkane1234 · · Score: 1

      What the hell are you talking about?

      Sure, you have to install all of those peices of software if you only have upgrade cds laying around! Jesus....
      I have a copy of Windows 98SE sitting here that is installable by itself, why would you need to install 95, then 98 in order to get 98SE installed?

      As far as IE3, I haven't seen that since NT4 default install. (well, actually isn't that an even lower version? lol) Win98 uses a higher version of IE, and so does every other version of Windows.

      I'm not a Windows advocate by a long shot, but lets try to be fair here. We're talking about installing Win2K, not going across the board with borrowed upgrade cds.

      --
      -- This space for lease, low setup fee, inquire within!
    4. Re:Linux! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Last weekend I tried updating a secretarys 233mmx pc from windows 95 osr2 to windows 98se. The installer told me to go buy the upgrade version, because the full retail install cd that they bought wasn't good enough. So I went and downloaded a pirated copy of the upgrade edition because Microsoft can suck my dick and spit my load up thier own ass.

  39. 21 Years Old, hah! by WilliamsDA · · Score: 0, Redundant

    Considering that it had it's 21st birthday today, it probably won't be easy until later tonight.

  40. umm...I dont think so by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Your telling me that some guy that writes colums for Linuxworld.com is going to be unbiased? Look, I'm all for a Penguin for president but at least do it right.

    Take the most current of each OS..Redhat vs. XP.
    Now take joe schmoe off the street and tell him to install them from scratch and then look me straight in the face and tell me Redhat is easier to install.

    Come on ppl..stop the lemming effect.

  41. I'd like to see.... by GammaStorm · · Score: 1

    ...a similar comparison using both a novice Linux user and a novice Windows 2K user and see the results. I'd be more prone to believe their experiences compared to just one person who probably has experience in both.

    I use both, but deal with Windows as my job on a daily basis. If I have an issue with Windows I know how to clear it up quickly, if I have an issue with Linux I know I'm off on the Google Trail. This doesn't make Linux bad, it's only a matter of experience in the field.

    I'd also like to see the novice Wiindows users expression when trying to choose packages to install on the web site. :)

  42. heck yeah by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    i've always said, if Macrosoft could get an installer that did all of the dirty work first, and then let the user be, the world would be a buggier place

  43. What is the problem? by forgoil · · Score: 2

    Put the XP CD in, boot. fix the partitions, start it, let the stuff run until it says "I'll reboot your computer now", make sure it doesn't boot the CD this time, w8, enter name, w8, enter timezone/language etc, w8, enter IP(etc) or choose dhcp. w8, log in.

    What is the problem? I can't run the redhat install for you since I haven't installed redhat for a very long time (and I won't do it again unless someone pays me for it), but I am quite sure it is very much similar. Heck, the Gentoo manual install isn't even tricky if you read the instructions. Heck, it is even REAL easy.

    Comparing install proceedures doesn't say much at all (even less if the OS is pre-installed). I don't know about you, but the time I spend installing OSes is wastly much less than the time I spend using computers. Comparing everyday usage in an objective way would have been much more interesting for sure.

    1. Re:What is the problem? by be-fan · · Score: 2

      Heck, the Gentoo manual install isn't even tricky if you read the instructions. Heck, it is even REAL easy.
      >>>>>>>>>
      He he. I've got it down to about ten minutes (stage3 tarballs). After having to do it nearly a dozen times while I hosed my system continuously trying to prelink it, I got to the point where the install commands had commited itself to muscle memory. Finally got a clue and just xfsdump'ed an installed system image*.

      * Which, btw, is just one of the cool things you can do totally easily in Linux (just man xfsdump; xfsdump [options]) yet you need to read tons of MSDN articles and figure out complex GUI programs to do in Windows.

      --
      A deep unwavering belief is a sure sign you're missing something...
    2. Re:What is the problem? by GigsVT · · Score: 1

      make sure it doesn't boot the CD this time, w8, enter name, w8, enter timezone/language etc, w8, enter IP(etc) or choose dhcp. w8, log in.

      Where is this "w8" key?

      Oh, maybe your "a","i", and "t" keys are broken.... No that can't be it, you used them elsewhere in your message.

      Maybe you have trouble spelling "wait"? I can understand, it is a pretty complicated word to spell.

      Maybe you enjoy destroying the credibility of your whole message, and eroding the meaning of the english language with AOL leet chat speak?

      Some people I just don't get.

      --
      I've had enough abrasive sigs. Kittens are cute and fuzzy.
  44. You're missing the point...as usual by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why am I replying to this? How many times have I heard this stupid question? My point is that it doesn't really matter which installs easier...if you know what hardware you have, linux is easiest by a mile. This of course changes if you get some box by a company that uses funky hardware designed specifically for windows. HOWEVER, it's not about the install, in the REAL world people are concerned about ease of use after install. I don't know a single person that just lives to install OSs on their computer all day...most care to use it eventually.
    SO, get a mac and run OSX. I've used linux for years and windows longer...but I've seen the light! I'm now an official Mac biggot and am interested in *nix power, easy install, AND usability...by the way, you get what you pay for.

  45. I dont think so. by pkplex · · Score: 1

    Windows is by far easier to install than Linux.

    One of the prime examples is X11... which is almost always a total bastard to configure for newbies.

    Sorry, but Linux is far more complicated and tricky to install than Windows.

    PS: IMO Linux will never be a decent desktop untill X11 is replaced with something far better.

    1. Re:I dont think so. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Whoa, now there's a post from the wayback machine! When was the last time you installed Linux? 1999?

      Most distros configure X pretty much automaticaly. Do you want to see how easy it is for X to autoconfigure w/o doing a full install? Burn thisand reboot.

    2. Re:I dont think so. by arkane1234 · · Score: 1

      Or until X11 has a default XF86Config that basically has a basic VGA-like display to it that will run on almost any vga monitor. (alot like Windows does by default)

      --
      -- This space for lease, low setup fee, inquire within!
    3. Re:I dont think so. by pkplex · · Score: 1

      Nah... X11 is very slow. VGA wont fix that.

    4. Re:I dont think so. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm not using anything named knoppix thanks.

    5. Re:I dont think so. by walterbyrd · · Score: 1

      I have installed both windows and linux dozens of times. I would say that, on balance, windows is a lot easier.

      You must consider: what if the installation is not 100% smooth? With linux, you're lucky if drivers exist at all. If they do exist, it can be difficult to find and install. X11 configuation can be a nightmare, it can ruin the entire installation.

  46. Wrong Comparison by DarkHelmet · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Windows 2000 Pro and Redhat 7.3? What kind of rigged game is this?

    I'm sure the Slashdot groupies would get a laugh if Microsoft compared Windows XP to Redhat 6.0.

    This is like comparing a 1.5 ghz Athlon and a 1.5 GHZ Pentium 4. You don't... There's no point. Stop comparing apples and oranges people.

    Flamebait, maybe. So what, reply. Prove me wrong.

    --
    /^[A-Z0-9._%+-]+@[A-Z0-9.-]+\.[A-Z]{2,4}$/i
    1. Re:Wrong Comparison by be-fan · · Score: 2

      How is this rigged. 7.3 isn't really any different from 7.0, which was released in 2000 as well. Besides, the Sony machine came installed with Windows 2000 Pro, which would tend to mean that the machine was built for it (ie. all hardware was supported out of box).

      --
      A deep unwavering belief is a sure sign you're missing something...
    2. Re:Wrong Comparison by Tarison · · Score: 1

      I think his point was it is 'rigged' because it isn't comparing the latest available release of both OS flavours. Why not compare Redhat 7.3's functionality against the old Windows 3.11? Not like we have to stick to the OS debate, either: Intel is far superior to anything Apple has to offer.. just look how my Pentium 4 compares against an Apple IIE.

    3. Re:Wrong Comparison by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      well, I'm an experienced linux user and can easily find my way through most software installations (be it windows, linux, solaris....). I installed XP on my brand new dell laptop. Printer? It didn't work...had to download drivers...Network? "Oh, Joe user, let me do it for you". It didn't work either.

      You know what? Software is making me a dumb user. Soon I'll have to ask for "expert help".

    4. Re:Wrong Comparison by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I installed XP on my brand new dell laptop.

      Well, if it's brand new there's a chance that a year old operating system won't have the drivers for it included.

    5. Re:Wrong Comparison by be-fan · · Score: 2

      Not really a valid comparison. If you are comparing Apple vs Intel, and you compare a $1000 iMac circa 2000 vs a $1000 dollar Dell circa 2000, its a very valid comparison. Both are in wide circulation, and give a very good picture of the state of the two systems in the real world, not just in the bleeding edge lab benches. Similarly, both Windows 2000 and Redhat 7.3 are extremely widely deployed. Using Windows NT would have been unfair (since it is no longer supported) and since Windows XP hasn't taken off like MS had hoped, it wouldn't have been the best choice either. If you go into a server room today, you'll most likely find Win2k or Redhat 7.x. Given that they're both roughly the same age, the article (if anything) is just slightly out of date, not biased.

      --
      A deep unwavering belief is a sure sign you're missing something...
  47. Completely unbiased review... by parabyte · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Jim Independent, a WindowsWorld.com columnist, compares Linux and Windows installations. He expected Windows to be faster and easier since Microsoft has been at it for 21 years. (DOS 1.0 was released 21 years ago today.) It turns out, Windows is quicker and less manually intensive."


    Honestly, it is easy possible to find configurations where I can prove either view. In general, it is still a pain to get all hardware supported and configuered under linux; wlan, firewire, cameras and high-end audio devices are just a few examples I usually spend days to make them work properly.

    p.

    --
    Without order, nothing can exist. Without chaos, nothing can be created.
    1. Re:Completely unbiased review... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree, and I also wanted to comment on the '21 years' thing. Linux is based on Unix (like Windows is based on DOS) and Unix goes back over 30 years, so I don't see how that is relevant.

  48. Installation != Configuration by coene · · Score: 1

    This article has no point to it. Its not a real installation of Windows in the first place, its a proprietary OEM install.

    The real comparison should be the ease and ability of the end user to Install AND CONFIGURE the system.

    1. Re:Installation != Configuration by stoolpigeon · · Score: 1

      You're right.

      Some others have said it as well. Installing w/packages like RedHat is a breeze- but if you want to change something once that install is done, that's another story.

      I've reinstalled rather than try and make changes on some systems.

      .

      --
      It's hard to believe that's how Micronians are made. Why don't we see it right now by having you both kiss one another?
  49. Linux wins by iamdrscience · · Score: 3, Informative

    I'm not very much surprised by this at all. About two months ago I installed Windows 2000 and Mandrake Linux on my brother's laptop, the Linux installation was rediculously easy while the Windows 2000 was a pain because (1) it took longer and (2) I had to download a couple of drivers (Linux worked fine!). Also once I had Windows installed I had to run Windows update like 8 times and restart like 3 before I was even REALLY done.

    I know the Mandrake installer now is much easier than most the distributions, but I believe that other distributions will be similarly easy soon. I know that the Debian installer is/was supposed to get a revamp so that it would be way easier, which is good because Debian is sexy.

    However, an easier installer doesn't mean much because hardly any of the regular computer users of the world actually installed their OS. If Linux really wants to crack into "the regular user" (does it?) what really needs to happen is they need to infiltrate the companies selling ready-to-run systems.

    1. Re:Linux wins by iamdrscience · · Score: 1

      Oh yeah, I also did a similar thing installing Mandrake and win2k on a desktop recently, Mandrake was pretty easy but I'm spent about 3 times longer installing win2k and it's still not on there yet.

    2. Re:Linux wins by MtViewGuy · · Score: 2

      Hold it right there.

      Here's a question for you: what version of Mandrake Linux were you installing? If it's Version 8.0 or later, it has way more hardware support than Windows 2000 Professional on its default install.

      A more valid comparison would be Mandrake 8.x versions versus Windows XP on an install.

    3. Re:Linux wins by kaitsu · · Score: 1
      Still the Mandrake hardware support isn't complete enough... I just installed a couple of weeks ago win 98 and Mandrake 8.2 to a computer with SiS 730S chipset. Installing Windows and a couple of applications required about a dozen reboots, Mandrake rebooted only once and was really nice and simple.

      But nicer installation doesn't quite make up the fact that I still have no audio in Linux and that my USB ISDN-modem isn't working. Mandrake seems to recognise both just fine, they just aren't working...

  50. Falacy by EdMcMan · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The reason most people think installing Linux is harder is because they make it harder. Most people starting with Linux have used Windows first, and therefore want to dual boot, which requires repartitioning and other fun stuff. Now, if you were going to Windows from Linux and wanted to do this, you would have the same problem.

    1. Re:Falacy by fferreres · · Score: 3, Insightful

      After you install linux first-time-ever, you don't understand anything at all. You undertand only what's been mirrored from the windows experience. Ok, you can use an Office suite and some apps, but that's about it.

      You don't really understand anything not to mention that the names of the programs and utilities are really confusing. With Windows you need to know much less, because it's been specificaly tuned to easiness. It asumes you don't know skwat. Windows for a power user (system and tools, not apps power user) may be a little lacking. The security may be crap. But it's pretty straightforward. Linux can setup easily, but administrating it and customizing it is a pain. And if some distro makes a tas easier (ex: mandrake font importer) it's not because Linux is simpler, it's because there is a little tool to hide the underliyng complexity. And this is different than just droping some fonts in a /windows/fonts folder.

      I would install Linux for a newby that wants to try it, but I don't expect him to know how to use Linux. I only expect him to fire up some apps and close them when done. He couldn't do anything else without learning quite a bit.

      I am not mentioning compiling stuff, putting things in the right places (correct prefix when needed), lddng, recompiling a kernel if he's using some hardware that wasn't supprted earlier.

      It can be made easier, but it's NOT easy, you can only hide it. Windows on the other hand always asume the user will know nothing, and all installers (not just windows) inherit that view.

      --
      unfinished: (adj.)
    2. Re:Falacy by Eloquence · · Score: 2
      I think you're touching on the same two major problems that are being touched on again and again by all people who argue that Linux is not ready for the desktop -- and I agree. The problems are X' font handling (and the complexity of X11 in general) and the software installation.

      For the font handling I don't really see a solution on the horizon (I don't know how Mandrake does it -- but I can hardly imagine that it solves the glaring incompatibilites between how different Linux apps handle their fonts, encodings etc.). I'm not very happy with X' slowness in general (window resizing, moving etc.) and hope that it will sooner or later be replaced by something more suitable for desktop use like Berlin or DirectFB. Hopefully, this will also bring us reasonable font management, nice and fast anti-aliasing etc. Certification for apps that comply with some minimum standards would also be nice.

      One key problem here is that the combined efforts for desktop Linux are relatively modest -- SuSE, Red Hat, IBM, HP, Sun, these are all interested in the server market and don't care much about the desktop. Mandrake and Lycoris are different, but Mandrake is running out of cash and Lycoris never had much cash to begin with. The one billion dollars IBM invested in Linux are almost exclusively used for pushing it into the server market.

      The other major problem of LotD, software installation (dependency hell), is virtually solved with Debian and Gentoo (although a source-based distribution is obviously only useful to very few people). Mandrake is, this is my understanding, working on a similar solution to apt-get (urpmi). And apt-rpm seems to be gaining some following. Red Hat wants to make money with up2date, so they're not interested in a free udpate service.

      I'd love for the people to agree on a standard -- a lot of work is being duplicated here, resources wasted unnecessarily -- but distributed groups rarely agree on standards, because of competition and personal vanity. This is not a problem unique to open source, just look at the DVD mess. In fact, OSS might have better chances to solve these problems if some distributors (Red Hat: "We don't need the LSB, problems will solve themselves" -- Debian: "We don't need to agree on a packaging standard! Ours is technically superior, it should be used by everyone!") weren't so bone-headed.

      One problem you don't touch upon is the X clipboard, which, while it's making progress, is still very much inferior to the almost universal Windows clipboard, not to mention extremely buggy (have had huge problems pasting large amounts of text into different browsers, for example). But this is related to X11's general problems and complexity -- X11 is really slowing Linux progress in my opinion.

      You make a mistake if you believe that Linux users "like" these problems -- they have just learned to deal with them. But nobody with any amount of sanity left could argue that X' font handling is anything but modularity gone horribly wrong. Only the unfortunately very loud zealots seem to believe that if your denial is strong enough, the problems will magically disappear. In this respect, MS could learn a lot from OSS: If you create a community of true believers, they will do everything to cover up the flaws of your product.

    3. Re:Falacy by fferreres · · Score: 2

      Well, it's a difficult task, because you need to do glue many different subsystems that are meant to be used at the console level. In a sense, it's like a garage hot-rod. It's certainly as powerfull, can sustain 9000 rpm for hours and some people will just love it above anything. On the other hand, Windows is like a BMW.

      --
      unfinished: (adj.)
    4. Re:Falacy by lightcycler · · Score: 1

      Good point. For a real test,

      (a) Setup Mandrake-Linux so that it dual-boots on a windowsXP machine,
      and
      (b) setup WindowsXP so that it dual-boots on a linux machine.

      What? Windows can't do that? Well that kind of makes the comparaison irrelevant, wouldn't you say? You can hardly compare ease-of-use between a powerful tool and a toy.

    5. Re:Falacy by andrewski · · Score: 1

      I believe it's spelled 'phallusy'.

  51. What I think people neet to look at.. by WndrBr3d · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Is not which OS installs faster, but which OS installs with less exploitable services off a fresh install.

    1. Re:What I think people neet to look at.. by Jonny+Ringo · · Score: 2

      Is not which OS installs faster, but which OS installs with less exploitable services off a fresh install... the fastest

      sorry, just wanted to add that back in there. :-)

    2. Re:What I think people neet to look at.. by M.C.+Hampster · · Score: 1

      Gimme a break. I guess I can turn around and say, "What we really need to be looking at is how many off the shelf applications you can install after you are done..." or "Which OS is easier to use by a newbie..." or anything else.

      Is it even possible to stay on topic for once around here?

      But yes, the parent post is soooo insightful....

      --
      Forget the whales - save the babies.
    3. Re:What I think people neet to look at.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So you vote for OpenBSD then, right?

      What's your point? Hey, I know, just emphasize an area you know your favorite OS will win rather than the ease of use of functions that real joe-six-packs will care about.

    4. Re:What I think people neet to look at.. by Proc6 · · Score: 1

      If so, then "DOS 0wnZ y0u"

      --

      I'm Rick James with mod points biatch!

  52. Another redundant "unfair comparison" claim by erat · · Score: 5, Informative

    I dislike MS as much as anyone else, but come on! This installation competition thing is like comparing apples to BMWs...

    First off, a Linux newbie would have absolutely NO clue about half of the stuff Mr. Barr did for the Red Hat installation. Clearly Mr. Barr is a seasoned Linux guy and can breeze through partitioning, network configuration, boot manager selection, package selection, etc. Try any of that on a Linux newbie ("...What's DHCP? And what the hell is this GRUB thing it's asking me about? I'm calling tech support...").

    I agree that the Windows installation is slow, has too many reboots, and is not fool-proof as far as hardware detection goes. However, the installation of all Windows products except for the so called "enterprise" editions is set up for people who don't know all that much about hardware. The old 80-20 rule kicks in here: if 80% of the folks are covered by the installation, that can justify the remaining 20% who need hand holding. I still have not encountered a Linux installation that does not assume prior knowledge of technical acronyms, Linux-isms, and common package names (how many new Linux users do you think have any clue that Samba offers Windows network connectivity? How many Linux installations present Samba as a "Windows networking" option and not as "Samba"? None that I know of, that's how many).

    As a pro-Linux, pro-BSD, pro-open-source guy, I'm giving this comparison two thumbs down. Sorry, Joe...

    1. Re:Another redundant "unfair comparison" claim by sulli · · Score: 1
      This installation competition thing is like comparing apples to BMWs...

      why is that unreasonable?

      --

      sulli
      RTFJ.
    2. Re:Another redundant "unfair comparison" claim by Tarison · · Score: 1

      A very honest, thought-out, and unbiased view. Windows covers enough for the computer illiterate to get them using their computer. I'm neither pro one OS or the other (I just want to be able to use my computer for a wide range of things, some I can do easier in Linux, others I can do easier in Windows.) With all the complaints most people have, you'd think Windows was too hard for them :p

    3. Re:Another redundant "unfair comparison" claim by El · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Likewise, a Windows newbie would have no idea how to configure Windows. True, whichever OS you have the most experience with will seem easiest to you. Having experience with BOTH operating systems, I still find Mandrake easier to install than Windows 2000 -- and I have a lot more experience with Windows. Installing ANY operating system is not for the faint of heart. Of course, my DVD ROM drives don't seem to be able to boot a CD, which makes things harder.


      Ask yourself if this is a symptom of "bloat": the Mandrake Linux installation requires 1 boot floppy. The Windows 2000 installation requires 4 boot floppies!

      --

      "Freedom means freedom for everybody" -- Dick Cheney

    4. Re:Another redundant "unfair comparison" claim by bwoodring · · Score: 1

      Actually, Windows XP will auto-configure everything, and my Mom can (and has) installed it with no problems. BTW: Windows 2000 requires zero boot floppies, the CD is bootable.

    5. Re:Another redundant "unfair comparison" claim by iamdrscience · · Score: 1

      well yeah, the Mandrake CD is bootable too, but he meant "requires" as in "if you're booting with a boot disk it requires". I also had the problem of a CD-ROM drive that I couldn't boot off of and let me tell you, the one Mandrake boot disk was way easier to deal with than the four Win2k disks.

    6. Re:Another redundant "unfair comparison" claim by Arandir · · Score: 2

      Okay, if you didn't like that comparison, here are four others you can do instead:

      1) Have two complete clueless newbies do the installs. One for Window2K and one for Redhat. They both have empty harddrives to work with. Which one will win? Frankly, I don't know. I would give it even odds.

      2) Same test, but with gurus. Pit a Windows expert against a Redhat expert. Which one will win? No question about it, Redhat will win.

      3 and 4) Now for the acid test of reality. Same two tests, with the same people, but this time they must install their respective systems on the second partition of the harddrive, without blowing away the preexisting OS on the first partition! I'm pretty sure who will win.

      "...What's DHCP? And what the hell is this GRUB thing it's asking me about? I'm calling tech support..."

      What? They don't have DHCP on Windows? I'm shocked! "Hello, Microsoft? Could you put my ISP on the line, 'cuz I have to ask him if I use DHCP or not. And while you're there, could you explain this NT Boot Manager thing to me?"

      --
      A Government Is a Body of People, Usually Notably Ungoverned
    7. Re:Another redundant "unfair comparison" claim by camken · · Score: 1

      I agree with you wholeheartedly, I use Linux on a fileserver/firewall, Windows 2000 pro on two workstations, Mac OSX on another, and another copy of Linux (RedHat 7.3 if you are counting) and they all have their strengths.

      I am a fairly new Linux user and while my use of it isn't what you would call great (read: can't use it for shit) it was easy to install.

      I am a seasoned windows user and not only don't my windows machines crash (like once in the two years i've had this setup) but they do things easier a lot of the time. BTW, I have no trouble installing win2k if i need to either.

      I am proficient at OSX but not what you might call a 'power user' however, when it comes to multimedia Mac has Linux and Windows both by the short curlies...

      Let's face it people, each operating system is good in its own right and there are simply things that they do better and worse than the competition.
      NOW LETS QUIT SQUABBLING ABOUT WHICH ONE IS BEST AND FIGURE OUT HOW TO GET LINUX INTO THE MAINSTREAM!

      --
      Moo.
    8. Re:Another redundant "unfair comparison" claim by erat · · Score: 2
      1) Have two complete clueless newbies do the installs. One for Window2K and one for Redhat. They both have empty harddrives to work with. Which one will win? Frankly, I don't know. I would give it even odds.

      I'd actually give Windows the edge here. In Windows, you get terms like "hard drive", whereas in Red Hat you get things like "/dev/????". Of course, Red Hat has some kind of default partitioning scheme, but I seem to recall you have to verify its correctness before moving forward. I could be wrong about this as it's been a while since I installed Red Hat.

      2) Same test, but with gurus. Pit a Windows expert against a Redhat expert. Which one will win? No question about it, Redhat will win.

