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Windows vs. Ubuntu — Dell's Verdict

Barence writes "Remember how Dell put up a website declaring Ubuntu was safer than Windows, only to later change its mind? Well, the company has gotten right back into the Windows vs. Ubuntu debate with a highly sophisticated website arguing the pros and cons of each OS. People should choose Windows, argues Dell, if: they are already using Windows, are familiar with Windows, or are new to computers. People should choose Ubuntu if they're interested in open-source programming. Brilliant."

718 comments

  1. It's about being truthful by SquarePixel · · Score: 1, Insightful

    It quite much comes down to that. It would be stupid and bad service not to tell that to users, especially those who like things just to work and want to play games too. Imagine if someone sold you a product that you don't know much about but only how you want it to work, and it wouldn't. Most users would feel the same way when they thought that all their programs and games would work.

    1. Re:It's about being truthful by Third+Position · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Irons with labels that tell you to remove your clothes before attempting to iron them are being truthful, too - but anyone who need a label to tell them that is probably too stupid to be allowed to get near an iron.

      --
      American Third Position
      Finally, a real choice!
    2. Re:It's about being truthful by SquarePixel · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Irons with labels that tell you to remove your clothes before attempting to iron them are being truthful, too - but anyone who need a label to tell them that is probably too stupid to be allowed to get near an iron.

      There's a difference, because doing that can seriously harm you. Not knowing the difference between Windows and Ubuntu is only an inconvenience for the user when their stuff doesn't work. It's also an inconvenience that will get them angry at the company that sold the computer for them, and don't you think it would be better for the company to inform their customers what they are buying and what they should buy based on their needs and expectations?

      I call that good customer service.

    3. Re:It's about being truthful by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Who is sopssa and why everyone seems to hate him? I'm curious.

    4. Re:It's about being truthful by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dell, offers support, and there barebones even for home users is 1 year next bussiness day onsite even if you choose no support.
      Can you imagine the support that would be required for most people on linux, grandma doesn't care whether it's open source or not.

    5. Re:It's about being truthful by WrongSizeGlass · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Choose UBUNTU if:

      • You do not plan to use Microsoft WINDOWS

      That's not 'truthful', that's paid options that are actually marketing.

    6. Re:It's about being truthful by h4rm0ny · · Score: 5, Insightful


      That's a terrible parallel to Ubuntu vs. Windows. For what it's worth, I'm a long time user of Linux - started off with an early SuSE then moved to Slackware. These days, I use either Gentoo (preferred) or Ubuntu (anything other than my main dev box I can't be bothered setting up Gentoo on). And you know what? I'd recommend Windows 7 to most people. I have it on my laptop and though I personally sometimes run into limitations on it, they're not limitations most people will encounter. I can't see my mother complaining that she can't open a bash shell for example.

      Ubuntu is probably the easiest Linux out there, but it's not as easy as Windows 7. Some of that results from the world in general being set up for Windows, rather than for Linux, and some of it is due to Ubuntu not being as slick or hassle-free as Windows 7. If you want security, then people are less likely to hack your Linux box than they are a Windows one, that's for sure, and you're not very likely to pick up a virus or be tricked into running some trojan. So as the summary states, there are arguments for and against. But it's pretty far from the truth to start talking about people who don't know enough to remove their clothes before ironing. I need a lot from my OS so I use Linux. But if I just wanted to surf, write emails and do some light word-processing, I have to say Windows 7 would be fine for me. My laptop which is primarily used for those things, has Windows 7 on it for this reason. If I need to do anything more on it, I just open a remote shell to my main system and use Screens and that's good enough for me.

      --

      Aide-toi, le Ciel t'