      Why?

      3 and 4) Now for the acid test of reality. Same two tests, with the same people, but this time they must install their respective systems on the second partition of the harddrive, without blowing away the preexisting OS on the first partition! I'm pretty sure who will win.

      Considering that I've never been able to run any Windows OS on the second partition of any drive, I'd say that this is more of a functionality issue than an ease of installation issue. However, I will admit that Linux installations are by far the most cooperative when it comes to setting up booting other OSes at install time.

      What? They don't have DHCP on Windows? I'm shocked! "Hello, Microsoft? Could you put my ISP on the line, 'cuz I have to ask him if I use DHCP or not. And while you're there, could you explain this NT Boot Manager thing to me?"

      In Windows, the terminology is something like "Get IP address automatically", not "Use DHCP". Of the two, which do you think is more clear to a newbie? I'll pick the former. And I'm not familiar with the configuration of "NT Boot Manager", but I would imagine the terminology used in setting it up (assuming it's part of the wizard-driven installations Windows typically use) is not all that cryptic. Keep in mind that most folks who are Windows users probably don't dual boot anything. In fact, I'd be surprised if they have any idea you CAN dual boot a computer. Of course, I could be giving them less credit than they deserve...

      Again, I'm not pro MS. I do think they've done some things right, though, when it comes to installation. It may take longer to do, but installing Windows requires a lot less prior knowledge of the OS than most Linux installations do.

      In the end, who really cares? If all goes well you install once, and from that point forward you have to deal with the OS you installed. I won't judge an OS based on its installation. If I did, Debian would be at the bottom of the barrel (we all know Debian is great, so it's a good thing installation isn't the benchmark that determines the quality of an OS).

    9. Re:Another redundant "unfair comparison" claim by Arandir · · Score: 2

      I'd actually give Windows the edge here. In Windows, you get terms like "hard drive", whereas in Red Hat you get things like "/dev/????".

      This test was between two absolute newbies. "/dev/hda" is going to be as foreign to them as "C:". People who have used DOS or Windows in the past know that C: is the first drive, not A:. But to a newbie that isn't obvious. Why shouldn't it be A:? Why isn't it "1" or "First"?

      Whenever my Mom asks where a certain file is, and I tell her it's on the D drive, she responds "what a D drive?"

      I expect that nine times out of ten, the newbie is going to choose the default install and let the installation program figure this all out anyway.

      Why?

      Well, I don't know that much about Redhat, not having used it in quite a while, but I strongly suspect that an expert Redhat admin can install from scratch in about fifteen to twenty minutes. I know I can do it in that amount of time with Slackware or FreeBSD, because I've done it countless times.

      When you know what you're doing, Linux, BSD and most other Unices let you get it done without getting in your way.

      In Windows, the terminology is something like "Get IP address automatically", not "Use DHCP".

      Not using Redhat, I really don't know what term they use. So I checked in their online manual. Interesting! They use the term "Configure using DHCP", which isn't the most intuitive statement in the world, but right to the left of that statement is a help window that says "If you do not have DHCP client access or are unsure as to what this information is, please contact your Network Administrator."

      Now that's helpful! I'm serious. They're actually telling you to ask someone for this info. This is a Good Thing(tm). Imagine some poor schmuck under Windows choosing "Get IP Address Automatically", because it's oh so intuitive, when in fact their ISP assigned them a static IP!

      p.s. If the only thing keeping Linux off the newbie's desktop is the choice of terminology, that can easily be fixed!

      --
      A Government Is a Body of People, Usually Notably Ungoverned
    10. Re:Another redundant "unfair comparison" claim by hyperturbopete · · Score: 1

      um, to be fair, a windows newbie would be just as confused by the win2k installation screens.

    11. Re:Another redundant "unfair comparison" claim by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Windows is too hard for me, that is why I switched to FreeBSD.

    12. Re:Another redundant "unfair comparison" claim by BJH · · Score: 1

      In Windows, the terminology is something like "Get IP address automatically", not "Use DHCP". Of the two, which do you think is more clear to a newbie? I'll pick the former.

      "What's DHCP?" == "What's an IP address?"

      And I'm not familiar with the configuration of "NT Boot Manager", but I would imagine the terminology used in setting it up (assuming it's part of the wizard-driven installations Windows typically use) is not all that cryptic.

      You have to edit a text file, adding the items you need. Hmmm... sounds familiar...

    13. Re:Another redundant "unfair comparison" claim by LippyTheLip · · Score: 1

      I think we are on to something. The average computer user does undersatnd what an operating system does, why it is necessary, and how it is distinguished from an application, a driver, or perhaps even from the hardware. I can't remember how many times people have told me that they use Windows as their word processing program, or asked why they can't play Minesweeper on my Mac (Minesweeper-like Mac shareware or VirtualPC notwithstanding).

      Moreover, the quesiton about whether "Configure using DHCP" or "Get IP Address automatically" is moot for these users. Both are equally opaque. (What's DHCP? What's an IP address?) And instructing them to consult their Network Administrator doesn't help much either, because they don't have one.

      In general, an OS should be easy to install and use and hard to screw up for those without a clue, but robust and flexible enough for those with a clue. IMHO, both Windows and Linux force this complexity on the user, and Mac OS X has gone farthest in reducing the appearance of complexity, while still offering it to the users who want to use it.

      This complexity permeates the experience fo Windows and Linux. Why call it a C: drive? or a D: or and E: drive? Why not call it a hard drive or a CD-ROM or a DVD? Why call it a NIC instead of an ethernet card or socket? We don't call light bulbs by some abscure acronym (perhaps TFE - Tungsten Filament Enclusures?); why do computer parts need obscure names?

      For example, when setting up an Internet connection, Mac OS X 10.1asked me how I connect to the Internet. Do I use a modem? Cable Modem? DSL? Airport? etc. and then configures all the network setings for me. While the most clueless of users might not know the answer to this question, it presupposes much less technical knowledge than either Windows or Linux. (And gives me the GUI and CLI tools to do lower level configuration work if I want to).

      I endorse some of the posts above that have called ffor a three way comparison: Windows vs. Linux vs. Mac

    14. Re:Another redundant "unfair comparison" claim by QueefChief · · Score: 0

      Well the obvious solution to this is spending many hours RTFM'ing. That seems to be the standard response whenever a newbie asks a question.

      --
      Get BannerBlind for Mozilla and block those slashdot ads!
    15. Re:Another redundant "unfair comparison" claim by QueefChief · · Score: 0

      How many CD's are the usual linux distros (and I'm not talking netinst images). Hell, I can afford to download three more floppy images (even on a 56k line), but downloading more ISOs can become cumbersome. (And arguing that retail boxes come with the CDs doesn't reduce the bloatness.) (And arguing that they're optional packages only furthers the notion that it's bloat).

      --
      Get BannerBlind for Mozilla and block those slashdot ads!
    16. Re:Another redundant "unfair comparison" claim by karmaflux · · Score: 1
      Four boot floppies. Wee-hah. You're supposed to boot off of the damn CD nowadays. What's that? It doesn't boot? Get another CD-ROM drive. I just built a computer without any sort of floppy drive at all -- and it's up and running Windows XP Pro -- which, you may remember, is one CD.

      Honestly, you sound like you've lost all grasp of reality. "Linux installs faster than Windows off of fewer disks!" I never in my life expected to hear anyone say that seriously. Windows XP is nearly a fully automated install. A blind man in a dark basement with Parkinson's can install it.

      --

      REM Old programmers don't die. They just GOSUB without RETURN.

    17. Re:Another redundant "unfair comparison" claim by AnyoneEB · · Score: 1

      Installing Mandrake 8.2 I found that almost everything is explained in a help window at the bottom, of course I'm not sure if a computer newbie would have any idea what the text in the help box meant.

      --
      Centralization breaks the internet.
    18. Re:Another redundant "unfair comparison" claim by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      4 boot floppies for Windows 2000? You must have a beta of Windows 2000 or something. Every version of windows 2000 that I've ever used is CD bootable, I have never had to use a boot disk for an install. Try booting off the CD, it might save you a bit of time.

    19. Re:Another redundant "unfair comparison" claim by El · · Score: 2

      But did your mom configure it to dual boot? Nope, didn't think so...

      --

      "Freedom means freedom for everybody" -- Dick Cheney

    20. Re:Another redundant "unfair comparison" claim by El · · Score: 2

      Beleive me, I tried booting off the CD. Try reading the original post, which says "My DVD ROM drives don't seem to be able to boot a CD"

      --

      "Freedom means freedom for everybody" -- Dick Cheney

    21. Re:Another redundant "unfair comparison" claim by El · · Score: 2

      You obviously MUST be working for Microsoft, as money doesn't appear to be a factor to you. I take it Bill gives you all your hardware for free, then? The fact that Windows XP install is fully automated does me no good at all when it does not support my VooDoo 3000 or VooDoo 3500 video cards, or my 3Com 3C509 Ethernet cards, does it? Mandrake DOES support these -- straight off the CD (which was burned from an image downloaded for free off the internet.) Cost to add Linux to my 6 existing computers: $0. Cost to add Windows XP Pro: $1800 + cost of new Ethernet Cards + cost of new Video Cards + cost of new CD ROM drives... oh yeah, now THAT'S a real good deal! (By the way, the Win2K was "free" too, since it came from my $3000/year MSDN membership, which was discontinued before XP shipped.)

      --

      "Freedom means freedom for everybody" -- Dick Cheney

    22. Re:Another redundant "unfair comparison" claim by samdu · · Score: 1

      You still have to deal with DHCP or static addresses on a fresh Windows install. This is a non-issue.

    23. Re:Another redundant "unfair comparison" claim by samdu · · Score: 1

      Windows requires 4 boot floppies because it loads every driver known to man prior to the actual install. I've never understood this. They could probably drop it down to one or two by loading up the most common drivers and then requesting subsequent disks for esoteric stuff or just boot the mouse, keyboard, and ide drivers from the floppy and pull anything else off of CD.

  53. Huh? by burnsy · · Score: 1
    Shouldn't the title of this article be...

    Is Linux or the Sony Vaio System Restore easier to install?

    1. Re:Huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, it should be:

      "Is RedHat Linux 7.3 or the Sony Vaio System Restore easier to install for a seasoned computer user?"

  54. Easier for who to install? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Anonymous to protect my hard-earned karma

    I chose to manually partition the disk using fdisk

    Well, you just lost 99% of Windows users with that one.

    Again...
    It is also a clear sign the RPM package system is superior to whatever Windows uses.

    Superior how? Because of restarts, which are rare after installs these days. I guess clicking "setup", "agree", "next"*, "finish" is too dificult for you?
    Seriously, this community bitches non-stop about Microsoft FUD and BS only to turn around and spit out its own.

  55. Neither is easy by be-fan · · Score: 2

    Both pale in comparison to the ease of installing BeOS (back in the day). First, a nice graphical menu allowed you to partition your disk, or simply choose the whole disk as the target. Then, a simple list allowed you to install the base system, the examples, and the japaneese support pack. After that, it was a single reboot, then one quick trip to the preferences menu to set up your display resolution and network IP. Everything else was autodetected.

    --
    A deep unwavering belief is a sure sign you're missing something...
    1. Re:Neither is easy by Sax+Maniac · · Score: 2

      Everything else was autodetected.

      It sure detected my oh-so-uncommon TNT card... but refused to show the mouse cursor. The mouse worked, you just couldn't see where it was. Even Linux could get this right. So, BeOS got the immediate uninstall.

      --
      I can explanate how to administrate your network. You must configurate and segmentate it, so it can computate.
  56. journalists, take note. by macsox · · Score: 2

    anyone reading this who is a journalist, the lesson is:

    objectivity is for lame-os.

    write from your own point of view! people like it, your articles will become more popular -- you will become more popular!

    it's the american way!

    1. Re:journalists, take note. by kyras · · Score: 1

      objectivity is for lame-os.

      Where can I get a copy of this LameOS? It's objective, you say!? I always hated how redhat was so subjective...

      Yes, I am a wisecracking asshole.

      --
      Tastes like burning! - Ralph Wiggum
  57. Fdisk? you gotta be kidding by greenfly · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Then it was Red Hat's turn. I inserted the first installation CD and rebooted Windows. I chose to manually partition the disk using fdisk. First, I deleted the partition I had originally created for Linux. Then I created a 256-megabyte swap partition and gave the rest of the drive to Red Hat, choosing the ext3 journaling filesystem.

    Ok ok, let's stop right here at the first paragraph. So, he already had his drive partitioned from a previous install (meaning he didn't have to mess with fips, partition magic, etc.) and he used fdisk to partition. And exactly how is this easier than a Windows install?

    Granted, I've used Linux for years, and fdisk isn't difficult for me to use, but having to use fdisk raises the difficulty of an install considerably. I know that RedHat doesn't require the use of fdisk in their install, but this reviewer should have known better.

    I make it a point to try out the various latest Linux installations on a spare machine here just to see how far they've come, and when one compares Redhat to something like SuSE or Mandrake, it still lags behind. RedHat is competing in the Windows NT/2k/XP Workstation/Server market, and isn't apparently too interested in the home desktop market, and their installer reflects this. There are still many questions asked throughout a Redhat install that would require some sort of background in Linux to answer.

    Something like SuSE's install would work better for such a comparison, as it best combines ease of use with configurability. The SuSE install tries to autodetect and autoconfigure everything the best it can, and then presents you with a summary of everything it has done, along with the option to change anything if you want to. The new Linux user would probably just click the "Next" and accept these defaults, while the experienced Linux user still has the option to change anything he wants.

    1. Re:Fdisk? you gotta be kidding by pi_rules · · Score: 1, Troll


      Ok ok, let's stop right here at the first paragraph. So, he already had his drive partitioned from a previous install (meaning he didn't have to mess with fips, partition magic, etc.) and he used fdisk to partition. And exactly how is this easier than a Windows install?


      Try it the other way around... I had an existing Linux installation on an 8GB disk. I move the 8GB disk to the pimary-slave spot (jumpers) and slapped a new 8GB blank disk into the primary-master position.

      ... Insert Windows NT 4.0 disk and begin installation. Lo and be-hold the bugger won't install on primary-master becuase there's stuff on primary-slave that it thinks is evil. It halts... refuses plainly to install. I'm not asking it to go onto primary-slave at all!. I remove the primary-slave drive, try again. Viola. Now that's intuitive.

    2. Re:Fdisk? you gotta be kidding by Mr_Icon · · Score: 2
      RedHat is competing in the Windows NT/2k/XP Workstation/Server market, and isn't apparently too interested in the home desktop market, and their installer reflects this.

      I agree. Here's how Red Hat installation goes for our workstations:

      1. Turn power on
      2. Wait for PXE to show the menu
      3. Type "workstation-install" at the prompt
      4. Walk away

      About 5-15 minutes later the system reboots ready -- if it was a reinstall, kickstart will automatically pull all stored configuration files for X, sshd, iptables, etc. from the backup server during %post. Of course, if this is a new install, running Xconfigurator takes a few more minutes.

      Total admin time spent on reinstall -- 10-15 seconds. Total workstation downtime after a HDD crash -- 10 minutes to put in a new HDD, plus 10-15 minutes until it reboots fully installed. A lot of physicists very happy.

      --
      If you open yourself to the foo, You and foo become one.
    3. Re:Fdisk? you gotta be kidding by El · · Score: 3, Informative

      Dual-boot is much more complex to configure. If he was willing to let Linux take over the whole hard drive, it prompt him once, then repartition the drive automaticially. Note that Linux is much more friendly to dual boot than Windows. You MUST install Windows first; if you install Linux first, then the Windows installation will render Linux unbootable. Hard to say whether this is by design or just laziness, but it does point out a certain arrogance on the part of the Microsoft programmers.

      --

      "Freedom means freedom for everybody" -- Dick Cheney

    4. Re:Fdisk? you gotta be kidding by simetra · · Score: 2

      Actually... it only overwrites the MBR. You can easily boot with a Linux boot disk, go in, and restore your MBR, say with LILO.

      It's not arrogance on the part of MS programmers, it's the assumption that 90+% of people who are installing Windows want Windows to boot when they turn on their computer. Of course, it would be nice if the Windows installer detects any pre-existing boot systems, but that's not really in their best interest.

      --

      "Would it kill you to put down the toilet seat?" -- Maya Angelou
    5. Re:Fdisk? you gotta be kidding by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Really? Strange... I just installed Win98 on a machine with both Debian and OpenBSD installed. You can still boot them, of course you have to go and change the active partition (Evil Windows 98! Evil!) but other than that, it doesn't complain.

      WinXP is a bit trickier, you have to use it's bootloader, otherwise it complains. (OR at least, I've never suceeded in getting WinXP to boot through LILO)

    6. Re:Fdisk? you gotta be kidding by Arandir · · Score: 1

      it's the assumption that 90+% of people who are installing Windows want Windows to boot when they turn on their computer.

      No, the assumption is that there will be only one OS per computer. Win2K hates an existing Win98 just as much as it hates an existing Redhat Linux.

      --
      A Government Is a Body of People, Usually Notably Ungoverned
    7. Re:Fdisk? you gotta be kidding by Yosho · · Score: 2, Informative

      Actually, I've installed Win2k on Win98 machines before, and it even gave me a nice little menu on startup that let me pick which OS to boot from. I've also had experiences installing Win2k and WinXP on machines with Linux already on them, and in neither case did they overwrite the MBR, although it also didn't give me the option to pick between Linux and Windows; LILO started up just fine, in fact, and all I had to do was go into Linux and add the appropriate sections for 2k/XP.

      --
      Karma: Terrifying (mostly affected by atrocities you've committed)
    8. Re:Fdisk? you gotta be kidding by Arandir · · Score: 1

      Okay, that's interesting. I stand corrected.

      --
      A Government Is a Body of People, Usually Notably Ungoverned
    9. Re:Fdisk? you gotta be kidding by Proc6 · · Score: 1

      Uh, arrogance on the side of Microsoft for not setting up dual boot for Linux? What? Microsoft shouldnt have to give a shit about dual booting linux, theyre not the ones trying to play catchup. If they did do that, then they'd have to support it. Why would Microsoft want to support users calling in with questions about their screwed up dual boot Linux process? Thats like saying "It's arrogant on the side of Sony that Toshiba remotes don't work with their TVs".

      --

      I'm Rick James with mod points biatch!

    10. Re:Fdisk? you gotta be kidding by DunbarTheInept · · Score: 2
      having to partition for two OS'es is NOT a disad to put into either column for complexity of OS install. It is a disadvantage of the fact that a dual boot is being arranged, and would be a problem no matter what two OSes were being used. If you start with the assumption that "no fdisking means Windows, and fdisking means Linux" then you are essentially saying that the machine's rightful config is to have Windows on it, and Linux is the "wrong" config that is abnormal. That isn't a fair comparasin.

      (That being said, this guy's comarasin was still a load of horsepucky, for other reasons.)

      --

      Don't label something "offtopic" unless you know the topic well enough to tell what's on topic.

    11. Re:Fdisk? you gotta be kidding by Kenneth · · Score: 2

      Uh, arrogance on the side of Microsoft for not setting up dual boot for Linux?

      No. Arrogance in the assumption that you will ONLY be using Microsoft Operating systems. When I installed NT4 workstation, and turned my box into a triple booting machine, It detected and added Windows 95 to it's bootloader, but blew away LILO.

      When I looked up triple booting instructions, I noticed that it would have been a trivial task to save the original MBR and use at as one of the options. That's really about all that Linux installers do when installing LILO or GRUP. If you dual boot with Linux and BSD, or Linux and BeOS, or Linux and some bizzare OS you wrote yourself, the installer still won't render your other OS unbootable.

      Therefore it is either extreme arogance or extreme laziness on the part of Microsoft and its programmers to simply wipe away the MBR and install what THEY think you should have.

      --
      There is a civil war coming in the United States. Remember which side has most of the guns
    12. Re:Fdisk? you gotta be kidding by DunbarTheInept · · Score: 2

      There's a difference between not bothering to go out of the way to help a competing product, and deliberately going of the way to destroy the competing product (and no, by "destroy" I don't mean in the marketing 'make a better product so people stop using the competitor' meaning, I mean in the very real 'break their product forcibly' meaning.)

      It would take less effort to leave the linux install alone than it takes to ruin it.

      --

      Don't label something "offtopic" unless you know the topic well enough to tell what's on topic.

  58. Nobody can eat just one. by ktakki · · Score: 3, Funny

    Windows is a fairly quick install, which makes those yearly re-installs a breeze!

    And I see that MS-DOS 1.0 is 21 years old. Let's take DOS out to a bar and get it drunk, watch it stagger home and puke in the bushes.

    k.

    --
    "In spite of everything, I still believe that people are really good at heart." - Anne Frank
    1. Re:Nobody can eat just one. by SN74S181 · · Score: 1

      A DOS 1.0 install takes about four seconds.

      That's the time it takes to put the floppy diskette in the drive.

      It'll wait for an eternity until you enter a date and a time during the bootup, though. (DOS 1.0 will NOT let you skip setting time and date). And there's no hard drive support, or subdirectories. (how many subdirectories do you want to HAVE on a 180K floppy diskette??)

    2. Re:Nobody can eat just one. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yearly installs are a symptom of MS-DOS based Windows. I have several Windows 2000 servers and workstations, and they've all been up and running since release day.

  59. Kids these days by s20451 · · Score: 2

    Why, back in my day, we were PROUD of how hard our OS was to install. "It took me 83 floppies and three whole days, catching catnaps on the floor," we'd say. 'Course, in those days, we didn't have any fancy damn GUIs. We had to build our own interface to connect through the serial port, using nothing but chewing gum and twine that we found while rummaging through our co-workers' desks. Why, I once installed the OS on a PDP-11 by licking my finger and feeling the shocks through the serial line. I had an onion tied to my belt, as was the style at the time.

    --
    Toronto-area transit rider? Rate your ride.
    1. Re:Kids these days by big.ears · · Score: 2

      I had an onion tied to my belt, as was the style at the time.

      Abe Simpson, right? Which episode was that?

    2. Re:Kids these days by SN74S181 · · Score: 1

      I've installed NetBSD on SparcStation IPX and IPC machines, over a serial console. Using the NFS method, from a server running Slackware.

      It's sort of cool getting those little Sparc cubes running, without a keyboard or a monitor.

    3. Re:Kids these days by s20451 · · Score: 1

      I think it was the one where Homer organizes a strike at the nuclear plant. Not 100% sure though.

      --
      Toronto-area transit rider? Rate your ride.
  60. Objectivity by nfras · · Score: 2

    While I don't disagree with the findings, the author lacks objectivity and is clearly biased.
    "Friends shouldn't help friends run Windows".

    Had this been a proper test rather than an opinion piece he would have tested the installation process using different methods (CD, network etc) and left out the rhetoric. If he had wanted effect from this article it should have been published in a main stream PC publication and he should have kept his opinions to himself.

    --
    You call me a pedant? I prefer the term "correct"
  61. I use Windows 2000 at work and I promise it's not by BoomerSooner · · Score: 1, Informative

    2 or 3 reboots to install (from scratch MSDN disks). It takes about 3 hours to get all the patches so your computer doesn't get rooted and give someone a backdoor to all your corporate info. I got them to let me setup a demo box running RedHat 7.3 and it's been working flawlessly. Our CIO (new hire) comes down tomorrow to check out our systems. I cannot wait to see the look on his face, our office is a piece of sheit.

    Now at my personal company I run Linux on all the servers and run Windows XP (Games), OS X (& 9), Linux, Solaris (which is the most confusing in my opinion), Win95 (for my ancient dos games) and FreeBSD (Qmail server). I've found OS X to be my favorite GUI by far and once more games start migrating to the Mac I may be able to kill the Windows altogether (doubtful unless the IBM PowerPC is real and not hype).

  62. Non-Issue by teslatug · · Score: 2

    Both Linux and Windows (simplifying names) are pretty easy to install and the "masses" do not care about this. They care about the apps and familiarity.

  63. Someone is smoking the crack! by Daddio · · Score: 1

    OK the only way Redhat is easier than windows is if you select the defaut easy install that will autopartition etc. Then you end up with 500 different text based email programs, sendmail, etc, etc. Whenever I have to upgrade a server (I don't do it that often) it is a six to ten hour job. Something always goes wrong. The red hat installer is ugly too. I am no windows fan bit my dad (60+) can install windows, but the is no way he could perform a redhat install.

    This is one of my biggest complaints with linux. Until you take it away form the tech boys (I'm one so shut up) and let some real usability interface experts work on it. Forget it. It will be nothing but a lab and server OS. Quit fooling yourself that you have any chance of even beating the mac on the desktop.

  64. Doesn't matter by LazyBoy · · Score: 1

    Users don't install Windows.
    It comes installed on their computers.

    --

    If Chaos Theory has taught us anything, it's that we must kill all the butterflies.

  65. can you say "Subjective"? by Hex4def6 · · Score: 1

    That column was BS. First, as has been pointed out, that was not a true windows install - it was some propiatory backup system that probably has numerous checks to make sure that its not running on a non sony system, etc. Secondly, I started off as a windows user myself, and still use it for most of my time. Linux Mandrake/Redhat installations have become a lot easier, but compared to windows, they still require a bit of knowledge about your PC. What was the real point of this article? How often does one really install systems? It's the day to day usage that counts. The number of minutes it took to install have next to nil importance in the long run.

  66. Is it really faster? by frovingslosh · · Score: 2
    I haven't installed this particular version of Linux, but have installed older Red Hat others and tried to install yet other Linux versions. I consider myself technically knowledgeable, but I often had to abort the install , reboot windows, and determine some simple setting that I would have expected the software to determine on it's own. (To be fair, the documentation made it clear that this was going to happen and the first time I installed Linux I did my homework and was ready. Later times I got cocky and had to go back to get something simple like an IRQ setting.)

    Are the Linux installers (at least Red Hat, hopefully others,) getting better at this? I noticed when I tried both Virtual Linux and Demo Linux recently that neither spotted my very typical dLink network card, and they even had trouble with my Nvidia GeForce3 based Video card. I expect Barr knew off of this information for his Linux install, but to be fair, if the install needs the human to look this information up and feed it in, then any time spent resolving these questions for Linux should be factored into the measurement.

    --
    I'm an American. I love this country and the freedoms that we used to have.
  67. Debian is better by tacocat · · Score: 1

    I just did a full installation starting with a single CD. To get the rest of the files I had to download from a cable-modem and install the packages.

    Time from initial boot to final GUI (wdm) based login: 60 minutes.

    And this is done on a Pentium MMX PC!!!

    If you want speed and simplicity, Debian.

  68. GNU/Linux is _way_ faster by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I just thought I'd pitch in that I installed a RedHat (some years ago so I don't remember the version) in a freakin' VMWare on an mid-end PC at the time running NT4. 7.8 minutes. No, that's not a typo, seven point eight minutes. Installing windows NT itself was an excercise in way over 30 minutes (trying to install XP I'd say it's nowadays nowehere near the right side of two hours).

  69. Bad Comparison by 56 · · Score: 1

    This is not a good idea for a comparison. First of all, as someone before me said, (Score: 0, Redundant) this should be a comparison of Red Hat Linux and Windows, not Linux and Windows. I could go out, get a 1-disk-distro, and have it installed in 10 seconds. Secondly, and more importantly, a windows intstall works with nearly all hardware you could have in your computer. A Red Hat install, fantastic as it is (I run rh7.2/w2kpro/fbsd4.3rc) Red Hat's hardware support is still behind windows. Even when hardware IS supported, there is a distinct possibility that it won't get set up correctly in the install, and if this is a fair test, you would have to include the time spent setting it up afterwards. Thirdly, your average windows user is not going to be able to just click on through a Red Hat install and get it right. Fine, they may, technically speaking (in the same vein of technical-truth as those people who, in response to being told that your favorite color is black, tell you "black isn't a color, it's a shade") have the install completed in less time than a windows install, but there will most likely be post-install config that must be done. This is not usually required in a windows install. If you ask me, the text-based sound install that Red Hat has would most likely slow your average windows user down. I think this is just a bad idea for a comparison, Windows and Linux are different beasts (at least in their current form) and should not be compared in this way.

  70. Debian Install by FJ · · Score: 1

    This last week I installed Debian for the first time. I'd heard really bad stories about it and was expecting it to be difficult. I was very happy with the install. The only thing that made it difficult were:

    1.) the sheer number of ways to install (CD, Floppy, NFS, FTP..). The documentation isn't terribly clear on separating each method.

    and

    2.) It didn't autodetect my network cards. No big deal since it let me select the modules for them.

    All and all, I thought it was one of the easier installs I'd had on Linux.

    Now installing OS/2 Warp v3.0, that was difficult...

  71. Snappy Answers to Stupid Questions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Q: Is Linux or Windows Easier To Install?


    A: Linux. Next question.

  72. is this guy even qualified? by diskus · · Score: 1

    i hate when people take "notes" about dumb activities such as installing OSes and pass them off as "reviews" on sites run my morons! hey, you know what, i installed linux on my girlfriend's mom's sister's computer and now, i am the all knowledgeable person qualified to make judgements. whatsever happened to reviews done by those who know?

  73. It's what happens after the install that matters.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    If this userfriendliness what should really matters is which one is easier to manage *once* it is installed.
    So far windows is a big winner. I went through most distribution and windows is always way more intuitive to do thing such as installing fonts setting up a dial-up connection, sharing files on the local network.

    free unixs are much more powerfull... but you stil have to hack your way around to do "simple" stuff.

  74. Rebooting considered harmful... by dpbsmith · · Score: 2

    This is one of these "memory hole" things. I seem to be the only person on the planet that remembers that in the waning days of Windows NT 3.51, one of the promises Microsoft made for Windows NT 4 was that it would almost never be necessary to reboot in order to install new software. I believe they said this was one of their major goals.

    I've tried to find documentary evidence of this claim, but haven't succeeded so far (so who knows, maybe I'm just wrong?)

    What I'd really like to see is a shootout between the UNINSTALL procedures on these two platforms. Windows Uninstalls are a joke. I would say the percentage of times an Uninstall simply a) run to completion without b) saying "Some components could not be uninstalled, you must delete the manually" or c) asking ME to tell WINDOWS whether some QQXXZZ314.DLL is needed by any program anywhere is about, and d) leaves the machine in a state where there are NOT obvious chunks of the software still embedded in the system, is about 5%.

  75. Uhhhhhh... by NeuroManson · · Score: 2

    He states right from the start that he was installing from Sony's VAIO recovery discs... 3 CDs according to the article... Basically a custom set that (apparently) includes Microsoft's setup package as part of the autoboot sequence...

    However, even Windows XP takes up ONE CD on its own...

    Maybe if he tried installing a base Windows OS instead of the kludged and bloated installation CDs that came with the computer, it would have installed faster?

    He is, essentially, damnning an OS because of how an OEM repackaged it, NOT because of how it came from Microsoft...

    Linux users using FUD? Whodathunkit!

    --
    Just because you can mod me down, doesn't mean you're right. Shoes for industry!
    1. Re:Uhhhhhh... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Vanilla cds from microsoft can be a nightmare on
      proprietary hardware like most laptops. Sure you would
      be spared a lot of the extra software but you would
      have to find drivers from the 3rd party manufacturers.

  76. Re:Sad news ... Stephen King dead at 54 by shades66 · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    is it me or has Stephen King died a lot recently?

    --
    ---- There are 10 types of people in the world. Those that understand binary and those that don't
  77. This is realistic... by sterno · · Score: 1

    The fact of the matter is that most people who install Windows will have an experience similar to what was just described. When you buy a computer pre-installed with Windows now you get these recovery CD's and all of them work very similarly to what was just described here. It is accurate to compare what most people will have to deal with in both cases.

    --
    This sig has been temporarily disconnected or is no longer in service
  78. Re:'Installing' isn't everything -- getting online by flamelord · · Score: 1
    good point, setting things up should be considered part of the installation.


    setting up winmodems are especially a pain in linux, especially if you have no easy access to other networked computers. you need to first research (online) which linmodem you need, then download it, and set it up.


    then since basically all isp's don't "support" unix machines need to fiddle with that. (not too hard if you've done it before, but not always trivial either)

    not somethign the typical joe wants to do.

    on an ethernet network, i'll believe the claim that most big linux distro's are faster and as easy to set up as windows. (also; once set up, unix is so stable, you won't need to mess with it again until you upgrade.)

    It would be a nice idea if somebody put together a CD with as many linmodem drivers and documentation, some helpful how to's, and maybe the latest version of mozilla, etc. for those of us who still use dial up at home.

  79. Unfair by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Does anyone else thing this comparison is unfair? First off, to properly judge which is easier to install, you should use a copy of each OS that you baught at Best Buy. Also, they should have a non-tech do the install of both in a single boot configuration. I also found the 'Box Score' missing a few feilds such as explaination of choices, and number of options.

  80. That's no surprise.... by RedElf · · Score: 1

    Linux has become easier to install over the last 3 years I've been playing with it, I'm not going to mention distro's because even though I've tested out many different ones I dont' want to start a disto war...Windows has become harder to install.

    The thing I like most about installing linux is that I can install all the software I want while I'm installing it I find myself done within around an hour at the longest.

    With windows, I find myself getting it installed in about 45 minutes, then I still have to install the drivers, and software...5-6 hours later I might be done. But then again we wouldn't want Microsoft to provide all the software we use with windows now would we?

    --
    You know, I have one simple request. And that is to have sharks with frickin' laser beams attached to their heads!
  81. 2000 pro vs 7.3 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    When was each of these operating systems released. At a guess around the year 2000 for win 2000 pro and 2002 for redhat 7.3 and the operating system which has had two years extra work done on it wins, well I am shocked. The reviewer should have used a linux distribution from around the same release date of windows 2000 pro or used a Microsoft operating system that was released around the time of redhat 7.3. Lets not even get into the fact that the windows 2000 pro cd he used was from sony and not a generic CD

  82. plus how can he really say it is "easier"... by AdamBa · · Score: 2
    ...when his article includes the following:

    "I chose to manually partition the disk using fdisk. First, I deleted the partition I had originally created for Linux. Then I created a 256-megabyte swap partition and gave the rest of the drive to Red Hat, choosing the ext3 journaling filesystem.

    Red Hat asked a few more questions about the system than the Windows installation did, but the default selections were always satisfactory. I chose to use the GRUB boot manager, to place it on the MBR, and for the Linux to be the default. Next, I accepted DHCP as my network settings, medium security, and picked my time zone. The installation asked for a root password and then let me set up as many user accounts on the laptop as I needed."

    I mean come on. Easier for him, maybe. To me one of the main components of "easier" is "can be installed by a less experienced user." I don't see the average grandma calmly partioning the disk by hand using fdisk.

    - adam

  83. enjoy installing linux over windows by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Personally, I feel linux is easier to install over windows, including all those updates and drivers.

    Mandrake Linux has a very straight forward install (Obviously in Expert Mode). Detects, sound card, monitor, network card etc. etc without a hitch. And then does the updates. One reboot, and we are all done.

    Now, since Mandrake comes with a huge list of applications, actually installion time is not really fair.

    With Window2000 Pro (1 CD), it obviously installs quicker because it's only 1 CD ...LOL, (without any apps), but it's those damn MS-Updates that take the longest. They drive me crazy. That is where I detest installing windows. They need to get a Debian 'apt-get update'.

  84. for most people by hereward_Cooper · · Score: 1

    what do you think most people will find easier...

    * leaving their preinstalled window as it is

    OR

    * repartioning their disk and installed linux

    ???

    -- Coops

    --
    zadok.org.uk
  85. And the answer is by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Mac OSX.

  86. biased by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    wow, linuxworld.com eh? you can sorta guess who wins without reading any of the article can't you? how about a 3'rd party site, without a linux or windows guy doing it, just a person who has never done an installation before, that would be a real one, i guess the reason they don't show up here is because windows wins?

  87. Second flame bait today... by BalkanBoy · · Score: 1

    Here is the second one. Is today flame baiting contest on /.? :)

    --
    'A lie if repeated often enough, becomes the truth.' - Goebbels
  88. This review is bogus by Sandman1971 · · Score: 1

    First, let me state that I run both Linux and Windows machines at home, each has it's use. So no flaming :P

    This review is pure BS IMO. The reviewer installed an OEM version of Win2K using recovery disks. In my experience, installing from recovery disks take alot longer than installing from an original Windows CD. Even if you have to download specific drivers for a laptop, it's still faster than using an OEM recovery disk.

    The pop-up advertisements are obviously part of the OEM recovery disk. They are not part of a standard Windows installation. So his complaining on that issue is moot.

    Thirdly, he's comparing the newest RedHat version to a 3 yr old version of Windows. For a more fair review, he should have installed either WindowsXP and RedHat 7.3, or Windows2K and a 3 yr old version of Redhat (which is what, RH 6.1?).

    Why not compare installing Solaris9 and Windows 3.1 and DOS? It was be just as fair as this piece of rubbish. If you're going to do a fair review, then do it right. Don't do it when it's so slanted it's not even funny.

    --
    It's better to burn out than to fade away
  89. Windows is easier for one reason by bwt · · Score: 4, Insightful

    ... vendors install it for you!

    I don't care how "easy" Linux ever is, 90% of people will never, ever install it. Unless more vendors start offering it pre-installed (hooray for Wal-Mart), Linux will never be adopted by any sizable percentage of desktops.

    The whole conversation about "ease of installation" is completely wrong-minded.

  90. Linux is like the... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Linux is like the retarded kid I saw on the playground in 3rd grade, wildly throwing a basketball around, yelling "I can play too!", begging for acceptance by the "real people."

  91. He didn't use an answer file. by hackwrench · · Score: 1

    Don't you know that if you want Windows 2000 Professional to boot fast, you have to use an answer file?

  92. EULA violation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Just out of curiosity, is this comparison a violation of the EULA that he accepted? I have not read it because I don't have windows installed.

  93. I think Winders be easier by grishnav · · Score: 1

    Click-through EULA's are anoying, but eh... don't bug me THAT much.>. All the windows popping up were because he used a recovery CD instead of a real 2k CD. Also, the default admin password was probably caused by the recovery CD (that, or he wasn't paying any attention whatsoever, which seems unlikely by the statistics on the page). Linux is superior when it comes to reboots, and load time, clearly, however, I believe the install process is much more difficult. I rarely run into a Win2k system where the default driver selections are not suitable. I have run into far more linux installations which required a great deal of customization to get working correctly. I really think Windows is the easier install. I think the author's combination of the wrong set of Windows CDs and good luck with RH just gave an illusion. But the reboots are anoying, and I don't like EULAs. And I'm a total Linux fan anyway. But I prefer Gentoo to RH.

  94. Is this a EULA violation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Just out of curiosity, is this comparison a violation of the EULA that he accepted? Isn't this a benchmarking or is it just benchmarking of .NET stuff? I have not read the M$ EULA because I don't have windows installed.

  95. A point everyone missed by pixel_bc · · Score: 1

    I didn't see anyone else in this thread mention it, so I will: The test was run against W2k, not XP. I've installed both -- I have to say the process has been much streamlined in XP.

    Why didn't he run the test with what a consumer would buy today?

  96. Install woes by hurterer · · Score: 1

    As long as getting my Alcatel Speedtouch USB dsl modem to work requires a 10 step process that can only be found on the internet (that's right, the same internet I need the modem to connect to), Redhat installs are not easier than Windows installs.
    Now, I appreciate that the drivers only being available online is the fault of alcatel, not Redhat, but my point is that there were 5 or 6 patches or pieces of software I had to download, and a long (and ultimately futile, but I'll take the blame for that) process I had to go through to get a USB modem to work. What was the advantage of USB again? Ease of installation? Not under Linux.

  97. What Utter Crap by rudy_wayne · · Score: 1

    "Joe Barr, a LinuxWorld.com columnist," --- you don't think he might be a little prejudiced, do you? Strike One.

    "...as I inserted the first of three Sony System Restore CDs supplied with the laptop" --- he then chooses some bizaare installation method to make things even more difficult. Strike Two.

    "Then I set the time and time zone. Again, it rebooted to continue." -- bullshit. I've installed Windows 2000 on several computers and it doesn't reboot at this point. Strike 3. Yer Out!!!

    This article is total bullshit. Windows 2000 only requires one CD, not the 3 (or is it 4?) that he claims in the story. Although I never timed Windows 2000 during the many installs I've done I can tell you that this guy is deliberately screwing around just to skew the results. For comparison, I recently installed Windows XP Pro -- 1 CD, 1 reboot, 18 minutes to install on a brand new clean hard drive.

  98. Moot point... by pXgray · · Score: 1

    It really doesn't matter how easy or how fast it takes one to install either operating system. The main issue is that many people will never ever install an operating system during their entire lives using a computer. In order to gain some ground, Linux needs to have a few _MAJOR_ computer manufacturers offer it pre-installed on desktop systems. Only then will we see an insurgence of Joe Sixpack Linux users.

    pxgray

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    You are at the end of the post. To the north lies the post.
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  99. OEM by droyad · · Score: 1

    I work for a small computer consultancy to whiteboxes. It takes me precicly 5 minuites of work to install windows. I put the CD in, the Floppy in and walk away. I come back 1 hour later and hit the enter key. Windows is installed.

    It does take longer (to install windows + apps) if you consider that many more apps are installed when RH is installed. KDE, GNOME, kOffice, etc.

    BUT the windows install is still simpler, no technical knowledge is needed.

  100. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  101. Pure FUD from Linuxland by double_h · · Score: 2

    I'm a Debian fan through and through, but I have to admit that Win2K Pro is one of the most straightforward, best-designed OS installs I've ever encountered.

    Shame on the aauthor of the article for trying to pass off some oddball vendor-specific version of the OS as an acceptable test case. And shame on Linuxworld for publishing this kind of badly-researched, biased FUD.

    1. Re:Pure FUD from Linuxland by chriskenrick · · Score: 1

      And exactly how good does an install have to be to impress a Debian fan :)

      - Chris

  102. Linux wins, if it supports all of your hardware by RatBastard · · Score: 1

    RedHat 7.3 is an almost brainless install. Very fast and very easy. The only problem is if you have hardware not supported by Linux. With RedHat 7.2 it was my Turtle Beach soundcard that didn't work. With RedHat7.3 it's my GeForce4 Ti 4400 that is not supported. X won't even start. It just dies.

    At this point Linux loses big time to Windows. Windows can boot to damned near any VGA compatible video card and let you install whatever drivers you need to get your video working. No dinking around with odd .rc files hidden in obscure directories or any of that sillyness.

    --
    Boobies never hurt anyone. - Sherry Glaser.
  103. Or what about firewire? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I have firewire and wireless on all my machines and in Linux, it takes forever. Not to mention if you have a laptop with a docking station, you have to reconfigure stuff like hot docking secondary mouse support, apm which is a bitch on linux

  104. Naw, let's take DOS 1.0 to the bar.... by mtec · · Score: 1

    ...that poor old DRDOS 1.0 frequents. He was never the same after losing his day job; became an alcoholic, wife left him - he tried to delete himself but was unerased by his old friend GEM (who is now a homeless transient) ... I think he just may have a few things to say to DOS.

    --
    Cake or Death? Cake Please!
  105. ding ding ding! by puckhead · · Score: 1

    We have the winner.

    --
    Watching Cowboy Bebop in my jammies, eating a bowl of Shreddies.
  106. Rediculous by SirNAOF · · Score: 1

    I dislike M$ and Windows as much as the next guy, but this story is rediculous.

    Mainly, he didn't use a Windows 2000 install CD. When I used 2k on my machine, I used 1 CD, the Win2k CD, and I had 1 driver CD to switch to.

    I can go from no OS to Win2k in an hour. Updated and all.

    I can also go from no OS to Debian 3.0r0 in 20 minutes.

    All anti-M$ bias aside, I'd still be on (almost) any linux distribution to install faster than Win2k.

    --
    Jeremy Baumgartner
  107. Brainless Review by kaustik · · Score: 1

    This review is completely meaningless. It appears that it is a review of a Sony Vaio restore CD vs. RedHat. WAY different than a 2k vs. Linux. 2k doesn't try to sell you virus software.

  108. 21 (A college perspective) by MacEnvy · · Score: 1

    So, are they finally going to let Bill Gates have a drink? 21 shots perhaps?

    --


    ***
  109. Installing linux is easy... by Space+Coyote · · Score: 2
    ... Let's see, what's the refresh rate on my monitor again?

    Is my mouse Microsoft or Logitech? It just says Hewlett Packard on it, how am I supposed to know?

    Root password? Who the heck is root and why should I let him on my computer?

    Linux might be easier to install, but to get the thing working right is another matter. IMO, it's not enough to assume the user doesn't know something, you should assume that the user doesn't care and doesn't need to know, all the user wants is to get some work done.

    --
    ___
    Cogito cogito, ergo cogito sum.
  110. Define linux and window distro first by SystematicPsycho · · Score: 0

    Surely redhat 6.x 7.x is easier to install than any windows. I've found installations of windows that the average luser wouldn't know how to fix the problem, specifying drivers in windows, windows/system, windows/system/precopy _on installation although with any linux it is assumed that someone knows what swap and root partitions are.

    --
    Analytic & algebraic topology of locally Euclidean meterization of infinitely differentiable Riemmanian manifold
  111. Well, now what? by GravySkin · · Score: 0

    That is probably the question the typical computer user would ask when there quicker easier installing linux system booted for the first time.

    The next question would be can't I just use windows.

    An article about installing? It equates to what? Certainly not using the product. The install is like the first cut with the scalpel in surgery, knowing the next step is more important.

    --
    "never met a Microsoft zealot"
  112. How Often Do You Need To Install Anyhow? by krmt · · Score: 2

    I think articles like this are pretty funny in a way. How often do you have to install or reinstall Linux if you're an average user? You know, the type who would use it just on their desktop? I've had the same Debian install for a long time now, and I feel no real need to do a reinstall. Maybe it's just that I don't rush out and buy a new computer every year or two that I need a reinstall, but seriously... once it's installed, it's installed. Granted, an easy install is important (and I'm eagerly awaiting the debian-install project to bear some great results) but the reality is that installs are such a small fraction of how a computer is used.

    --

    "I may not have morals, but I have standards."

    1. Re:How Often Do You Need To Install Anyhow? by Reziac · · Score: 2

      Sounds like me. I install an OS appropriate to the hardware at hand, and then very rarely, if ever reinstall or upgrade it. When I build a new box, then I consider other OSs, and may do a reinstall right off if I decide I don't like how the first one turned out (or if the first attempt was used to experiment with a new OS, so took too much abuse). After that -- each box tends to be set in stone for the entire lifespan of the hardware. I've had Windows setups that had as much as 7 years of hard use without a reinstall. (In fact, I've *never* had to reinstall Windows except for one incident of HD failure.) I hope that once I get the in-progress box for linux going, I'll discover a linux disty that can achieve similar longevity.

      Besides, no matter what your chosen OS, the OS install takes only a minor fraction of the time required to get *everything else* installed, tweaked, customized, and taught to play nice together. Who wants to repeat that any more often than necessary?!

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
  113. Doze VS *Nix by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    i have a Win98se CDrom and a Linux Redhat7.1 or Slackware8 CDrom

    the last time i installed Win98se i took a piece of paper and made a mark on it for every time i had to reboot with Win98se for only the install, device drivers and Windows Update it took SIXTEEN reboots to just get Windoze updated and device drivers all together...

    with either Linux Redhat7.1 or Slackware8 it only needed the ONE reboot at the end of the install procedure, and the updates VIA Redhat's Up2Date did not need any rebooting...

    you decide which one was a better and easyer install...

    personally i think Windoze is a pain in the a$$ to maintain and more trouble than its worth, i keep win98se installed only for a stupid Cannon flatbed scanner that is not supported by Linux yet due to the chickenshit hardware design that Cannon used, and anytime i buy new hardware i check a Linux Hardware database for compatibility before buying, Windoze is being sent to the dustbin of history because of their restrictive EULA and un-fixable vulnerabilitys, high prices, why pay billy borg & mickysoft a kings ransom for a OS when i can do the same things in Linux for free or much less expensive and more reasable price, i know i can download it free, but they are HUGE downloads and i don't allways have the time and patience so i rather buy a boxed set so i can have the professionally burned CDroms and documentation & online support if the need for help ever arises but i have been lucky and can resolve my problems with just a little reading and paying attention to detail when a error does occur...

    forgive any mis-spelling and grammer errors as i just slammed this out while watching television...

  114. PLEASE include moderation of articles in slashcode by xQx · · Score: 1

    PLEASE, PLEASE, PLEASE allow moderators to moderate posts, not just the comments under them, so SOMEONE can score this article:

    -1 REDUNDANT

    Before you mark this down as a troll, try to answer this yourself... if various distros of linux allowed you to play tetris while you installed the OS 3 years ago, HOW, oh HOW is this news??

  115. They should compare it to Knoppix linux on CD.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    30 seconds and you're done. Install? what an out-dated concept.

  116. Even with six different Linuxes and Solaris 8... by krinsh · · Score: 1

    I won't install any of them until I can get my 1995-era monitor to give me a proper GUI display after I install them. I seem to have no problem getting 600x800 and 1024ish with all the Windows packages I have; even the RC's and 180-day betas; but I get no working screens (just a scrambly "you fried your monitor" output regardless of drivers, etc.)

    Of course it will take less time to install RedHat if you are just installing the base OS with no extra RPMs, Apache, etc. It takes me far, far less time to install DOS 3.1 on 386 laptops used exclusively for radon gas monitor management than it does anything else.

    --
    I think with the interesting people, their lives can't possibly be wrapped up into a nice little package.
  117. What a load of biased and skewed crap by rudy_wayne · · Score: 1

    I'm surprised this guy didn't claim that doing battle with the Loch Ness Monster is also part of the Windows installation process. It would be just as accurate and believable as the rest of this steaming pile of deliberately skewed nonsense.

    Instead of installing a standard retail copy of Win2000, he deliberately chose some bizaare, proprietary system restore process. *Of course* it took longer doing it that way -- but he knew that before he started.

  118. more linux FUD. by js83592 · · Score: 1

    Comeon people - isn't this article the worst piece of FUD you have ever seen. I remember a time when people would scream murder if M$ published anything that even remotely mamied linux.

    The idea is: Publish real objective pieces. You never want to be the one badmouthing the competition - it lets on that you are actually threatened.
    ie, lead by example.

  119. Pot meet Kettle. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And shame on /. for letting you posted your badly-researched biased FUD.

  120. Win2K Varies per Hardware by man_ls · · Score: 1, Flamebait

    For me, Windows 2000 Professional has been the easiest installation I've ever done--even easier than Windows XP.

    My Linux adventure: Download RedHat ISOs. Burn RedHat ISOs. Install...core dump to a screen with a page of C++ code and some message about invalid memory allocation. Download Mandrake ISOs. Burn Mandrake ISO. Install Linux. Boot to KDE. Have no idea what to do next because I don't know where to put drivers, or even where to configure TCP/IP settings...so it ends here with a pretty GUI and built in apps but nothing else.

    Windows 2000 Professional upgrading from 98SE was about as lengthy but ended up working properly. Install, CD-Key, convert to NTFS, reboot 3 times, start installing device drivers, then reinstall all my applications because over 2/3 of them stopped working when the new OS came. No data was lost.

    A fresh 2K Pro install can go from blank hard drive to fully operational system (all hardware installed) in an hour MAX, with 3 "user intervention required" type prompts (locale settings, computer/domain name, CD-Key), and 3 reboots. Win2K detected my DHCP server automatically, grabbed an appropriate IP address, and I went to the Internet and downloaded the proper drivers. 2 reboots later, I was up and running with the latest Detenators, Creative drivers, etc.

    Maybe he had wierd hardware, or lots of it, but a 2K Pro installation is hardly a stressful or time consuming experience.

    1. Re:Win2K Varies per Hardware by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      Hmmm now can you tell me about all the apps you get with windoze? Want to make a spreadsheet or a database with your MP3 collection? HMMM that requires additional program(s). A "stock" linux install installs a large amount of so-called 3rd party software that allows you to actually "use the computer" for something more than solitare and e-mail.

  121. But you work for Microsoft by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So of course you didn't have any EULA's to deal with and it worked perfectly.

  122. This article brought to you by Microsoft by Trogre · · Score: 1

    WTF is an inline advertisement for Microsoft Visual Studio.NET doing in this article?

    Is Slashdot really accepting sponsorship from the devil? Times must really be tough.

    Or is there some kind of generic advertisement reseller who says "I'll pay you $nnnnn.nn to put ads from my sources on your site". Anyone know how this works?

    --
    "Nine times out of ten, starting a fire is not the best way to solve the problem." - my wife
    1. Re:This article brought to you by Microsoft by WebMasterJoe · · Score: 2
      WTF is an inline advertisement for Microsoft Visual Studio.NET doing in this article?
      It looks like the ad is from doubleslick, and I think they just match up ads to web sites with slight regard to content (well, they're both computer related...)

      And, rumor has it there are a few people on this site who program for Windows environments... not me of course, but some soulless freaks...
      --
      I really hate signatures, but go to my website.
    2. Re:This article brought to you by Microsoft by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      IIRC, this topic has been discused multiple times here on Slashdot. Each time the basic answer is "The marketing department doesn't talk to the editors, and vise-verse".

      So to break it down for you, Slashdot doesn't much care where its revenue comes from. They shouldn't. Just so long as the money is good, and the advertisement isn't disgusting, then the ad goes on the site.

      Money is money. Selling your soul to the devil requires you to do it willingly, on your own accord. Taking the Devil's money doesn't count as selling your soul.

    3. Re:This article brought to you by Microsoft by Trogre · · Score: 1

      Ah, but it isn't *just* taking the Devil's money, is it?

      They're encouraging people to purchase the Devil's products, effectively endorsing them.

      Even if /. has no knowledge of what ads are being put on their site, people will (and do) still say to the sponsor, "I saw your ad on Slashdot"

      It doesn't appear that /. is selling out, but I would have thought they would have a bit of say as to what vendors are and aren't allowed to advertise on their site.

      --
      "Nine times out of ten, starting a fire is not the best way to solve the problem." - my wife
    4. Re:This article brought to you by Microsoft by Tadghe · · Score: 2

      Why am I reminded of the saying
      "You can't shake hands with the devil and say you were only kidding"

      dunno....maybe it's just me

      --
      Bugs Bunny was right.
    5. Re:This article brought to you by Microsoft by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's not surprising. There used to be a counter in the About page that revealed that a majority of Slashdot readers use Internet Explorer on Windows 9x/NT. Microsoft is just advertising to their target audience.

  123. Post Install by brandonsr · · Score: 1

    For me, installing windows is incredibly easy. It's the process I have to go through after the installation that is the harder part. With Linux, all the drivers are in one place, /usr/src/linux. But with windows I have to go through at least 4 or 5 cd's to pull all my drivers. And it seems these days with each driver I install I get a lot of fluff.

  124. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 2

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  125. Win2k and RH7.3 by pjt48108 · · Score: 2, Informative

    I have installed both Win2k and RH 7.3, and RH required only three disks (all CDs), and Win2k required three floppies PLUS the CD, which makes FOUR disks required, and two separate drives. Both installations were from scratch--no OEM disks, on reformatted drives (meaning a totally clean install)

    Additionally, Win2k refused to install recently via a CD-RW drive, which may, of course, be due to Win2K not recognizing the CD-RW.

    --
    Mmmmmm... Bold, yet refreshing!
    1. Re:Win2k and RH7.3 by forkboy · · Score: 2

      A solution to your Win2k woes.....boot from a win98 emergency start disk (or dos disk with CDROM drivers) and copy \i386 directory to the target installation drive and run the setup progrem (winnt.exe) from there. One boot floppy, one CDROM, less headaches.

      For Linux, I prefer minimal installs and add things as I go, so I use a really light Slackware install. One install CD, hardly any of the packages off of it are installed. Just enough to have internet and compiler access.

      --
      This message brought to you by the Council of People Who Are Sick of Seeing More People.
  126. Ghost it by sfennell90 · · Score: 1

    Or do what I do, use Norton Ghost to reinstall the OS. Just make a clean install the first time, Ghost it, and you can have a fresh install in under 20 minutes. Works like a charm. Even so, Windows installs are still easier on the casual user than Red Hat. Article was flamebait if you ask me.

  127. Amen by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Years and years ago, I was going to run NT-4 on my servers. I could never get it to run, it always blue-screened after the final reboot. Just for the hell of it, I tried installing Slackware-3.2, and never looked back. I still have the 800 bucks worth of unused NT cdroms collecting dust. That experience convinced me that the *only* reason people said Linux was "too hard to install" was because Windoze came pre-installed. If the average mouse clicker had to install Windoze, they'd never be able to do it.

  128. More faults... by bwoodring · · Score: 1

    Additionally, he used the newest version of RedHat against a two-year old version of Windows. Windows XP is considerably easier to install than Windows 2000 is. If Linux users want to be taken seriously they need to give up their straw-man arguments.

    1. Re:More faults... by laserjet · · Score: 2

      That may be true, but Win2000 and Linux are more similar. Win2000 currently has much more 'server' market share than XP does.

      you still have a point, I was just pointing this out.

      --
      Moon Macrosystems. Sun's biggest competitor.
    2. Re:More faults... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh, good argument. I mean, I know a TON of "average end users" operating networks with servers at their home. Really.

      Hm, ever had the idea that abusing penguins instead of masturbating might be worse?

  129. FUD Re:Comparison not fair by einhverfr · · Score: 2

    Wait until he has to install Red Hat on really old hardware. It hangs !!! Try IBM thinkpad (486) 750ce, old Toshiba T6600c (486) and some of the CompactPCI PII. SuSE was the only one that seem to install.

    Hmm.... I have RH7.2 running on a K5 (Acer Advantage with a replacement CPU, 32 MB RAM, 1GB HDD). Sure it is stripped down but it runs just fine. I have also installed RH 7.1 and Conectiva 7.0 on an old Compaq DeskPro (P2) with no problems. I also have it running on an Armada and an Inspiron (both P2s).

    I assume you are trying to install it graphically? Try the text-based install. When the graphical install runs into problems, I always use a text based install.

    --

    LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
    1. Re:FUD Re:Comparison not fair by Old+Uncle+Bill · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I'm sorry, I must have been in a coma during the K5-486 merge. Or maybe the K5 was a 586 clone... hmmmm.... I agree, and I am a hardcore Unix bigot, but there is a big difference between the 486 mentioned above, the supporting chipset glue running alongside it, and the AMD K5 architecture.

      On the other hand (I think there is automatic modding down of Linux bashing), RedHat is VERY easy to install now, but when my mother calls with a printer problem on her Windows XP box it is a little easier to troubleshoot than Linux. I have been using Linux since pre .99, but it has always been a hacker swiss army knife more than a usable OS for the masses. Which should be cool with the folks that read this board, do you really want the same OS your grandparents use? I think we need to spend less time trying to convince the computer unsavvy to use Linux and more time making Linux work with the M$ crap. And of course, there is OS X. I'm sure that if any of us could afford that hardware we would burn all of these PCs in a pile. Maybe I'm just speaking for myself here.

      --
      Yes, I am an agent of Satan, but my duties are largely ceremonial.
    2. Re:FUD Re:Comparison not fair by 1lus10n · · Score: 0

      actually i guess were going to agree to disagree.

      i think linux should patently avoid working with windows, and make windows work with it.
      the windows clients rely on servers for there mail,web etc.... well most of them are unix based so windows should be the ones trying to work WITH something. problem is they dont - instead they try to make everything proprietary so everyone has to buy there slow unstable crap, like exchange.

      and be it that i bash windows and promote linux - yet my karma sucks hard. i would assume windows promoters get modded up. yet us "zealots" get modded down. *just a thought*

      --
      "Two things are infinite: the universe and human stupidity; and I'm not sure about the the universe." --Albert Einstein
    3. Re:FUD Re:Comparison not fair by DaveAtFraud · · Score: 2

      I'd like to see someone even get W2K or Windows XP to install, run and do ANYTHING useful on a system with only 32MB of memory. I'm inflicted with running W2K under VMware at work when I need some windoze specific application and its swap city with a 64 MB virtual machine. I need a quad esspresso just thinking about how slow Windows would be with only 32MB.

      BTW, I too was running RedHat on a K5 box but with 64MB of memory, Micronix 486 motherboard, Orchid VLB video and an Adaptec VLB SCSI card. What finally drove me off the box was the video card was no longer supported in current XFree86 revs but I could still run it as a super VGA. My guess is that nothing from Microsquish more recent than Windows 95 would even install on the box.

      --
      They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither safety nor liberty.
      Ben
  130. Depends... by DrewMadMax · · Score: 1

    This all depends on which flavor of linux you install. Personally, I think it faster to install Windows than a Debian distro, at least before the new stable version was released (there-by producing new install disks). It normally took 2 or 3 ttries to get it right. But, that doesn't mean windows is better.. hehe. "True Knowledge Exists in Realizing Your Own Ignorance"

    --
    "True knowledge exists in knowing that you know nothing"
  131. Application Install by lpret · · Score: 1

    My problem is application installation with Red Hat. I dual boot Win2k and RH 7.3, and the biggest difference for me is installing programs. There is no handy GUI Winzip to easily unzip, no "click next" installation. I still believe that will be the one thing that holds Linux back from being the Windows killer.

    --
    This is my digital signature. 10011011001
  132. doesn't microsoft do the same thing? by zentex · · Score: 1

    Is it not microsoft that has 'unbiased' labs ship out cookie-cutter reports that thier products are better (in any sense) than anything remotely considered to be a competitor?

    I'm just playing devil's advocate here....

    --
    Appended to the end of comments you post. 120 chars.
  133. Linux vs Windows Installs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm not a huge fan of Linux and I'm pretty hard-core Windows. That being said, I've recently created a dual-boot Win2K / RedHat 7.3 install on a P3-500 MHz machine. To install Windows, I needed to hit F6 and install ATA drivers so that the Win2K installer could see the hard drives to install Windows. After that was done, all I needed was one reboot and it was done. However, this is a HARDWARE specific issue - it just so happens that this mobo requires these ATA drivers - other mobos don't, so in that sense, it may not be fair to blame this on Win2K. To my surprise, red Hat immediately found the drive without any intervention from me and proceeded to install. I did find the initial partitioning screen a little less than intuitive. This was my fault - I'd created three partitions and was planning on putting Win2K on the first one, Linux on the second one and using the third one as shared data storage. I hadn't realised that it would be easier to simply provide free space to Linux. The problem with putting Linux on the third partition was that it meant I dealt with the 1024 cylinder problem for booting with LILO. I fixed that by specifying lba32 in the lilo.conf file, writing a new boot sequence to the /boot partition and peeling it off to a file that I placed in the C:\ directory... but it took some time to figure out that's what I needed to do. After that, though, everything went smoothly. I'd rate the RedHat 7.3 install and Win2K at around the same. I did spend more time on the Linux install but in fairness, I know Windows much better than I know Linux. Windows XP, on the other hand, installs as smoothly as the best parts of Win2K and Linux... no ATA drivers, no confusing partition screen, so I'd probably have to say: (1) Windows XP (2) Red Hat Linux 7.3 / Win2K.

  134. My own experience the other day... by ewanrg · · Score: 1

    A couple weeks ago I was trying to make the case about us needing to bring in Linux for evaluation in-house, and had an older HP Kayak that I did something similar on. I chose the Debian Floppy Boot and Network install option, and it seemed to go smoother than any Windows install I'd ever performed... until I got to the video.

    Folks, I've often been bothered by Windows requiring me to go from 640x480x256 default to something usable. But after the gyrations I had to go through to get an X server up and running, I have a lot more appreciation for Windows.

    Now, does this kind of test really matter? No! Because if there's decent documentation (something I think the Linux community does need to work on) then you do this once, and the real question becomes usability and reliability.

    Just my .02 worth,
    Ewan

  135. From a recent experience... by cowboy+junkie · · Score: 2, Flamebait

    I got a zippy new Dell at work, and I decided to multi-boot between Win2k and Linux. Both are pretty simple, but the problem I had was with driver support. With Redhat 7.3, X had a problem with either my video card or LCD, and that wouldn't work at all. With Mandrake 8.2, X started fine, but it had issues with the USB mouse and the built-in Ethernet.

    My point? Well, if I had a driver issue with Win2k (which I didn't, of course, because that's what Dell supports), I could just go to the manufacturer website and dl the driver and away we go. Or use Windows Update and have a pretty good shot at finding something there.

    With Linux, it's a much more elaborate and vague search for help when you *do* run into a installation roadblock. That's not a rip on Linux - it does amazingly well in terms of hardware support all things considered. But for the latest and greatest hardware, installation can be a real drag.

  136. I know a TRUE way to find out by zentex · · Score: 1

    get some bushman from zimbabwe who's never seen, let alone heard of a calculator (=computer) and get HIS opinion...that'll solve the debate :-)

    --
    Appended to the end of comments you post. 120 chars.
  137. this is too shallow by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    the stated question should approach on the reality of installation so that 'easier' is not so relative. There are factors of speed, hardware support, correct autoconfiguration yet intuitive interface allowing for customization and override to mention a few.

    I personally have had some very pleasant Linux installs, but was lucky to have the _perfect_ hw combo for the services I wanted. Whether from forums, friends, or my other experiences I have come to the conclussion that as it stands now, Windows installations are far ahead of any Linux distro I have seen. (with the exception of those times I had the forementioned perfect combo of hardware)

    The lesson here is that the installation and configuration methods are not robust enough, yet IMHO once these are taken care of Linux will be the clear winner.

    Now back to the fanboy fest.

  138. What they shoulda tested... by i.r.id10t · · Score: 0
    ... is Linux v. Windows v. Mac OSX.

    I've been doing computer stuff for a long time, but not with macs, other than occasionally starting Netscape. I've installed just about very version of Windows and quite a few Linux distros including Gentoo and LFS - but OSX and I just couldn't get along well enough to get past the first reboot.

    --
    Don't blame me, I voted for Kodos
  139. Only the first disk is the OS by aoteoroa · · Score: 1

    My Mandrake install had three disks, and everything you need for an OS is on the first disk.

    The other two disks are applications and games.

    To me the the real difference is how often you need to reinstall. Over time windows systems aquire junk in the registry, and c:\windows\system and this junk slows the computer down. Often the only way to reclaim your computing speed is to reinstall windows. And the two hours that Joe Bar reported is nothing. That doesn't include the lost time for all the settings in your development environment and lost styles, in Word etc.

    1. Re:Only the first disk is the OS by NanoGator · · Score: 2

      "To me the the real difference is how often you need to reinstall. Over time windows systems aquire junk in the registry, and c:\windows\system and this junk slows the computer down. Often the only way to reclaim your computing speed is to reinstall windows. And the two hours that Joe Bar reported is nothing. That doesn't include the lost time for all the settings in your development environment and lost styles, in Word etc. "

      That's a fair and legitimate point. However, what about hardware support? Windows 2000 comes with a pretty good set of built in drivers. It's easy to find a computer today that doesnt' require any additional driver installs once Windows is running. Is it as easy for Linux? I think the answer is "in some cases yes, in some cases no."

      Windows, being the dominant OS, gets all the best hardware support. Every release of Windows has a larger list of drivers natively supported, requiring fewer trips to the company's website. Linux has a larger battle there because most companies ignore it, sadly.

      Hopefully, though, Linux will gain enough popularity that companies will feel compelled to support it. When that happens, the issue I just mentioned evaporates. (If anything, I expect Linux Developers to make that drastically less painful than Microsoft.) Today, though, it is a bit of an issue.

      --
      "Derp de derp."
  140. I just re-installed XP today by Metaldsa · · Score: 1

    And it wasn't hard at all. All my hardware was recognized instantly and the only annoying thing was the ads for MSN.

    I have never installed redhat but unless it has complete driver support I would never recommend it to a friend. Even the best games have trouble with different hardware configurations. I doubt with today's linux driver support that the average Joe would ever prefer a linux installation over XP.

    Oh yeah, forgot to mention how nice it is to hear a comparison of Linux and Windows from linuxworld.com. Now if I could only ask Michael Dell's opinion for my next computer purchase?

  141. What if MS sponsored a similar study? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    None of the comments I've read has questioned the fact that a columnist at LinuxWorld concluded that Linux was an easier install over Windows.

    What would have happened if Microsoft sponsored and MSNBC reported a study that found that Windows XP was the easier install? Would slashdotters have accepted it so happily? Or would it have been labeled as FUD?

    Yes, mod me down as -1 flamebait, troll. You'll only prove me right.

  142. Where exactly does fdisk play into this, lunix nut by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    public interface NewbieComputer
    {

    void on();
    void off();

    void access_website(String url);
    void chat(String msg);
    void check_email();
    void listen_to_music(String song);
    void write_document();

    void print();

    }

  143. Your mileage may vary... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Coincidentally, I setup a Dell laptop with W2K and RH7.3 last night. As I'm more of a Win guy and hadn't played with Linux for a couple of years, I was very impressed with the improvements in the installation process for RedHat (last time I tried was RH6). The RH installation was pretty fast, supported most of my devices and was pretty easy to follow.

    However, when I was finished, I noticed a couple of problems: 1) even though I booted and installed off a CD, it didn't have an entry for the cdrom in fstab, or even a device driver for it in /dev. autorun wouldn't mount it, either. It also picked the wrong driver for my LinkSys wireless card. So I downloaded one from their site, unpacked it and then couldn't build it because there was no Linux source in the install (still fighting with these problems).

    So, although I was able to do the initial install faster and more smootly, I also hit a couple of brick walls more quickly, too. Granted, I had to download a few drivers for W2K, too, but they were easy to find, installed without a hitch, and didn't require any build process.

    My two cents...

  144. I just did an install by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Here is what I was doing:

    I had gotten out my old 586 133mhz system. (Ok - give me a break - I just was looking for something to do and thought this to be a neat project.) I wanted to set up a system to monitor some things for me (like the stock market maybe) but I wasn't looking for immediate gratification (ie: real time monitoring).

    The system: 586 Intel system, 133mhz, 64mb memory, three hard drives: 427mb, 1.2GB, 5GB, 40GB. Floppy, S3 Virge graphics card, ATI 128 Rage graphics card, Samsung 955DF monitor.

    Software: MS-DOS 6.22, DR DOS, Win3.1, Win98, Linux v4.1, and Linux v7.2.

    Here is what happened:
    1. The 427mb disk drive was so old it would not spin up.
    2. The 1.2Gb disk drive spun up but had so many errors it could not be used.
    3. The 5Gb disk spun up ok.
    3a. I first partitioned the drive with MS-DOS 6.22's FDISK and loaded MS-DOS. Really easy to do. About 15 minutes.
    3b. I then used Linux v4.1 to partition the rest of the disk and install Linux v4.1. Also very easy to do. Took longer - but more options to choose from. About 60 minutes. (Remember - it IS a 586 running at 133mhz.)
    4. After rebooting I first made sure MS-DOS 6.22 worked and then I rebooted and tried to get Linux v4.1 up and running. Version 4.1 saw the S3 card but wouldn't go into graphics mode.
    4a. Took down the system, replaced the S3 card with the ATI card. Rebooted. Linux v4.1 wouldn't use the ATI card. System wouldn't see the CD rom. Had to reboot and us upgrade path to get ATI 128 Rage driver.
    4b. Rebooted. Linux sees ATI card - but won't do graphics. Fiddle with system a while. No good. Decide to try Linux v7.2. About two hours have passed.
    5. Install Linux v7.2. One and a half hours go by.
    5a. Hard drive decides to give problems. Bad INodes all over the place. Decide to get new hard drive.
    6. 586 not compatible with new 40GB Maxtor hard drive. Spend (as an aside) about two hours fiddling with software to get things right.
    7. Install MS-DOS 6.22. Again about 15 minutes.
    8. Install Linux v7.2. In the attempt to install GRUB the system freezes. Another two hours gone by since the freeze is at the end of the installation. Disk will not boot. Bad MBR.
    9. Can't get MBR to come back - go ask younger brother (who is a certified engineer) about it. He makes suggestion - I try it - it works. About two days go by.
    9a. It turns out MS-DOS v6.22 can't fix the MBR on a 40GB disk drive - so I had to switch to Win98. FDISK on Win98 fixes MBR via FDISK/MBR.
    10. Installed Win98. About two hours.
    11. Installed Linux v7.2. About two hours.
    12. Linux v7.2 won't see the ATI graphics card again. Spend a couple hours trying to get it to work. No good. Shut down system. Re-install S3 card. Everything works! Linux v7.2 sees and correctly installs S3 driver. Unfortunately - the S3 card doesn't know what monitor is attached. No graphics. About two hours.
    13. Set the monitor to be Custom. Fill out info. Monitor now works. Both Win98 and Linux v7.2 are up and running.

    MS-DOS v6.22 = 15 minutes
    DR DOS = 15 minutes
    Win3.1 = About an hour
    Win98 = About two hours
    Linux v4.1 = About an hour
    Linux v7.2 = About two hours

    Amount of frustration:
    MS-DOS = None
    DR DOS = None
    Win3.1 = Very slight
    Win98 = Some (mainly the speed of the system)
    Linux v4.1 = More than v7.2 but not a lot more
    Linux v7.2 = More than v4.1 but not a lot more

    GOD! I can't believe how slow a 586 at 133mhz is!

    Bad things I noticed about Windows:
    We all know them so why talk about them?

    Bad things I noticed about Linux:
    1. If Linux can identify and use the graphics of a system to install the software - why do we have to go through the hassle of telling Kudzu or Xconfigurator how to configure our graphics cards and monitors?
    2. If something goes wrong with the install - why does it die? It should either skip that part or at least give the user the option to continue.
    3. When there was a bad location on a hard drive the boot-up process would dump me into a shell so I could run fsck. Only there were literally thousands of bad inodes on the disk. Why isn't there a mechanism in place to just mark those areas as bad and go on? Why am I supposed to know everything there is to know about inodes and bad directory entries? Why not just say "The disk drive is bad. You need to replace it." Or something like that so I don't spend six or eight hours trying to fix the thing. Talk about frustration.
    4. If you have to use the Custom option in Xconfigurator to create a custom set-up for your monitor - why doesn't Xconfigurator STORE this information for later use?
    5. How come Xconfigurator has one set of monitors, mice, keyboards, etc... and Kudzu has another? Kudzu could find the Samsung 955DF monitor (S/M 955DF) but Xconfigurator said "Unknown". Yet, even when Kudzu FOUND the monitor - Xconfigurator would not use the passed in values for the H/V frequencies. Which is why I had to use the Custom option.

    Notes:

    Although I love Linux (we use it at work as well) it only takes one time through the installation process to want to just punch someone over the lack of common sense when it comes to how certain key items are implemented. This is NOT to say that since v4.1 Linux has gone no where. Linux has GREATLY improved over the v4.1 release. There is still just a lot of work to be done.

    Peace, love, save the whales, and all that stuff like that there.

  145. You expected something else? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Of course Windows isn't that easy to install. Microsoft doesn't bank on users having to install it.

  146. Let my last 2 days be a testament... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    On Sunday, I was on a job site to migrate a bunch of Windows machines from one PDC to an Apple Xserve running Samba. Should be easy, right? Not if the previous admin who installed all the PC's was incompetent and configured the Windows NT clients with a password on the local admin account and then didn't document it (he was fired rather messily for other suck nonsense involving the computers). So we had to reinstall the OS because once the machines were taken off their old PDC, you couldn't authenticate in to the box. We had to reinstall Windows NT 4, Windows 2000, and Windows XP Professional on 4 machines. Today, we finished the 3rd machine. The fact that you have to restart the freakin machine everytime you make a change to the preferences means sitting and waiting for the machine to decide to either accept or reject the new settings. I can count the wasted hours because of this. Tomorrow, we are install SuSE Linux on the 4th machine. We have the whole disto installed on one of our Powerbooks and we are going to set it up and an FTP server and install over the network remotely. We tested it this evening. We started the install at 6PM. By 8PM, the entire OS with all the proper config files were installed on our test box and we were up and running. Windows can bite me, I'll never actually pay for that OS. And I'll never let my clients buy another copy of Windows as long as they are paying for computer services from me. Oh, yeah, you also forgot to ask about installing the Mac OS. And by the way, it takes 45 minutes, and maybe 2 CD's (Jaguar comes on 2 CD's because it has lots and lots of nifty free software included).

  147. Right comparason by Burning1 · · Score: 2

    If I was configuring a new system as a dual boot Windows/Linux machine, I sure as hell would use Windows 2K rather than XP, as would most of the people here.

    If anyone is making a flawed comparason, it's you. Very few people have a reason to use RH 6, while plenty of us prefer 2000 to XP.

    1. Re:Right comparason by Noke · · Score: 1

      You sure don't speak for me. I prefer WinXP over 2k any day.

  148. 25 hours for Windows, about two hours for Linux by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    25 hours for multiple attempts to get Windows installed. About two hours to get about 7 Gig worth of Suse Linux installed(entire professional version, 7 CDs). Windows had me hunting down drivers all over the place. Problems with the adaptec raid card, problems with the monitor drivers. Problems, problems, problems. Partition problems, more problems. 25 hours later from 5 am to 6 am next day without break, Windows finally working (but still has problems with a separate windows partition for swap), and it takes under two hours to install SuSE Linux, all 7 CDs of the professional version, dual boot to the windows system. I get openoffice.org, staroffice, multiple browsers, editors, compilers, servers, im chat clients, games, more word processors, email clients, email servers, apache, MySQL and PostgreSQL databases, translators, calculators, da Gimp, Acrobat file creation possibilities, VNC server and client, backup programs that work, anti-popup browsers that work, video tools, audio/multimedia tools, and so much more. All included with the OS.

    I get a rock stable system, uptimes measured in months (except for security patches (which reset my uptime for some reason even though I don't reboot), my web server has been up for six months, since first install, and I know next to nothing about web serving).

    My printer was automatically detected and ready to print thanks to cups (and it is an obscure, discontinued Minolta printer), sound works, video works, everything works. Windows, driver insanity. Had to hunt down video driver (download from manufacturer site from different computer), had to figure out why it was running in emulation mode (problem with the adaptec card, took multiple installs of driver downloaded from adaptec site), had to dig out motherboard drivers, printer drivers, CDRW drivers, modem drivers, lan drivers, sound card drivers, and more. Had to download updated versions of acrobat, winzip, WinSCP, Putty, and about a dozen other programs. Had to further install Windows versions of word processing, spreadsheet, database, presentation apps, and email client/virus detection software (NOT, only use Linux for email, hence don't need email client or virus detection software).

    Over a thousand dollars worth of Windows software, and about a hundred worth of Linux software, and I can legally run it on more than one computer.

    The only thing still holding me to Windows is Quickbooks Pro (now solved since I've discovered MyBooks by Appgen, and now that Crossover Office supports Quickbooks, and Quickbooks Pro will immediately follow), Dreamweaver (Quanta and Bluefish are not quite there yet), and Corel Draw. That's it. That's what I need to ditch MS for good, and never look back.

  149. let my wife try by briancnorton · · Score: 1

    I say that we let my wife try to install each and see which takes her longer. That would more accurately show which is "easier."

    "Oh, all I had to do was manually partition the disk using fdisk, create a 256-megabyte swap partition and give the rest of the drive to Red Hat, choosing the ext3 journaling filesystem, choose the GRUB boot manager, to place it on the MBR, and for the Linux to be the default and choose DHCP as my network settings?" Yeah, that sounds "Easy"

    --

    People who think they know everything really piss off those of us that actually do.

  150. Yet anothre unfair comparison. by Mondain98 · · Score: 1

    This comparison fails on so many levels. Ignoring that it was done by someone from linuxworld.com and not an independent, neutral, 3rd party, it's biggest failure is comparing a brand-spanking newest build of RedHat against a 2-year-old Win2k Pro. Are we *supposed* to be surprised that in 2 years there are more patches for win2k than there are for RH7.3? The Sony Vaio and McAfee popups have absolutely nothing to do with either OS, so their popups should be ignored on both OS's. Should MS be penalized because their vendors write launchers with horrible usability such as this? He also knew everything about setting up mount points and partitions; is the average user supposed to know how big to make a swap, usr, or boot partitions? Why didnt he accept the defaults like he did with the Win2k install? Put the install up against XP and try it again, chief. 1 cd, I think a total of 3 mouse clicks for the entire XP installation, a far superior and smoother installation process than either 2k or RH. I'm sorry, but as much as I use both Windows and RH, this just wasnt even close to a neutral benchmark test. Not by far.

    1. Re:Yet anothre unfair comparison. by Mondain98 · · Score: 1
      "I checked the IBM PC Camera by starting xawtv and sure enough, Red Hat had it working without any effort on my part, just as it had done with the PCMCIA NIC. The install was soup -- no dependency insanity, and just one stinkin' reboot."

      If you think a typical box comes with hardware RH detects right out of the box, youre fucking insane. Let an average user build a box and see what works under XP/2k and what doesnt under RH. It's a sad fact but an unignorable one. Of course there was no "dependency insanity" moron, it solved all your dependencies for you during install. Idiot.

  151. Enough with the empty advocacy by Junks+Jerzey · · Score: 2

    This is right up there with Amiga owners getting excited because they saw their favorite computer in the background of some sitcom. Sigh. Advocacy is so completely lame.

    The big flaw in this case is that RedHat is easier to install, *when* you have a system that won't cause problems. As long as all your perihperals are supported under Linux, then you're okay. When they aren't, then that's where the trouble is. This isn't a knock on Linux at all, it's just a side effect of the complexity of PC hardware. New hardware comes out left and right, all of which have Windows drivers, and many of which don't have Linux drivers. I'm sure I'm not the only person who has gotten stuck with a video card or printer or scanner that wouldn't work with Linux.

    If there's anything keeping Linux from being an acceptable desktop alternative, this is it.

  152. Blame Sony by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I am a fan of both OS's, and each does have its faults, and I have to say, the reviewer did not present a fair comparison. The most obvious and glaring flaw was that he used Sony's restore disks, which is not, properly speaking, a w2k install. Sony adds all sorts of crap to it, and sets w2k up the way they want to. A standard OEM install of w2k lacks many of the supposed flaws he whines about. He should blams Sony.

  153. FreeBSD by djcdplaya · · Score: 1

    As long as you are using one disk, and only putting FreeBSD on it, I find it the easiest to install.

    Installing Windoze is a pain in the rear, bar non. How many reboots does it take to get the thing going.

    Linux is considerably easier IF you know some basic facts about your computer and / or network.

    Anyway, FreeBSD is the easiest of all, unless you would rather have pretty pictuers instead of reading.

    What kind of question is this anyway? Most people that run windows couldn't install it anyway.

    1. Re:FreeBSD by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      God man! You are so full of shit it hurts.

      You know nothing. Just shut the fuck up.

  154. XP nightmares by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 2

    For the record, just trying to set up a preinstalled copy of Windows XP on a new Dell box at the office took more than a day recently. You know why? We typed the wrong name in for one of the users at the start of the whole process. That is all.

    We realised our mistake after a couple of minutes (name should have matched logins on various other servers) so we renamed it and carried on. After setting everything up (which took a good couple of hours to get things into a sensible state), we then discovered that renaming a user on XP doesn't (it just changes the text on the login screen and such, not the underlying name). Oops. So we try various other things, like renaming the user back and copying it to a new one with the correct name, but unfortunately that doesn't work either, due to some bizarre bugs in XP's user management code and all the fabulous permissions technology required to let me access my own PC these days.

    A significant exercise trawling the web for information shows up numerous threads on newsgroups where Microsofties reply to people with this problem by saying "Have you tried Procedure X?" The original posters reply "Yes", and the Microsofties all go silent, every time.

    I'm not a massive Linux advocate; I like the idea, but I've never really tried it in anger as my main OS (though I sense the time is drawing near). However, I'm pretty sure that you can't get your box into such a completely silly state by typing one wrong word at the start of an installation sequence in any Linux distro I've ever seen.

    Unless that word was rm, of course. :-)

    --
    If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
    1. Re:XP nightmares by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is probably a naieve question, but did you try using the admin account to delete and re-add the user?

    2. Re:XP nightmares by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 2

      When you're trying to fix a broken system, my experience is that there's no such thing as a naive (or stupid) question. :-)

      However, yes, we did try that, and a whole bunch of other similar things. Unfortunately, XP is a bit too clever for its own good, and there are lots of superficially sensible things it won't let you do. Some of them are by design and to do with the user permissions system and such, and some are just outright bugs. Unfortunately, the particular position I fell into all-too-easily apparently cannot currently be fixed as a result of the combination.

      --
      If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
    3. Re:XP nightmares by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ok this is not too difficult. Read carefully because I'll only say it once: Computer Management Users & Groups.

      Right-click My Computer --> Manage --> Users & Groups

      Simply rename the user. This is not a difficult process.

    4. Re:XP nightmares by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 2

      It's not a difficult process, but it also doesn't work. Renaming the user doesn't actually rename the user, it just adjusts what's displayed in a couple of places, such as the log-on screen. Internally, your user name stays the same as it was before. Assuming that it actually did what it said was the mistake we made right at the start, which is why it then took several days to clear up the mess. With hindsight, we should have just reformatted and reinstalled at that point; it would have been faster.

      --
      If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
  155. 21 by .com+b4+.storm · · Score: 1

    (DOS 1.0 was released 21 years ago today.)

    So, does this mean DOS can legally purchase alcohol in the states now?

    --
    "Wow, you're like some kind of superhero able to ward off happiness and success at every turn."
    -- Ryan Stiles
    1. Re:21 by Kredal · · Score: 2

      No, because DOS died in a horrible accident 7 years ago... His remains are kept up on the mantle... you can look at him by typing "cmd", but he's just a shell (ha ha) of his former self...

      --
      Whoever stated that signature sizes should be limited to one hundred and twenty characters can just go ahead and kiss my
  156. Summary by Raul654 · · Score: 2

    Having done my share of XP, Red Hat and Mandrake installs, I will say I agree with (almost) everyone else here - XP is definitely easier to install and the article is obviously biased in favor of linux, and XP still comes out on top.

    But, having said this, I'd like to point out one counter example. The disk partitioning utility run by XP/2K when you install is *TERRIBLE*. I accidentally installed XP to the wrong hard drive just 2 weeks ago because it's so vague. If nothing else, Mandrake and Red Hat get this part of it right - the graphical partioning (disk druid in Red Hat, I don't know about Mandrake) leaves no chance of error.

    --


    To make laws that man cannot, and will not obey, serves to bring all law into contempt.
    --E.C. Stanton
  157. Yes! by SoupIsGoodFood_42 · · Score: 2
    Yes. It would have been much more fair. I'm not an MS fan (quite the opposite infact). But this artical is just plain Linux FUD.

    When I installed Win2k (several times on different computers) I only needed 1 CD, rebooted 2 times max, and never had to swap the CD once.

    RedHat? Two words: Package dependancies. After installing it 2 or so times. I gave up and just pick one of the preset installations.

    As for the total time it takes to install. Who cares? It's only something you should be doing once in a blue moon.

    1. Re:Yes! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Use debian.

    2. Re:Yes! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      FUD ya reckon? I disagree.

      I've installed Win2K and Linux many times. A base Windows install from the CD's needs a helluva lot more than 2 reboots, unless you like old, buggy, insecure software An install isn't complete until the machine is secured and updated!

      Once the OS is on, you then get to update everything to current spec, which takes another hour or more. You can do the same with RedHat via up2date, but you don't need to reboot for each new component.

      And no, (re)installation shouldn't be a regular activity, but it's way more regular for Windows boxes than Linux.

  158. No way dude. by Penguinoflight · · Score: 1

    You buy a dell, gateway, or a emachine and it's more than likely you'll have to reinstall everything because they did it wrong in the first place, not to mention swapping out that Nvidia tnt for a video card. Sometimes we forget how hard it really is to work with "easy" stuff.

    --
    "And we have seen and do testify that the Father sent the Son to be the Savior of the World"
    1 John 4:14
  159. Agreed by lowe0 · · Score: 1

    He shouldn't have used the restore disc. Gee, maybe if you'd try the normal products instead of what Sony sends you, you'd have better luck?

    Anyway, sure, there's a lot of discs involved (my system setup routine involves 7 - one Windows, one Office, 5 Visual Studio) and there's some reboots (I think there's six.) I don't have any hardware that needs really hard-to-find or poorly packaged drivers (maybe because I let Sony stick to selling me TV's?) and my machine is a whole lot more capable after my two hours than this guy was able to get his Windows machine.

  160. 1 instruction manual per OS by oliverthered · · Score: 2

    well it looks like windows will never get installed then.

    --
    thank God the internet isn't a human right.
  161. he's cheating by g4dget · · Score: 2
    He is using restore CDs for Windows. It gets even worse if you install from Microsoft's distribution. Often, Windows will misrecognize hardware or fail to recognize it altogether. Then you have to go hunting for drivers over the web from various manufacturers' sites.

    Linux became easier to install than Windows quite a number of years ago. The main advantage that Windows still has these days is that it comes preinstalled. The other problem with Linux installs is that on laptops, the precompiled Linux kernels often just don't have the right options set; this should be fixed by finally making the Linux kernel completely modular, but I won't hold my breath.

    Mac OSX, incidentally, is perhaps even a little easier to install than Linux, but it asks more annoying personal questions.

  162. Linux v. Windows by fjm03 · · Score: 1

    While it's been some time since I've installed a Linux distro, I just finished installing W2k on a fresh box. The process took two, yes two, days over 56k. The initial install goes no better or no worse than Linux but then you start down the trail of SPs and security patches and 12 hours later you have a "sercure" platform. Installing W2k should not be attempted by the faint of heart, those easily bored, or those without, at a minimum, a T1 connect.

  163. This is Joe Barr by daserver · · Score: 1
    1. Re:This is Joe Barr by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      From my own experience, his evaluation of mplayer is completely on the mark.

  164. Gee, big surprise there! by AussieBastard · · Score: 1

    Of course RedHat was faster and easier to install than Windows, otherwise the article wouldn't have appeared on Lunixdot, I mean Slashdot. *rolls eyes

  165. Remember the Mac setup challenge? by xixax · · Score: 2
    A while ago, there was a public challenge where a Mac 8500 and a HP Vectra duked it out.

    And I think the Mac wins. As big a Linux fan that I am, I could with no qaulms whatsoever recommend a Mac to my sister and tell her to install MS Office herself. Speed of install is probably more relvant to work situations, and that'll mostly be disk images anyway.

    Xix.

    --
    "Everything is adjustable, provided you have the right tools"
  166. Got Ghost? by The+Kow · · Score: 1

    From an IT perspective, don't most IT departments just ghost their installs onto new machines? Talk about a pointless .. point ..

    --
    Moo
  167. Can we stop this? by Krusher55 · · Score: 1

    Can we stop this "which OS is easier to install" nonsense because honestly, it really doesn't matter. Here are a few reasons.

    1. Even though 95% of all PCs run computers, most people never have to install Windows. It comes preinstalled.

    2. How much does it really matter if Linux installs 10%, 20% or even 80% faster. Does anyone really chose an OS because it is faster to install or requires a little less manual intervention?

    3. What happens if you have hardware that isn't, by default, supported by the latest Redhat release? How much effort does it take to go find the drivers, if they even exist, download them and install them. There is still oodles of pieces of hardware not supported by Linux.

    If Linux advocates have to resort to a "Linux is easier to install than Windows" arguement for why Linux is better then that says a lot about the state of Linux.

  168. Joe Barr dislikes Microsoft is news? by sheldon · · Score: 2

    Joe Barr has been an anti-Microsoft zealot for as long as I can remember. Years ago he used to plague us with his Team OS/2 crap. Then it was his anti-Internet Explorer crap. In fact for a while there his website denied access to IE web browsers just to prove some kind of point. Now he's a Linux bigot and hates the Windows 2000 installer? Go figure.

    How about getting someone who isn't biased to do a comparison?

    Anyway, Windows 2000 installs fairly easy by itself now that SP3 is out. It was more of a pain prior to that with all the various hotfixes. WinXP handles hotfixes better and you can more easily install them all at once without reboots. Also if you make your own custom installation cd you can really streamline the process by installing SP3 right from the start. [see www.nu2.nu]

    What I think is nice since I create new Win2k environments under VMware quite frequently is using sysprep. I simply copy the base image I created over into a new directory... rename the config file, boot with vmware and then sysprep prompts for the machine name and I'm up and running including all my default software.

  169. Hey by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Is it me or did that review leave a bad taste in my mouth like it was written by a linux freak. The first time i tried linux using a manual partition editor, i deleted my windows partition by accident. linux askes to many question on install. Also, the reviewer seems incompentent.

  170. Gentoo is all from source by fireboy1919 · · Score: 2

    And all the source except the linux kernel, binutils, and grub are online (you only get what you need to get online with the installation CD).

    --
    Mod me down and I will become more powerful than you can possibly imagine!
  171. Actually the question should be .... by Proudrooster · · Score: 1

    Actually, the question should be, "which is faster to install the second time around" (keeping your application data intact of course)? The reason I ask this question is because Windows suffers from O/S decay and needs to be reloaded fairly frequently, especially if you have kids or users that love to install software.

    Most of you might not know this, but you can build RedHat Linux with a net boot floppy, ftp or nfs server, and that strange file called "anaconda-ks.cfg" in your root directory.

    Red Hat Linux is so easy to rebuild and get back to a running state with all your applications, data, and patches.

    Windows on the other hand usually requires a week or so, before you can locate all the CD's and license keys for the applications and get back to a useful state. I always DREAD reloading the Windows box, which usually is required about twice a year.

    Which do you dread reloading the most?

  172. he was using CDs? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    jesus. maybe i'm behind the times with ghost and dd/netcat

  173. win 2k vs. redhat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    he installtion that this fellow had to follow was for the Sony Restore CD's. These are by no means a standard installation. If one were to install an original version of the windows 2000 product on a standard desktop such as a dell dimension they would find that there are roughly 3 interaction points in the entire installation:

    a) select a volume and condition the media for installation.
    b) select the desired components to be installed
    c) configure the basic system information.

    There is very little interaction with the installer once the process is started. Windows 2000 comes with a fairly comprensive set of drivers to make your system functional (provided it's a desktop) Laptops such as the Viao have a great deal of custom hardware and require specialized drivers for just about everything.

    Most of the reboots required in the article are a result of the viao having custom hardware and specialized drivers.

    As such, this cannot be considered a standard or fair review of the installation process on both machines.

  174. BS by Deathlizard · · Score: 1

    This is almost Laughable that this made Slashdot. It's Even more Laughable that people are defending this piece of Trash Review.

    First of all, Using OEM Restore Disks NOT = OEM Win2k CD. The only ones that are somewhat good are the Gateway, Compaq and eMachines disks.

    Second, There are not 8 reboots in Win2k install. Theres one after Text install, after Graphical Install, after a Service pack, After IE6, and After all the patches, Making it 5.

    Third, If it takes 2 Hours to install win2k on a modern day machine, then that is the worst, most overbloated restore CD I have Ever Heard of. I can install Win2k completely from blank drive to fully patched in under 1 hour. It could Probably take me 2 hours if I wore a Blindfold. Hell it only takes me three hours to install Win2k, fully patched, install MS office and all of my files, settings, Drivers and programs I use.

    Forth, What CD Swap, there is only 1 CD in the entire OS installiation. You put it in the Drive, turn the PC on, and get the little bobbing bird and set it so it presses the Enter key.

    Let me say one thing however. I recently Installed Red Hat 7.2. They have definetly came a long way since 5.0, which was a total pain in the ass. 7.2 is definetly a step in the right direction when it comes to Linux installs. I dont think it's as easy as a windows install, but it's very close.

    1. Re:BS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > get the little bobbing bird and set > it so it presses the Enter key. Best comment in this whole silly thread.

  175. imagine that.. by Suppafly · · Score: 2

    A linux website comparing a linux install to a windows one and saying the linux one was easier, who would a guessed?

    Mean while, back in the real world, its obvious to most anyone outside of the linux drum beating zealots that windows really is easier to install and a lot more tolerant of errors than every linux distro out there.

  176. it depends by passion · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I tried installing the latest Debian release this last weekend.... took me the whole weekend, and 6 re-installs. The best I could get was running, but had some serious problems, such as: no networking installed, didn't recognize my mouse, couldn't run X because it didn't know how to work with my monitor, and top it off, it couldn't read the damn floppy drive.

    So I downloaded the latest Mandrake... first shot, I got everything loaded that I wanted, and it took me less than an hour.

    How does that compare to Windows? Who knows? I wouldn't touch that shit, but I would believe that Windows users experiences range anywhere between the two. Hell, my OS X installation was about as smooth as the Mandrake install.

    --
    - passion
  177. All y'all by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Can I get a FuK all y'all slashdot niggaz. Basically, y'all lack objectivity - defending yo punk azz soon to die muthafukkin' operatin' system. YO - I'M talking to you - you geek ass mutha fukaz! Apple is comin' fo' you azz - gonna run all up in ya gutz. You and your Linux lovin' buddies. OS X is gonna make yo' punk ass free lovin' OS go the way of the muth fukkin' wicked witch of the west - and their ain't a GOT damn thing you can do about.

    And I'm OUT MUTHA FUKKAZ!

    _PEACE

  178. My favorite install feature by TheLinuxWarrior · · Score: 2
    Is that during a Linux install, you can rip out all of those things that you know you don't need, want, or will use.

    On the other hand, look at Windows 2000 installation ( My favorite Windows if I have to use it), there's literally nothing to the install. You can't go in and disable things, and there is a very small number of things that you can deselect. You have to wait until after the install is finished, then go disable things via the Windows registry.

    I'll take the granular Linux install over the take it all and like it Windows install any day.

  179. Joe Barr by rudy_wayne · · Score: 1

    is a total dickwad. I have never seen such a biased and unfair piece of crap.

    I dislike Microsoft as much as the next guy, but Windows 2000 and Windows XP Pro are fast and easy to install. Unless of course you deliberately choose some bizaare installation scheme that you know with be slower than shit in january.

    1. Re:Joe Barr by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I didn't immediately see any anti-Barr rants. Could you link to them directly ? Thanks.

  180. The best way to judge how easy an install is.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    Forget about a seasoned user computer. Take a newbie and watch them install it.

    No help, no assistance, no advice. Just observe.

    I believe the difference would be night and day.

    Cheers,

    -ps

  181. Lycoris...fast, cheap, good, get all three at once by MsGeek · · Score: 2

    Lycoris Build 44 took all of 15 minutes to install on a P3 733MHz. It worked on the first go. Updating to Build 46 was a bit of a pain (installer complained of invalid GPG signature, phantom problem, I chalk it up to teething probs) but it worked like a charm. Lycoris is easily the fastest OS install I've seen since MacOS 7.1.

    --
    Knowledge is power. Knowledge shared is power multiplied.
  182. How Typical by rudy_wayne · · Score: 1

    Joe Barr is an all-too-typical example of the Linux Zealot. When I wrote a rebuttal to his biased piece of crap he merely dismissed every point as "wrong" or "insane" without a single fact to refute my statements.

    1. Re:How Typical by Kredal · · Score: 2

      Can you post the rebuttal and his responses? I'd like to see them. Thanks.

      --
      Whoever stated that signature sizes should be limited to one hundred and twenty characters can just go ahead and kiss my
    2. Re:How Typical by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Could you provide a link to your rebuttal ? Thanks.

  183. Current Linux installs are nice now, but ... by saskboy · · Score: 1

    Linux installs are not nearly as easy as Windows installs were for me 7 years ago. I'm no Windows dummy, and was pretty much self taught for installing Windows 95 and resolving IRQ problems and the like, but I still can't get Linux to work on the Internet by modem or DSL yet by myself. I tried installing SuSE 8 the other week, but it proved hopeless because I didn't buy it because I wanted to try it out first, and there was no description on how I could make a "CD 1" from the files I had downloaded.

    Mandrake 8.2 was much nicer for me since I got the .iso versions, and it installed like a charm. I also was able to figure out how to configure LILO this time to load Windows by default. Mandrake also offered to set a user to log in automatically which adds a nice "Windows" touch.

    My bottom line is Linux is good, but not yet for gnu-bies like me.
    John

    --
    Saskboy's blog is good. 9 out of 10 dentists agree.
  184. My God, man! by PhxBlue · · Score: 2

    You mean a LinuxWorld.com columnist might write an article that compares Linux favorably to Windows? Who would've guessed!

    The guy may have said he thought Windows would install faster. Regardless, someone who tends to favor one system over the other will look for ways to "level the field" when he doesn't think his favorite pony will win. After all, this is journalism, not scientific research.

    Then again, this sort of thing happens in scientific research, too. But at least scientists will try to make something of a claim of impartiality. How partial can you get when you work for a Linux-geek magazine?

    --
    !#@%*)anks for hanging up the phone, dear.
  185. misinfo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Win2k only takes one reboot. Why are people still refering to Win95 install process and attributing it to Win2k.

    Also, out of the box, windows 2k WILL install most of the drivers and is more likely to have WORKING drivers right off the bat. Neither of them can do this with the NEWEST hardware of course. Win2k also has a lot of apps that can get most people working. You may not like them, but they are there. Word processing, browser, some games, etc.

    If you havent installed 2k/xp dont post a bunch of crap about the process.

    By the way, I think the easiest install ever goes to Knoppix :)

    Knoppix rocks.

  186. Too bad... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Linux is worthless as a desktop operating system. It's like a house of cards. "Look, see? A web browser! It really works!" And the second something goes wrong, if Granny doesn't know what to do with root she ain't going to be installing a new driver for her new scanner.

  187. On System Restore disks and "fairness"... by PythonOrRuby · · Score: 2

    It's been mentioned here that it wasn't fair to use a system restore disk provided by Sony as a comparison to a fresh install of RedHat.

    It's also been mentioned that Windows in most cases comes already installed.

    Isn't this the perfect comparison then? For the vast majority of people, the only Windows install they'll ever do is via a system restore disk. And since Linux wasn't pre-installed, the only Linux install they're likely to do is a fresh install.

  188. Well I'm a Windows user... {shame} by DrShaggy · · Score: 1

    On top of that, I don't know linux all that well. I probably couldn't make it through an installation without help. However, I ran linux on my computer for the first time about a week or two ago when slashdot did the story on the Knoppix live on cd distro of linux. So I downloaded my first linux ISO and popped it in the drive for boot-up and my god thats magic! I was running linux, into a perty window manager, and all of my hardware was set up in less time than it takes my win2k to boot up. If you guys are trying to impress windows users, that Knoppix is quite the demonstration.
    P.S. Yes I know this wasnt technically a full linux installation but I'd say its pretty close, I mean I was running linux, isn't that the point of an installation?

  189. Funny by nhavar · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Funny I just had to install WinXP/98/Linux Mandrake last night. While XP took the longest it was the most complete and useful when logged in and took the least amount of fidgeting with, with only my digital camera not having at least base drivers. 98 would have been a close second except that it refused to load either my sound or my network card without a hassle. It still came in second because Linux Mandrake was hell to install (and it has one of the better installers). First the install choked half way through. Often the 'focus' caret wouldn't show and since it refused to recognize my logitech mouse either PS/2 or USB then I was often left guessing or unable to choose a button. Once completely loaded KDE ran just fine - good picture, sound, network everything but still no mouse and when I tried to switch to another mouse the system choked when shutting down (USB problems). Oh BTW why does it have to be so difficult to download a plugin. One step - prompt for download! Boolean YES I want - NO I don't. Instead of "Hey let me look and see if I can find a plugin for you! Oh yeah here it is on this page! Click here, then here, then wait, then all your browser windows close... then??? What page was I trying to look at?" All for shockwave?

    Anyway I digress... I personally would like to see a comparison between a desktop install of RH, WinXP on say 5 different configurations of computers. The scoring would be based on all the basics a user needs to get started 1)Video 2) input (mouse/keyboard) 3) audio 4) network/connectivity 5) E-mail/browsing 6) Setup time. This would be an out of the box test - no additional downloads or penalties for "Oh he doesn't have the latest driver". Get both installs off the shelf at Best Buy - yeah I know it kinda of knocks RH for a loss when you can't just download the latest distro repleat with updates, but it's "fair".
    Face it each system is going to need some patching and a check for latest drivers and probably a security review to be safe. Time how long it takes for each system and the ease in which it can be done - then score. Then go down the list of "useful" apps that each distribution has "bundled" and where they rank and how they compare and what it would take to get a comparable product should the "bundle" not have it included - then score.

    A few itterations of that procedure and you'll find all of the gaps in the competition and be able to make some serious improvements.

    --
    "Do not be swept up in the momentum of mediocrity." - anon
  190. Linux easier... NOT by umStefa · · Score: 1

    Back in '96 I got my first computer with Windows 95 installed. Every single computer I have had since then I have built myself and I always installed windows in less than 2 hours.

    Well last night I finally made the switch to Linux. 12 hours later and I still don't have sound, can't play movies or even use half my drives. Every single Linux HOWTO I have found assumes a basic working knowledge of linux (which I don't have and I really don't think that the majority of Windows users would have).

    Installing linux was an adventure in itself. Red Hat installed but I couldn't get any sort of GUI to start, so I cleared that off and tried Debian (impossible for a begginer), then I finally tried Mandrake. Two install attempts with mandrake and I had linux running and could use KDE as a GUI. That was last night, I have spent all day today (I had the day off) trying to get Linux running the basic functions I need, without much sucess. I did manage to get Samba partially working but it won't allow me to share all the directory's I want. As I previosly said I can't get sound, can't install any software, basicaly all I can do is surf the web and get e-mail.

    To to sum up my little rant, Linux may be easier to install for expert users but for the majority (IMHO) of windows users who install their own OS's linux is a major expidition.

    I personally will be using Windows XP the rest of the week and will continue trying to get Linux up and running this weekend.

    --
    Technology is most abused by the very people it was created to help
  191. Clueless Users (from the theatre world) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And I can authoritatively tell you that they refuse to pay you after services rendered, (setting up their pc) during the process they act like total assholes (especiialy if windows doesn't autodetect their drivers) and tell you how stupid you are. Never EVER do work for theatre people without having a contract written and signed.

    1. Re:Clueless Users (from the theatre world) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He said he doesnt read AC posts, but i dont believe him. I also dont believe that people actually use killfiles in Usenet, especially in low traffic groups.

  192. I love the headline on the front page... by GriffX · · Score: 1

    "Joe Barr, a LinuxWorld.com columnist, compares Linux and Windows installations. He expected Windows to be faster and easier since Microsoft has been at it for 21 years. (DOS 1.0 was released 21 years ago today.) It turns out Red Hat is quicker and less manually intensive."

    If the Onion ever decides to make fun of Slashdot, they need look no further than this post to realize that it's already been done for them. This is like an article that reads "Cheese Enthusiast Joe Barr compares cheese versus hummus. Turns out, cheese is better!"

    --
    These comments and opinions are mine and mine alone, although they shouldn't be.
  193. driver hell in Linux by Freddy_K · · Score: 1

    Mandrake is simple to install. It's when I have to upgrade the video card drivers so you can play some Quake3 or UT is when it's not so easy...

    What's the link to that page of instructions to update the video drivers? :)

    Why can't I just replace the old files with newer ones to upgrade the drivers? Or have better install scripts that more automate the process.

  194. Gas costs much by thegnu · · Score: 1

    Sony is an evil company, and to compare THEIR install of one of hte hardest win installs to one of the EASIEST linux installs is kind of stupid. No, wait. It's REALLY stupid. I'd like to say that I'm definitely not trying to put Linux down, but we're talking about mother-friendliness. The mandrake partitioning thing is more confusing than the windows one. Way more confusing. If you're going to count internet time as install time, why not compare amount of bits to download instead of time? Or download times in different parts of the US? Or what if you install Win2k and you threw out the 2k modem driver because you thought you wouldn't need it, and you need to drive to the library to download it, only you live on the other side of town, and have to drive 36 miles? And you drive a big SUV that only gets 14 miles to the gallon, and gas costs 2.59 9/10ths a gallon, so you ACTUALLY spent $206.63 on Windows, instead of $199.95 AS MICROSOFT ADVERTISED. PLUS regional sales tax, which, because you live in Hawaii, is something absurd like 11 cents on the dollar. DAMMIT! I also, by the way, know not how much 2k costs.

    --
    Please stop stalking me, bro.
  195. Next time use the Win2k CD by PSL · · Score: 1

    If this test was done right the tester should have just used the Win2k CD instead of the Sony System Recover CD that includes all of the extra crap that manufacturers love to have "pre-installed" with your new system. Win2k Can be installed on average in 15 minutes. Another 15-20 for all your drivers for periferials. And much less than 8 reboots. It is only recommended to reboot... you don't HAVE TO.

    --

    "Times may change, but standards must remain the same." - George Carlin.
  196. Easier? What about features? by Priyadi · · Score: 1

    I'm talking about Mandrake installer here, it has a lot more to offer than legacy windows installer.

    - Ability to resize existing FAT partition
    - Choice between normal mode for casual users or expert mode for advanced users
    - Network installs, installation without CDROM drive
    - Installation on existing FAT partition (loopback). Can windows install itself on existing ext3 partition?

  197. Win 98 vs Mandrake 8.2 by Pope+Raymond+Lama · · Score: 1

    Here go ther numbers from the last re-install in my
    brother's box. (800Mhz/512MB Athlon)
    I am not making this up. Windows got all messed up
    with the two network cards.

    CD ROM swapping: 2 for MDK, none for windows.
    Reboots:
    Win98: 38
    Mdk: 1
    BSOD:
    Win 98: 1
    MDK: N/A
    Security Mode Reboots:
    Win 98: 9
    MDK: none
    Elapsed time:
    Win98: 3h50; Unable to configure both network cards.
    MDK: 1h35; NATting to the whole house.

    I say one thing: the guy on the article was lucky with his windows
    install.

    --
    -><- no .sig is good sig.
  198. DVD Distro by Sean+Clifford · · Score: 2
    Its been said before, but I'll whore:

    All the more reason for distros on DVD.

  199. Your last comment is rather ironic... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I dont know of any Linux ISO that doesn't include either KDE or Gnome.
    They just dont exist.

    *glances around* FUD all cleared up?

  200. Joe Barr by Aciel · · Score: 1

    Joe Barr is not the most reliable of sources. He gave very biased reviews to Xine and MPlayer. I won't say much more than that, except that you should read what they have to say about him at www.mplayerhq.hu.

    Not trying to troll, just trying to point out that this guy isn't necessarily a reliable source.

  201. Figures... by momobaxter · · Score: 1

    When an article states Windows is easier than linux, the zealots come out and argue it's not true...

    When an article states Linux is easier, the monkeys come out and argue it's not true...

    Slashdot should learn this isn't a good place to post individual comments based on experience, instead they should have more obvious news like "water is wet, but hard when frozen" who can argue that?

    --
    "Full sources for linux currently runs to about 200kB compressed" --Linus Torvalds 31-Jan-1992
  202. Re:sig has to go. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I agree that the man is using his daughter. Tha'ts fucked up.

    That doesn't change the fact that he's right about the under god bit.

    And so it turns out that he has one set of beliefs and the mother has anohter. Doesn't he have the right to try to get the school to teach his beliefs, just as much as the mother wants them to keep the god part?

    I'm not trying to defend this guy's actions. But on the legal issue, I agree with him.

    Here's another example: You know those miranda rights? "you have the right to remain silent, you have the right to an attorney," etc. etc. Most people, myself included, think that the cops shouyld have to tell you that stuff.

    Miranda was convicted of rape, then set free because of the Miranda decision. The fact that he is a criminal and did a bad thing doesn't mean that the law we've named after him is bad too.

    See? Don't conflate the legal issue with the domestic/personal issue. That NewsMax article is extremely guilty of putting the father on trial, when the trial is really about the constitutionality of the state endorsing religion by requiring kids to say that they are "under god." He, as the parent of the child, seems to have some say in the things that the child is exposed to at school. It also turns out that he is an asshole, but legally that is irrelevant.

    Peace!

  203. Haha, thats funny. Oh wait, its not by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    (1) who the hell has an SE/30 anymore?

    it doesn't EVER support ethernet, and barely supported a modem. No one uses one today for a desktop. A museum, maybe, but then they wouldn't run NetBSD.

    (2) if you keep everything to minimal X11 and TWM, almost any linux distro is super-fast.

    (3) Mac OS X is built to run on PowerPC architecture. Not 680x0.

    However, the latest version of A/UX (Apple Unix), can run on 680x0 architecture, including the SE/30.

    Has a command line built underneath a sleak classic Mac interface. The 1992 precursor to Mac OS X.

    1. Re:Haha, thats funny. Oh wait, its not by SN74S181 · · Score: 1

      The point was:

      Any Mac, even as old as a SE/30.

      There is ethernet available for the SE/30. Usually on eBay for less than $20. NetBSD supports it.

      It takes a short amount of time to add whatever Window Manager you want using the Packages system.

      Don't you mean, the last version of A/UX? It's a dead OS.

  204. Not a fair comparison by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This guy is using a Sony Restore CD (i.e. the reason for the 3 CDs and all the pop-ups). A normal Win2K cd is much less of a hassel and doesn't have any ads for 3rd party products.....again...a slanted test in favor of linux....you guys wonder why Linux still hasn't made any real dent in the Windows markets...

  205. Linux is easier to install? by mckayc · · Score: 1

    Hmm... a *LinuxWorld* article saying that *Linux* is easier to install.

    That's a huge surprise.

    Wait, wait, let me go to Microsoft's site and see what they have to say about Linux for completely unbiased information.

  206. i disagree (about all of it) by io333 · · Score: 1

    yea sure, linux installs are getting faster & faster. I think my last more or less minimal + 1 desktop install of mandrake 8.2 took about 20 minutes or less on mediocre hardare (duron 1ghz). WinXP installation on the same hardware takes about 40 minutes for similar functionality.

    But Mandrake8.2 after that 20 minute install is *much* slower in everyday use as compared to WinXP (after all the eyecandy silliness is turned off in XP).

    In contrast, my GentooLinux install on the same hardware takes about 24 *hours* just for compilation (let alone all the myriad manual steps that must be taken to make it work at all), but then afterwards is completely optimized only for my system (and for what I intend to use it for), and is at least as fast in everyday use (and sometimes twice as fast or more) than WinXP.

    Someone further up pointed out that the install doesn't really matter, it what happens after that counts.

    *EXACTLY*

    Don't all of you running Mandrake or Redhat wish that it ran twice as fast or more than it does now?

    Well, you could have that. But you wouldn't have a less than 1 hour install any more, now would you.

    But ask yourself, which would you rather have?

  207. Yay, we win! by extrasolar · · Score: 2

    What do we get?

  208. Huh? by darkpurpleblob · · Score: 1

    For example, to get a more secure version of Internet Explorer, consumers must give up their freedom of speech. That's right. By clicking "I accept" you agree not to "disclose the results of any benchmark test of the .NET Framework component" unless you have written permission from Microsoft.

    Huh? So? What's the issue here? Sure, clicking 'I accept' may be restricting freedom of speech, but is his girlfriend planning on running and publishing the results of benchmarking the .NET Framework? I thought this comparision of installers was from a consumers perspective

  209. Sounds like my SuSE 7.3 install! by Mustang+Matt · · Score: 2

    Only I didn't have to do the windowsupdate, I used yast...

    --
    The man who trades freedom for security does not deserve nor will he ever receive either. - Benjamin Franklin
  210. I totally agree. by Mustang+Matt · · Score: 2

    I used to be one of those people.

    Recently I decided to install SuSE 7.3 from scratch with the intent of setting it up as a web, email and DNS server for a friend. I also installed X.

    Granted, I now have a lot of experience with apache, sendmail and bind9. It really wasn't required to get things setup.

    This wasn't even a brand new machine with the latest and greatest and everything installed without a hitch. Couldn't have gone smoother.

    I used to struggle with partitioning all the time. Now I have a Windows workstation that's seperate from my linux servers. I use it for the few programs that I can't get in linux such as Homesite and photoshop because I am too lazy to find(learn how to use) equivalent programs.

    --
    The man who trades freedom for security does not deserve nor will he ever receive either. - Benjamin Franklin
  211. Windows vs Linux -- Why? by GlueAll · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Ok, I am going to admit upfront, this is my first reply to a post on slashdot. Up till now, I have just enjoyed the reading, but, this installation ease of both os's has really sparked an interest for me. I have installed both Windows and Several Flavors of Linux, as well as a couple BSD flavors. I have been using BSD for about 10 years now. I recently added linux in the form of slackware to my knowledge arsenal. About 7 years ago, I started using windows as well, in the 95 flavor. Now, I must say, windows does have a very easy, straight forward install. It does what it is supposed to do, which is install windows. On newer machines, and with newer windows versions, I have had windows up and running, with very little effort in around 30 minutes. Windows XP was my most recent install, and it was beautiful. The fact that windows xp has a biggilion drivers included in it was very nice, because it auto-detected and setup my hardware for me. The only real effort I made was agreeing to that damned EULA. But, as much as I hate it, I did agree, and went through the rest of the setup with no problems. Now, comparing it to my slackware install, slackware was a little more tricky. But then again, slackware is openly known to be for more advanced users, so I will leave this lay. Instead, I will use my experience with installing mandrake. My roommate, who is a die hard linux hater, agreed to install mandrake on a machine just to see what it looked like. I gave him the cd's, and told him was not going to help him in anyway. About an hour later, he came over and told me he loved the install interface, said it was extremely easy to work with, and he had it 100% configured. I went over and checked it out, and low and behold, it was working, and dang good at that. Now, my question is, why the linux vs windows debate? I don't want to start a flame war here, or anything like that. But, think about it. Both operating systems do what they are designed to do. I do prefer linux of windows for the simple fact that I am a BSD baby. I started with it, it is what I know best. But, windows does have may strong points, which linux debaters and supports seem to overlook. I am a die hard microsoft hater, but I hate them for their business practices, not there software. Granted, there is alot they can clean up, and tune out, but, it works. If microsoft open sourced there product, what would we do? Close them down? Is it not every hackers natural incline to make something better? So, if the source was released, wouldn't someone take the source, fix a ton of problems, and then release it, or feed the fixes back to the original author? Isn't this the theory of GPL? This would in affect keep windows around wouldn't it? (Granted if all the bugs were fixed, would we still think of it as the windows we have all come to love to hate?) Like I said, I don't want to start a flame thread, I just want to get the wheels turning.

  212. well said by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    please mod this up

  213. since you asked by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    you morons get so annoying
    1 reboot. thats it.

  214. Cheap shot by Traa · · Score: 2

    Is linux easier to install then pre-installed windows? [fill in lotsa links to DELL et al offering computers with windows pre-installed ONLY]

    Think about that.

    now get back to work

  215. Laptops by jchristopher · · Score: 1
    I just installed both Windows 2000 and Red Hat 7.3 in a dual boot configuration on an HP Omnibook 500. Red Hat picked up my NIC and sound without any interaction on my part.

    Under Windows 2000, it had drivers for neither, I had to install and configure them afterwards. Needless to say, I was pretty impressed.

    There are still some usability challenges, but overall, RH 7.3 is VERY usable, even for a newbie. And typically, I've been very critical of Linux usability in general. It is improving at a rapid rate.

  216. Device drivers by raptwithal · · Score: 1

    One thing that makes Linux much easier (IMHO) to install is the device drivers. Although not every manufacturer makes device drivers for Linux, for those that are included in the distribution, they get installed along with the base system.

    For Windows, you have to install the system, reboot, finish the installation, reboot, and then reboot another time for just about each driver you install. So getting a new system up and running is usually much faster under Linux.

  217. Windows is harder to install.. by Quazion · · Score: 2

    Ever tried installing windows when you allreaddy got linux installed, wow thats hard, cause your linux wont run anymore then, i didnt even bother.
    (its not possible to make windows dual boot with other operating systems from within it self)

    Quazion ;-)

    ps. this comment isnt mine but i think its true.

  218. What a shock by JSR+$FDED · · Score: 1

    A Linux magazine saying Linux is better than Windows... Imagine that.

  219. easiest OS install ever by margaret · · Score: 1

    The fastest and easiest OS install I've ever done was BeOS. (the intel version, in my case) From the time I opened the shrinkwrap, it was about 10-15 minutes until I was browsing the web. If I remember correctly, this included the time it took to partition my hard drive. During the actual OS install, I had to click ok maybe 3 times. I miss that OS :-( Especially the haiku error messages...

    Second easiest install - Mac OS X. (yep, I'm one of those switcher people)

    -margaret

  220. What a crock by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That is so amazingly rigged it's not funny.
    Firstly, he does not use windows 2000, but the sony recovery disks, so of course he gets all the annoying invasive stuff which he complains about. THis is (for the most part)put there by sony, not ms.
    Secondly, if he is comparing windows 2000, why isn't he comparing it with redhat 7.0 or debian 2.2 or something? If he's going to use the latest version of redhat he should use the latest version of windows, which is XP.

    I will never trust anything I read about anything computer related if it's coming from someone who works for a linux company (go figure, linuxworld) or shows any linux favourtism, they are just as bad as the people microsoft pays out in their biasing.

  221. Discussion = moot by The_Shadows · · Score: 2

    Why even bother comparing load times?

    For the personal user, even the "6 hours" some say is required to install 2K is very little. For the corporation, they Ghost. It's a 5 minute install.

    BTW, one of the above comments mentioned a 6 hour install of 2K? Well, sir, I will say that it did recently take me all of 6 hours to install all my drivers, updates, Office, etc. Of course, why would I ever mention that this was on a PII 266 w/ 256MB of RAM? Oh, and that the install was Advanced Server, not Pro?

    It took, oh, maybe 2.5 hours, tops, to install (Pro) on my primary system.

    Sigh. I digress. The issue is not about install time. As I said, corporations can do all their installs much more quickly. Ghost it, or use another system imaging tool. Home users might get screwed occasionally by a really long load time.

    The real issue is stability and functionality. Who cares how long it takes to install if you don't have to do it again? I have had to blow away my copy of 2K twice since I've started using it. The cause BOTH times were for upgrades. Motherboard upgrades. I had a Mobo blow out on me, and the replacement had a bad memory controller from the get-go. Now, I've been running fine for over 6 months, and am well on my way to 5, if not 6, nines of uptime.

    That is with the box being made to do gaming. I rarely need reboots, and haven't needed to reinstall. As much as I've played with Linux, on box #2, I've also never needed to screw with reinstalling it. It also doesn't get as many hardware upgrades. I don't use it for the same features, but you know what? I'm happy with both of them. I couldn't care less which one took longer to install. (BTW, Linux took longer but it was a clean Gentoo install so point == moot)

    Later.

    1. Re:Discussion = moot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "The real issue is stability and functionality."

      You just keep telling yourself that. If that were the truth Linux would have overtaken M$ in the workstation market. Since X is such a PITA to setup no one wants to the deal with it. If the Linux community would pull their heads out of their keisters they might figure that out. IMHO, the linux community hates M$ so much that they must be different just for the sake of it. If KDE were more configurable like windows it might just catch on. But to change the freeking screen resolution you have to edit a damn TEXT file and reboot. What kind of $hit is that?!?!?

      Meanwhile Apple is spanking Linux with it's OsX. A true merging of Unix and GUI. No, I'm not a staunch Mac user. I bought my first Mac last year to study up for a new job. The job fell through but I kept the Mac. OsX kicks ass. It's easy to use and I can always drop to a prompt and get business done. If the Linux Nazi's don't start changing they'll be history execpt for the server market.

      Get yer $hit together!!

  222. Sony Restore bites by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The Sony restoration method is absolutely NOT a windows install. In my experience Sony adds a lot of useless junk to their images.

    I'm not going to say which install is better, but comparing RedHate to Sony is hardly what the article said it was doing. If he had admitted that it was RH vs. Sony would we have all followed the link?

  223. Gee, thats a nice comparison by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    maybe instead of installing a newer version of redhat against sony restore cd's of a 2 year old version of windows he should have used xp, people would have been a little less ornery about it.... and did he mention the specs of the laptop, i didnt read the article too in-depth but if its some old pentium 2 with 64 megs of ram i would definately expect redhat to be faster

  224. Unfair comparison by Tilos · · Score: 1

    Comparing a Sony restore disc and an orginal Red Hat disc is unfair. How about comparing with a Red Hat disc with Windows 2000 retail disc instead?

    However, when I last checked the Red Hat installation took about half the time Windows 2000 did.

  225. Get a HDD by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You "own" a 3.2Gb HDD and you had to borrow a 2Gb HDD??? You can get a 40Gb HDD for $80US, 80Gb for $130US.

    Is your machine a P100 as well?

    1. Re:Get a HDD by Ravenn · · Score: 1

      Typical AC troll....

      Re-read the above message. Oh don't bother, I'll just tell you what you missed: I'm a *student*, which means a severe lack of fundage. A mature-age student, with a wife and two little mouths to feed and clothe, as well as buy textbooks, and pay for my course to better my life.

      Get out of you're parent's basement (or maybe attic, or bedroom) and see what the real world is like.

      I wish I could afford the AU$140 for a 60GB hdd, but I have to ride 17Kms (that's around 10 miles, to save you from having to work it out) each way, 5 days a week, on a pushbike, regardless of the weather, as well as lug my heavy textbooks. I do this to save the extra few dollars a day on public transport, and because I can't afford a car.

      Besides, with a Linux system, a P100 can do just as much, only slightly slower.

      I'm a real man, who thinks of family first, and my needs as secondary. Not a luser who can't even post a response to something like this with an account... :-)

      Ravenn

      --
      Of all the things you can accomplish by screwing up your face and swearing into a dark room, sleep is not one of them.
  226. my vote by sewagemaster · · Score: 1

    my vote goes with windows 2000 pro.

    here's my hardware setup.
    ati rage 128.
    Dlink ethernet card
    soundblaster live
    dvd rom
    ricoh cdwriter
    pentium III 450mhz.

    win2k autodetected all my devices including the ethernet card without me having to do anything more. how would i know if my ethernet card would be using the tulip.c driver? i completely switched over to linux and recently moved back to win2k. windows' stability was one thing that pissed me off the most and in win2k it has never crashed once within the last 5 months. no need to partition swap space during installation. no need to know all the details about my cpu. it does the installation all for me. i'm not saying it's better, but it's EASIER. as far as maintenance, debian is still the best ;)

    here's the offtopic part

    i still use netscape 4.7. IE occationally because they are both responsive. mozilla is not. konqueror is not. kde is most pretty, but it's not responsive. people are saying that konqueror and kde are the best apps, but i'd say licq is the best ap for linux.

  227. The questions isn't how fast, but does it work? by King+Dick · · Score: 2, Informative

    Whether the install is faster or not is immaterial if the final product doesn't work (in either case). I won't go into detail here, but I tried to install Slackware 8.0, Red Hat 7.0 and 7.2, freeBSD and Mandrake on two different computers before finally getting Red Hat 7.3 to install. I enlisted the help of two different long-time linux users, two full books on linux, and several web sites. I poured hours upon hours into the problem. The most humerous part is when the Red Hat boot floppy kept telling me that my computer didn't have any hard drives, and the Red Hat disk one in my CD-Rom wasn't a Red Hat disk! Once Red Hat 7.3 instaled, it was like pulling teeth to get X-windows to work. Even though my Video Card and Monitor were both in the list and selected, they didn't work. Had to try combinations of other monitors and cards before finding something to work. On the other hand, I've installed every version on Windows on various computers. I agree, have something else to do while it installs. I also agree that win 98 is buggy, ME is useless, and while I love XP, it's a resource hog and full of security holes. But you know what, they all WORK! I have never had a failed install of any Windows OS in probably 40+ installs. And I can use my computer without HOURS of configuration. My point is that the speed of install is only part of the equasion. If you want a solid secure system, get a Linux CD and set aside a week. If you need to use the computer before then, Windows is probably the better choice.

  228. moron by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    youre an absolute fucking idiot if it takes you 2:05 hours to install win2k.

    even with office 2k, it takes about an hour, tops.

    That linux distro may well install quicker, but no way would that windows install take that long.

  229. You're missing the obvious.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    WINDOWS already comes pre-installed on MOST of the home PC's people buy today.. Even if Linux WAS easier to install, most people don't care, because, the WINDOWS OS is already on the machines they are buying..

  230. yet another troll for the fanboys by maxpublic · · Score: 2

    The fact that this article appears on Slashdot, and generates the amount of commentary that it does, should be enough to send any rational user into giggle fits. I mean, how much more obvious does an article have to be to troll for Bill Gates fan-boys? Claim that Linux does *anything* better and you'll have the sheep running in all directions blasting Linux and extolling the virtues of Windows.

    Nice going, sheep. You rose to the bait again. This in itself says something about the average Windows user.

    Max

    --
    My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    1. Re:yet another troll for the fanboys by Sarreq+Teryx · · Score: 1

      What bait, the guy is an obvious Linux Zealot who is trying to bash windows mare than windows needs to be. windows ain't the best out there, but it's what most people are able to use (by people's abilities, before everyone jumps on that), whereas Linux is a royal pain in the assh and tends not to support anywhere as much hardware as windows, which is a BIG BIG 10 up in favor of windows.

      But if you're gonna pick an OS on just how hard and how long it takes to install the thing, GO USE A MAC.

  231. parent is a troll by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    the good old "I'm pretending I didn't get the joke" and watch those suckas hit the bait.

  232. What's this guy on about? by mulhall · · Score: 1

    I installed Win2k on my Sony Vaio FX-301 laptop three weeks ago and it didn't take three CD's, or 2.5 hours.

    I downloaded the neccessary drivers from Sony, but apart from that time which you can't include in a windows installation speed comparison it took *less* than an hour. Got a bunch of hardware errors and installed the Vaio drivers, rebooted and started browsing the Web over dialup (testing) and a network connection for CivIII downloads...

    In fact I was doing three other things while it took place, so not exactly rocket science eh?

    I really don't see what the point of this was apart from to get heads nodding in ignorant agreement in the Red Hat community. There's plenty of real complaints to be made about Win2k, but installation sure isn't one of them.

  233. Screenshots ? by Radium_ · · Score: 1

    Too bad no screenshots are available. It is possible to easily take a screenshot of the Mandrake installation by pressing the "F2" key...

  234. Is Red hat easier than SuSE? by joeler · · Score: 1

    I am curious is Red Hat easier than SuSE? I can't imagine anything easier than SuSE for a new install. I did not try Red Hat since 5.x - used SuSE since 5.3.

    OT: I am really happy with the latest Crossover Office from Codeweavers, Quicken 2002 works rather impressivly. I waited for years to upgrade my Quicken...

    --
    >>>please remove "nospam" from email address
  235. Unlike the Apple comparison by Quila · · Score: 2

    I remember that Apple one. OS 9 took a fraction of the install steps vs. NT. First, they should have compared to the popular OS, Windows 95/98, instead of the workstation OS. Second, after you had completed the shorter list of things to do and installed OS 9, you then had to go through and do most of what was done on NT during the installation (like networking) anyway. It was like World Com/Enron accounting practices.

    However, this one seems to be fairly made, with both platforms up to the status of having the machine up and running with all normal services, connectivity and updates. Red Hat even had a disadvantage that it wasn't just a fresh install on a whole machine, instead having to have a partition configured on the 2K machine.

    If it weren't for a certain couple of apps I need, I'd go with Red Hat.

  236. Who cares about installation when preinstalled? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    New PC - Windows XP Home, quality hardware, yummy. XP installation time zero as it was preinstalled. Shame it freezes every five minutes in use. All MS certified drivers, up to date, used Windows Update to get bang up to date on the OS, verified the memory using DocMemory, latest BIOS, clean as whistle. Freeze. Reboot. Freeze. Reboot. Freeze. Reboot. How Microsoft have got the balls to release such a stinking pile of dingos poo as XP Home is beyond me. I will NEVER buy another MS operating system as long as I live. For now I'll use WIN98SE which works fine on the same hardware. Longer term I'm bailing out of MS altogether.

  237. IE6? by Corporate+Troll · · Score: 1

    Question: is it mandatory to install IE6 (I don't use IE) when installing SP3. Heck I didn't even know that SP3 was out. No, I don't use "Windows Update": I don't like it when my PC does things without asking.

  238. What's this whineing about 3cds? by puppetier · · Score: 1

    Ok, listen up windozes users that are complaining about the 3cds for a fresh RH installation.(I'm not sure about the content of the RH installation CDs so I'm going to otherwise use Mandrake linux as an example) Now you have 3CDs for a MDK install, the first CD is for the OS and apps critical for the OS functionallity, this disk is easialy comparible to the one cd required for a Windows installation. Now the 2nd MDK disk, is filled with apps that are not so critical but can be very useful and mostly apps that an average user wants or needs. Then the 3rd disk has more or less toys or the odd apps out, ones that are not very widely used and not very commonly used. Now I think off of a fresh FULL to the teeth MDK8.1 install you get the OS and about 6000 apps, and yes this is only 3 disks. Now you have your Windows 'wonderful single disk install' that will provide you with at most 50 useful apps. Time for some math:

    we have 3 MDK8.1 cds that have about 6000 apps and we have 1 windows install with about 50. Now if you were to make a windows install with 6000 apps, when all other apps for windows average off about 1 cd per extra app not on the install cd. How many cds would you need for a 6000 app windows install?

    well, 6000-50= 5050 CDs for extra windows applications. Now to be fair we all know that about 2000+-1000 would be downloads, like winamp, icq, etc. That still leaves you with 2050+-1000 CDs that you need to make a 6000 app windows OS. Note i'm not saying that either party would accually want a 6000 app install but think about it. Even if you only wanted 200 app install. Most of that if not all will be on a linux distro cd, opposed to windows where you would either have to download them or acquire a copy somehow(cdr or purchase). So are you complaining about convience?

  239. Times and usability will vary widely by Mandelbrute · · Score: 2

    Sometimes it would be easier and less time consuming to install slackware 2.0 from twenty floppy disks than windows XP from bootable CD - this is one of those case by case things, similar to getting someone on the street to taste test margarine. Your hardware will vary and the installation will vary.

  240. Nonsense by dswan69 · · Score: 1

    My Windows 2000 is on one CD, so is XP; both require a single reboot during the installation; both take in the region of 30-40 minutes to install most of which can be completely unattended - if you take the trouble to set up an install script it'll do everything on its own.

    As far as drivers go XP came with drivers for almost everything and no OS install can possibly have the latest drivers unless you just acquired it.

  241. Can you flash it? by yerricde · · Score: 1

    As far as the 2K install went...since I don't have a spare EEPROM with the unbroken ATI Xpert 2000 code on it, (I have to send it up to Ottawa, CAN) I'm stuck.

    Does ATI offer a downloadable DOS based utility to upgrade the card's BIOS? If so, install FreeDOS and run it.

    --
    Will I retire or break 10K?
    1. Re:Can you flash it? by MsGeek · · Score: 2

      Apparently this EEPROM will not flash. When I called ATI to ask about the problem they told me to box up the card and ship it.

      Unless there is something else wrong with this card that ATI is not talking about, the chip in question cannot be flashed.

      I know there is a chip on the card that can be flashed, but this is not the one that is actually faulty. Weird situation. At least ATI has the integrity to recall the card, although they should actually *publicize* this recall...

      Weirdest of all the Xpert 2000 works FINE in XFree86. And neither Anaconda (Red Hat 7.3) or Lizard (Lycoris Build 44) nor even the Windows 98SE installer tickled this bug. It's only the Windows 2000 installer.

      Some "Xpert 2000" that card is! ;-)

      --
      Knowledge is power. Knowledge shared is power multiplied.
  242. A simple question by 1110110001 · · Score: 1

    I really hate this install comparisons. How often do you install a new system? Once a half year? Or once a year? How often to you use your system. Everyday? You see the point. If my mum tells me her system is fubar she calls me to install a new system. She doesn't call me everyday when she wants to use the system. Usability in daily work is much more important especially for the simple-minded user.

    b4n

  243. When there's nothing between dialup and T1... by yerricde · · Score: 1

    yes, but a cd/disk is all you need to get a full debian system. Network installation.

    In some geographical areas, an Internet connection with faster than 5 kilobytes per second throughput costs $900 per month.

    So the choice for Linux users is between several discs that can be easily scratched up even if cared for properly, waiting several days (at four hours per day) for the packages to download over dial-up, paying through the nose for a T1 connection, or paying through the nose to move house to where cable or DSL is available.

    --
    Will I retire or break 10K?
  244. net installers worry me by yerricde · · Score: 1

    I've got two floppies for FreeBSD...

    Do they fit a working system into 2.8 MB, or do you have to pay hundreds of dollars a month for T1 broadband in areas where neither DSL nor cable is available?

    --
    Will I retire or break 10K?
  245. Joe Barr, a LinuxWorld.com columnist, compares Lin by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Joe Barr, a LinuxWorld.com columnist, compares Linux and Windows installations....

    Oh yeah, this is unbiast.
    What BS.

  246. "a different disk" costs $300 by yerricde · · Score: 1

    Bad checksum in Windows 2000 = pop a different disk in and hit retry.

    And where do you get that different disk? Are you willing to spend $300 for a new Windows license every time you scratch up your copy? Or are replacement copies of "end-of-lifed" operating systems still available from Microsoft?

    --
    Will I retire or break 10K?
    1. Re:"a different disk" costs $300 by NanoGator · · Score: 2

      "And where do you get that different disk?"

      I have several laying around. Also, some of us are smart enough to make backups of our software. My company uses Windows 2000.

      Worst case scenario is I borrow a friend's. As long as I have the original CD (working or not) to prove I have a copy, I'm not doing anything wrong.

      --
      "Derp de derp."
  247. Double standard for apps on the OS CD by yerricde · · Score: 1

    With Redhat you get far more software than the win2k installation, it includes a number of editors, office suits, etc. etc.

    Double standard. When Red Hat or Mandrake includes applications, people call it a "useful feature that gives Linux a leg up on Windows." However when Windows includes applications, people call it "anti-competitive." What's the key difference?

    --
    Will I retire or break 10K?
    1. Re:Double standard for apps on the OS CD by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1. RH doesn't make the added sofware, or get paid for it. They include it as a courtesy, both to the user and the developer.
      2. RH doesn't force you to install apps. If I don't want a web browser on my Linux install, I don't have to install it anyway.

  248. Actually getting a replacement copy? by yerricde · · Score: 1

    Umm, if you have another disk available

    I already paid $300 for a copy of Windows. Now they want me to pay $300 more for a non-scratched copy?

    --
    Will I retire or break 10K?
    1. Re:Actually getting a replacement copy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      WTF? Are you a tard or something? Ever heard of 'backups' or 'taking care of your CDs'?

      If you can't take care of an OS CD, you have no business using Linux. Only a total dumbass would pay for a CD more than once.

  249. DVD costs money by yerricde · · Score: 2

    Besides, why would you install from the CD:s if you can get it on a DVD?

    Because I am a student, and I don't have the funds right now to afford a DVD-ROM/CD-RW drive to replace my Plextor CD-RW drive. I would also rather not shut down and open my computer to swap drives every time I want to read a DVD vs. burn a CD for backup.

    You -DO- support your Linux-distribution of choice, don't you?

    Yes, and that's why I said "DVD-ROM" instead of "DVD-R" or "DVD+RW". However, I do not support the practices of Motion Picture Association members.

    --
    Will I retire or break 10K?
  250. what or where is "windows"? by Lewis+Mettler,+Esq. · · Score: 2

    I am familiar with Debian as well as RedHat, Mandrake, Xandros, Lindows, eLx and a few others. But, what is "windows"?

    Is that a GUI or windows manager?

    By the way, Mandrake, Xandros (beta) and Lindows (also beta for us) all install on one pass through the CDs. I have no idea why Microsoft thinks that the machine has to boot, reboot and triple boot just to get the hareware hooked up. Sounds like defective software to me. The free software does not require it. Why should the most expensive software require it?

    --
    NexuSys - Linux support by the best
    1. Re:what or where is "windows"? by passion · · Score: 2

      Why should the most expensive software require it?

      Because they like to take extra special care of your machine... :>

      --
      - passion
  251. Linux has no games? WTF? by yerricde · · Score: 1

    I agree entirely. Linux is a terrible gaming platform.

    Wrong. Linux runs NES and Game Boy Advance games almost perfectly. Just set up your game pad, put your GBA cartridge in a cart reader that you bought for $50 at Lik-Sang.com, start FCE Ultra (for NES) or VisualBoyAdvance (for GBA), and play away.

    --
    Will I retire or break 10K?
    1. Re:Linux has no games? WTF? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh come on. I love emulators as much as anyone.. I use my Dreamcast as an NES emulator more than an actual Dreamcast, but saying Linux is a good gaming platform because it runs emulators is sad. Sure, some of the newer games will run under Wine, the fact of the matter is that games are developed for Windows, and there is no getting around that.

  252. Win2k out of the box will catch a virus by yerricde · · Score: 1

    Sure it takes time to update through the Windows Update crap, but that's not necessary to have a usable system.

    <sarcasm>
    If your idea of "usable" includes "will possibly contract a virus if you merely surf the Web or read e-mail", then I'd guess Windows 2000 without service packs is usable.
    </sarcasm>

    I REALLY dig the compression feature in NTFS. Suddenly you have 90% more space.

    Unless your applications' native data formats are already compressed (staroffice, mp3, jpg, etc). Doesn't Linux have a compressed filesystem?

    --
    Will I retire or break 10K?
  253. next on slashdot... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...guy in ska band finds out that ska is better than all other types of music!

  254. Backup? by yerricde · · Score: 1

    his recovery disks are nothing more than hard drive images. He can reinstall Windows and MSOffice in ten minutes.

    And how long does it take to install the rest of the applications (virus checker, firewall, compiler, decent RGB image editor, non-bloated media player, etc) that are either obviated in the UNIX architecture or installed with Mandrake?

    And how long does it take to backup the user's data and restore it after re-installation? Most of the computers that come with Ghost restore disks do not use a separate partition for My Documents; they just wipe out all the user's precious data on re-install.

    --
    Will I retire or break 10K?
  255. Installation versus Actually Working by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sure, he might have gotten Red Hat installed faster -- but I'd bet that his usb and scsi peripherals will take days, if not weeks, to connect, and even then, work badly.

    Windows is so much better than linux at recognizing hardware and hardware compatibility...

  256. A PC is born... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I feel it's a typical PCish way of thinking advertising how easy can be the installing operating systems by the non-technical user. Is it really belongs to all-day computer use to install OS, drivers, etc? Look after the series "The car is born" on Dicovery :)

    1. Re:A PC is born... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I know all these words, but I just can't parse these sentences..

  257. My experience (or lack of it...) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Allow me to relate my experiences on the subject.

    First let me set the scene: 1 Old machine (P2 400), 2 NIC's, nothing special about the rest of it...

    On this machine I have installed (at various times) WinNT(4) server, Win2K Server(Adv), Win2k SBS, Win2K Pro, Win98, & RedHat 7.3. The ONLY OS I had any problems installing and configuring was RedHat. Firstly setup couldn't set up the / partition automatically (possibly serves me right for trying a server install), nor was it possible using Disk Druid. FDisk. Oh joy. Having finally configured the partitions, entered network info, the install starts, then crashes about 5 mins in. One bug report on the way to Bugzilla. Time to try again. Repartition (admittedly, it's easier this time, as I know what I'm trying to do - n n n t 83 etc...). Try different configuration options for my NIC's, and ditch XWindows. Install seems to work. Yippee. However, when I boot the machine (floppy boot only - what the f's going on?) I find I have no man pages for any commands, let alone half of the commands I expect to find. Still, I figure I can add these in later. Time to configure my start-up environment.

    "vi .Bash_profile"

    [Bash: vim: bad command!]

    Err. No, it's there. I can see it. Oh f it.

    In summary: Windows (all attempted versions) no problems, though at 1-2 hours a pop it could be quicker. Linux (RedHat) 4 hours so far, and it's still shite!
    Don't get me wrong, I'm not giving up. As soon as I've finished this rant, and made another cup of tea I'll have another go. But be warned...

    Don't believe everything you read on the internet (except this of course).

    Tone.

  258. Suse 8.0 by rppp01 · · Score: 1

    They hail the '3 click' install. Of course that doesn't count the swapping of the cds......but you don't need to install the apps. That what the other cds have on them.

    --
    They stuck me in an institution, said it was the only solution, to...protect me from the enemy, myself
    1. Re:Suse 8.0 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Get a clue. There is only 1 CD when you install Windows (2000, XP, whatever). This idiot that did the comparison decided to use the Sony restore CDs which makes his article completely false and biased.

  259. Getting the patches? by yerricde · · Score: 1

    Installing any operating system and connecting to the internet without installing all the latest patches (yes, that includes linux) is ... stupid.

    Without connecting to the Internet, how does a fellow obtain the patches?

    --
    Will I retire or break 10K?
  260. It depends... by platos_beard · · Score: 1

    It sure as hell is if you've lost your product key...

    --
    What's a sig?
    1. Re:It depends... by platos_beard · · Score: 1

      oops "It" = "Linux"

      --
      What's a sig?
  261. Welcome To Windows by yerricde · · Score: 1

    She'd just be pressing keys or maybe clicking on stuff

    At least Windows includes a simple tutorial program (the infamous "Welcome To Windows") on first boot.

    --
    Will I retire or break 10K?
  262. Red Hat doesn't work on Macs by yerricde · · Score: 1

    and why only Windows and RedHat, why not lump in MacOS 10.2, to get a broader picture?

    The test specified identical computers. Red Hat does not make an OS Product for Macintosh hardware. You want Yellow Dog Linux.

    --
    Will I retire or break 10K?
  263. Product activation requires a telephone by yerricde · · Score: 1

    You type in the CD Key and voila a new Windows XP system.

    Installation of a Windows XP operating system hasn't completed until you've signed up for telephone service from your local telephone monopoly, signed up for MSN Internet Access (or another ISP), and activated Windows XP.

    --
    Will I retire or break 10K?
  264. Heh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The guy doing the comparison was an idiot - He should have used retail copies of Win2K and/or WinXP. Who knows what Sony put on the cd's in addition to the Win2K installation files. Also, his Windows Update path was wrong. Why install IE 5.01 SP2 if you're just going to upgrade to IE 5.5 or 6 right after?

    On my Dell Lattitude notebook, I can install RedHat and Win2K/XP in a little under 20-25 minutes each, and be ready to rock and roll...

    Too bad I use Gentoo on it....no such thing as a fast install there...but boy, talk about the speed when done!

  265. No more Win v. Lin comparisons, for fsck sake... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Unless they are going to be fair. If you are a Linux guru don't go comparing Linux to Windows unless you have a Windows guru doing the comparable task(s). This guy is so clueless about Windows, he is using a Sony restore disc. C'mon, people. Open your eyes. To install an OS, configure additional hw/sw, and secure the OS is a time consuming task on any platform. However, I am sure I could do these things on Windows much faster than a linux guru. I am also sure that a linux guru could do the same on a linux system much faster than I could.

    NO MORE APPLES vs. ORANGES COMPARISONS, PLEASE!

  266. WINDOWS 2K comes on 1 CD by gatkinso · · Score: 1

    Not 3.

    Perhaps he used the Sony recovery discs....

    Stoopid.

    Not to mention invalidating his comparison.

    --
    I am very small, utmostly microscopic.
  267. Windows like a BMW? Give me a break by yerricde · · Score: 2

    On the other hand, Windows is like a BMW.

    BMW. Our hardware runs better without Windows.

    --
    Will I retire or break 10K?
  268. Lets make this fair. by ultraright · · Score: 1

    If Mr. Barr gets to set the table in favour of Linux, let me use a real Windows install CD, and an answer file. I'll hit enter a few times, and walk away. Windows may not have a clear win even then, but let's not be totally biased.

  269. Other Comparison Suggestions by rmdem · · Score: 1

    First of all... Hahahahaha!

    This article is just dumb. Recover disks?

    Again... Hahahahaha!

    Here's my suggestions for future "in-depth" articles:

    Installing an internal scsi hard drive vs. a usb external hard drive
    A dog vs. A cat, which one climbs trees faster?
    Who solves more crimes, the fire dept. or the police dept.
    Sony VIAO Windows 2000 recovery cd vs. Red Hat distribution (oops, this one's taken)

  270. Slashdot: Serving you Biased B.S. daily. by Tuzy2k · · Score: 0

    You Linux trolls need to learn that your O.S. will never get anywhere. Windows is the most used O.S. in the world for a reason. GNU is total B.S. If it were otherwise then the world would be run by the principals of Karl Marx not the principals of Adam Smith. Go take an economics class. If you don't know what I'm talking about, which you probably don't - given that you are Linux users and have a combined IQ of .8 - then I have probably just wasted my time in despensing my wisdom to you. Dont bother flaming. I wont be checking for replies as I have done my daily deed by educating the world on the false rhetoric that you people dispense each day.

  271. So SO off topic... (Re:sig has to go.) by Loligo · · Score: 1

    >constitutionality of the state endorsing religion

    There is no constitutionality issue involved here.

    The US Constitution does not prohibit the state from endorsing or acknowledging religion. It prohibits the state from establishing a religion. Nowhere in the constitution or bill of rights does the vaunted "seperation of church and state" line appear.

    The first amendment DOES say that Congress cannot make a law that establishes or prohibits a religion. They can make laws that DEAL with religion. They can make laws that MENTION religion. They cannot, however, declare that the official church of the United States is Catholicism.

    It's unfortunate that a good amendment has been so kicked around and trampled and manipulated (much like many other amendments) by people with an agenda.

    -l
    (oh, and FWIW, I'm an atheist, and I simply don't say the "under god" part)

    1. Re:So SO off topic... (Re:sig has to go.) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Um, I sort of agree with you. But the schools receive Federal money, and thus laws that apply to Congress get handed down to the recipients of congressional money. Obviuosly Congress still gives plenty of money to religious organizations, which is nice because that means that tax-free corporations get the added bonus of taxpayer subsidies. Nice work if you can get it, L. Ron Hubbard. I think the loophole is that organizations like the Red Cross aren't primarily ot to prosletyze and convert you.

      My feeling is that the words 'under god' have the effect of establishing a religion. they certainly legitimize it. If you disagree, change those words to 'under allah' or 'under zeus' or 'under buddha' and see how people respond.

      Most people aren't atheists, I guess, which is why it isn't a bigger issue. But I am planning (any day now I swear) to mail the Treasury department a $20 bill and ask them if they can print me up some money that doesn't say 'in god we trust' or if that's too much to ask, get their written permission to edit the objectionable religious content with a sharpie.

      Anyway, about the whole Pledge of Allegiance: Is there like a "master document" somewhere in a NIST lab? We all know that Eisenhower "changed" it to include Under God, as part of the cold war, but what exactly did he change? Is there dictated somewhere WHAT the actual OFFICIAL pledge is? Or is it just "oral tradition?"

      Back when I was forced to pledge my allegiance to a piece of cloth made in China, I also just didn't say the "under god" part. But I still felt like I was being coerced, and in fact I was being compelled to make false statements concerning my subjectivity to a God who doesn't (according to me) actually exist.

  272. it all depends by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    i've tried installing linux on a few computers here at work.

    so far the main failures have been
    1) network card unknown
    - 2 different nics, and at work where nearly everything is done on the network, this was a big problem
    2) sound card unknown
    - only tried one, but this is a minor problem at work, not sure why the work machines even have sound cards really, we cant use them if they did work.

    and at home on my computer with an asus p4t-e motherboard, i cant get linux to see the floppy drive controller. (yes, i can boot linux with a floppy, but it cant see it after linux starts loading) i remember seeing a patch somewhere for this problem, but it was a broken link.
    its also missing my usb external modem (isdn ta) and my usb mouse (fixed the mouse by putting it back on the ps/2)

    linux tried: RedHat, SuSE 7.3 & 8.0, Debian 3.0 (with 2.4 kernel)

    windows 98 missed the new hardware, but then so what, 98 is 4 years old! i was happy it saw all my ram!
    winxp saw the new hardware and other then signing away my soul, my machine's soul, and my first born, its running fine (uptime max 7 days with planned downtime, not crashes).

    so, its un-American, signing away freedom to some uncaring dictator.
    welcome to the UCA, united corp. of America, land of the dmca and the home of the enslaved

  273. Picking nits and questioning the premise by Ubertech · · Score: 1

    Before I start picking nits, I want to say that I liked the article, especially the conclusions, or Post-game analysis, as Mr. Barr puts it. However, I need to point out four points in the article that bugged me. After that, I also have to question the premise of the article itself.

    1) "Since Microsoft has been in the operating system business for exactly 21 years (DOS 1 debuted August 12, 1981), and employs 50,000 souls, I expected Windows 2000's installation would be seamless, fast, and lightyears ahead of upstart Red Hat's by any measure I could concoct."

    While Linux has been around approximately 10 years less than Microsoft by this statement, UNIX has been around much longer. The concepts and commands are well known. In any case, both Linux and Windows have been around long enough, and their features have evolved enough over time that it doesn't really matter any more how long either system has existed.

    Also, I think it matters little how many people work for Microsoft. Of those 50,000 souls, it is only a small number that actually work on the development of OS code. I do not know how many people over the years have contributed to the development of the various programs that make up a Linux system, but I don't think this matters, either. There are many dedicated programmers working constantly on the kernel, the GUI, installers, and a host of other pieces of code that make up the entire system.

    2) Red Hat, and Linux in general, is not an "upstart" anymore.

    I usually expect to see comments like this in the mass media, or technology media specifically. I would hope, though, that at linuxworld.com they would know that Linux is no longer an upstart operating system. It's been around for a decade. It is in use in business all over. It is as much a contender in the server arena as any other system. As a desktop OS for Joe Everyman, I can go along with the Linux as newcomer schtick. But remember, perception is everything in the media. If you want to get over the newcomer image, then you need to start treating the system as if it is common knowledge that it is the best thing to come along since <insert favorite technological advance here>.

    3) "The clock was striking high noon as I inserted the first of three Sony System Restore CDs supplied with the laptop. I sat back to see what might happen."

    I don't have a Sony laptop, so I am speaking without knowledge here, but in my experience with other computer systems, using the vendor's restore CD is NOT the same thing as installing Windows from Microsoft's media. That seems to make the comparison, as well as rest of this article irrelevant, but I will continue.

    4) Windows Update

    I agree with Mr. Barr that it is stupid of Microsoft to make the user install so many updates individually. It is still a nice way to apply patches, though. I am thankful for any group who makes automated processes for upgrading and maintaining systems. While I am capable of applying updates individually, or recompiling my kernel, or upgrading apache, or anything else I want to do, I want to spend time using my system, not upgrading or patching it. I remember the annoyance of applying fixpacks to OS/2. Upgrades to Novell NetWare 3.X and 4.X, while simple, were a pain. For Linux, Red Hat has up2date, Mandrake has its Software Manager, Debian as apt-get. (I know there are more, but these are the only ones with which I have some familiarity.) For me, they are all good. They save time. The one trade off to always keep in mind, however, is that it is easy to rely on these automatic updates, even if the latest fixes are not available with them. It goes without saying that this can be insufficient when there are serious security flaws to fix.

    A final point.

    While I am all for comparing operating systems and the philosophies behind their design, I must question the necessity of comparing things like installation ease and boot times. While I agree that it is good to make the installation of an operating system or an application as easy as possible, after a certain point it should become a non-issue. What matters much more is what work one is able to accomplish with the machine. Unless I am in a lab evaluating a bunch of systems, I don't want to spend my days installing Linux (or Windows, or OS X, or BSD, or anything else). I want to spend my days using the computer to do things. I want to visit web sites, I want to send and receive email and faxes, I want to send and receive instant messages. I want to use my printer, scanner, camera, PDA, etc. I understand that until I can order from Dell or Gateway, or walk into Best Buy, and purchase a system with Linux pre-installed, there will be some need to make the case for easy installation, but let's not focus so much on installer programs that we forget about making the system easy to use.

    --
    Be quick to listen, slow to speak, and slow to anger.
  274. Note to the submitter by poot_rootbeer · · Score: 2

    DOS 1.0 did not require an installation -- in fact having a hard drive was optional back then.

    I believe the first edition of DOS that could not be run directly off the floppies was 5.0, and that was what, 1989? In those terms, Microsoft doesn't have much of a lead with installers at all.

  275. Re:let my wife/Parents/Grandparents try by dtabraha · · Score: 1

    My thoughts exactly.

    I've given lots of pro bono computer training to people ranging from those who just need help figuring out some drivers to those who have "taken a computer class" at some worthless training corporation, and think that knowing how to use Microsoft Word makes them computer savvy.

    When you have to explain what the difference between "left" click and "right" click is, or the difference between Internet Explorer "The Blue E" or Windows Explorer "The Yellow Square" is, the topic of installing Windows or Linux becomes moot. With Windows they might at least have a chance, since M$ caters to "I shut the monitor off, so my computer must be off" people.

    It's a silly comparison anyways. You don't install Linux because it's easier than Windows. You install Linux because it's configurable, faster, and doesn't carry all the overhead that MS software does.

  276. You may terminate this License... by yerricde · · Score: 1

    As long as I have the original CD (working or not) to prove I have a copy, I'm not doing anything wrong.

    Then what's this in the EULA? "You may terminate this License at any time by destroying all copies of the Software."

    --
    Will I retire or break 10K?
    1. Re:You may terminate this License... by NanoGator · · Score: 2

      "Then what's this in the EULA? "You may terminate this License at any time by destroying all copies of the Software."

      Sorry, don't see the relevance.

      --
      "Derp de derp."
  277. Copy protection? by yerricde · · Score: 1

    Ever heard of 'backups'

    Ever heard of SafeDisc 2?

    or 'taking care of your CDs'?

    Even the best cared for discs will bit rot, especially in the case of a disaster. If a disc is copy protected, and you try to store it off-site, it costs big bucks to transport it to the office whenever you need to use it.

    Only a total dumbass would pay for a CD more than once.

    Then what about the millions of CDs sold to people who already had a legit copy of the music on vinyl?

    --
    Will I retire or break 10K?
  278. Lose your right to use the software by yerricde · · Score: 1

    Sorry, don't see the relevance.

    Once you destroy your copy of the Software, you can't borrow a friend's copy because you have terminated your right to use the Software. The 17 USC 117 backup rights may not apply because you waived those when clicking the Install button. And you certainly can't install patches, as those have a "Supplemental EULA", which considers installation on an unlicensed system to constitute fraud.

    --
    Will I retire or break 10K?
    1. Re:Lose your right to use the software by NanoGator · · Score: 2

      Where does 'destroying it' come into play? If it's scratched it's just damaged, not destroyed. Im not defending MS's EULA, we all know it's slimey, but for all practical purposes you're fine.

      --
      "Derp de derp."
  279. Its all about convenience .... who really has it? by iamjts2 · · Score: 1

    Good thing that Linux, et.al. is making such tremendous progress in this area -- 'convenience'.

    I. As one extreme, one can pick-n-choose (down to which particular font, lib, etc. one wants) their way to the 'perfect' lean-n-mean configuration for their Linux box.

    II. Or, one can pick a 'packaged' set of features: e.g., 1. desktop (browsers, editors, email, multimedia, etc.), 2. developer (tools, languages, libs, etc.), 3. server (DB's, webservers, Samba server, etc.), 4. Internet (router, firewall, caching, etc.)

    III. Pick a 'package' as a starting point, then pick-n-choose what 'extras' one wants.

    IV. For the enterprise, one can create-n-save a 'precise configuration' that then can be mass replicated any number of times (with no per-seat fees, etc.!)

    PREDICTION: It is only a matter of time (when the 'market' is ready) until one is 'widely' able to purchase the PC, laptop, etc. with Linux, et. al. preloaded--as easy as passing through Wal-Mart.

    For the record -- my 'had to do' comparison: Which is easier to load from scatch? Linux or Windows?

    A friend of mine offered to pay me $100 to 'rebuild' his virus-eaten DELL laptop. I thought--mistakenly--an easy 100-spot! Boy, was I ever wrong!

    I have spent OVER eight hours thus far--after finally downloading and burning on CD all the necessary driver updates, etc.

    I have fed the Laptop over 20 different CD's--still have another set of 8 CDs to go.

    I am constantly asked to 'reinsert' a CD that it just finished accessing 2 or 3 CD's back!

    I have lost count of how many times the machine had to be 'rebooted' -- some of the CD's had several 'pre-installed' applications.

    The drivers conveniently provided on the DELL 'install' CD's were wrong!

    I had to go to DELL's website to download the 'correct' ones before the graphics, sound, modem, etc. would work properly--initially came up with VGA (16-color 640x480 resolution, NO sound, NO modem, etc).

    Installation of each individual driver required its own trip through plug-n-play discovery, specifying the location of the correct drivers, reboot with my fingers crossed, etc.

    Yep, rebuilding a 'crashed' Windows machine is a real 'convenience'! Don't you agree?

    So, I wonder? How much time did the DELL technician need to create the 'master load' that then was replicated on hard drives BEFORE the laptop was even built!

    The Linux install? Well, it took about 30 minutes to go through the menus of options (which system libs, tools, fonts, etc. did I want), and about 90 minutes to 2 hours for the 3 CD's to be loaded decompressed and installed.

    Yes, the Linux install correctly identified all my devices--mouse, graphics card, sound card, NIC, CD-ROM, etc.

    At the end, I elected to create the repair/boot floppy. That's it! Reboot, login in, and start working!

  280. Article violates EULA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Did'nt he say the he agreed to not publish benchmarks in one of the EULA's. Seems to me like he just published a benchmark.

  281. IE 5.01 SP2, then IE5.5? by sharkey · · Score: 2

    Why? What's the point? Both are available at Windows Update, so that you can CHOOSE which you want. I'm not trying to troll here, but the guy who wrote the article obviously was. Hmmm, download several MBs of a Service Pack I don't need because I'm moving to the new version today, but the download time and a reboot can be used to deride what I want to deride. This is on top of what others point out, that this wasn't a Windows 2000 install, but rather a Sony Recovery procedure, including various apps.

    Hey, Joe: Send me your Vaio, and I'll install Win2000 Pro and RedHat 7.3 on it, and the extra bits of hardware you want. I'll also apply the fixes to the OS and default applications, skipping the unneccesary ones. I'll time it, and send you the results.

    --

    --
    "Outlook not so good." That magic 8-ball knows everything! I'll ask about Exchange Server next.
    1. Re:IE 5.01 SP2, then IE5.5? by Sarreq+Teryx · · Score: 1

      but you can install IE5.5 without installing IE5.01 first, so why do what he did and waste the time installing IE5.01 first?

    2. Re:IE 5.01 SP2, then IE5.5? by sharkey · · Score: 2

      but you can install IE5.5 without installing IE5.01 first, so why do what he did and waste the time installing IE5.01 first?

      Precisely.

      --

      --
      "Outlook not so good." That magic 8-ball knows everything! I'll ask about Exchange Server next.
  282. windows install? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I dont understand why this is comparing the install of redhat to the recovery cd's of windows 2000. I know that win2k pro takes around 2 hours on my computer to install and that only installs drivers that were made 2 years ago.

  283. I'm obviously the minority here but.... by Sarreq+Teryx · · Score: 1
    Whether he's lying or not is another problem, but this guy's an idiot.

    Firstly, he's basing his comparison on Sony's Vaio Restore disk set, which does not set up like a normal win2k install in the least.

    Then by his own admission:
    First came SP2 for IE 5.01, then came IE 5.5, and then Windows 2000 SP3. The SP3 update took the longest -- 30 minutes for that update alone. Finally, the remaining three critical updates could all be installed together: two security updates for IE 5.5 and one for the Windows Media player.


    Why even bother upgrading to IE5.01SP2 when you're upgrading to IE5.5
    Why even bother with IE5.x at all when IE6 is out
    And I'm sure that being a Linux guy, he'd rather install Mozilla of some flavor anyway, I actually like NS7 so far, but it doesn't work with iframes properly.

    Also by his own admission:
    I was attacked by a flurry of competing screens. One was a hardware wizard, another wanted me to register the Sony Vaio, and yet another was a sales pitch for McAfee's Virus Scan. But that's not all. There were three more under all those: a guided tour for getting started with W2K, a second hardware install wizard, and a request for me to insert the first Application Recovery CD.
    Sticking to my game plan, I closed everything but the Applications Recovery process.


    The rest be damned, but he could've taken care of both hardware wizards and the Application Recovery CD right there and then, with no reboots, until done all 3 tasks, and the first Windows Update could've been done before then also

    After all that (assuming use of a real win2k disk, and high speed connection), there should only've been 4 reboots, 5 EULAs (still not great), 6 EULAs counting the extra one Sony threw in for the Recovery Set, and a grand total of between 40mins to 1 hour to install everything.

    Windows itself: 1 reboot, 1 EULA, 30 minutes

    First Boot (hardware, AppRecCD, first WU[SP3]): 1 reboot, 2 EULAs, 5 to 10 minute

    WU2[IE6]: 1 reboot, 1 EULA, 2 to 5 minutes

    WU3[postSP3/IE6 security updates]: 1 reboot, 1 EULA, 2 to 5 minutes

    Reboot Times: 1 to 2 minutes * 4 = 4 to 8 minutes

    Totals: 4 reboots, 5 EULAs, 43 to 58 minutes

    ---INSERT---
    I entirely forgot DX8.1, and so did he. Anyway:
    DX8.1: 1 reboot, 1 EULA, 2 to 4 minutes
    new totals: 5 reboots, 6 EULAs, 45 to 62 minutes
    ---/INSERT---

    The article is as invalid as a Mac zealot doing the same comparisson between Mac and Windows, or Mac and Linux.
  284. Useful feature vs. Anti-competitive feature by darqchild · · Score: 1

    RedHat and Mandrake are trying desperately to compete.

    Microsoft is trying to stamp out competition.

    --
    What? Me? Worry?
  285. The answer to the question is... by evilpenguin · · Score: 1

    The answer to the question "is Linux or Windows easier to install?" is, of course, YES. Logic is a harsh taskmaster. "Which is easier to install, Linux or Windows?" That question might lead to naming one of the systems. Sorry, I'm just feeling nitpicky tonight...

  286. No Linux for me baby! by b21ace · · Score: 1

    I've had Corel Linux for 1 year, but not on my hard drive. It's in the box on my bookshelf. I have nothing but problems on istall, whether it be incompatible hardware or the software running abnormal. When I build cpu's, Windows is always a breeze to install. I like tinkering with different software but Linux has finally frustrated me one to many times!

  287. QUAKE III by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you want to talk about games, talk to a gamer. In my experience Quake III gets alot better frame rate under linux than it does in windows (probably because just about everything will run better compiled for linux).
    from your friendly neighborhood hacker,
    Dr_C_Hackworth

  288. BeOs of course by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    From my experience, BeOs Pro 5.1 is faster. Ten minutes from load to first use. Unbreakable OS.

    Seriously, Win 2K wasn't a problem, Win 98 SE is ok, Win Me was slow but ultimately worked, and XP @#$%ed itself.

    Mandrake 8.2 failed on all three attempts, and on each it repartitioned part of my hard drive so it was trashed until reformatting and Partition Magicing.
    The old Mandrake 7 was better that way.

  289. MY COMPUTER HAS 1796 KB RAM by themusicgod1 · · Score: 1

    which means i cannot install linux :p

    ease of install my ass

    i CAN however install windows 3.x,2.x,1.x, and DOS/DOSSHELL 6.x-5.x ... at least i can USE the machine, instead of letting it collect dust as a failed linux box.

    --
    GENERATION 26: The first time you see this, copy it into your sig on any forum and add 1 to the generation.
  290. Linux is easier by Falconpro10k · · Score: 1

    Mandrake is really really good, im using it now, even tho i compiled my own kernel...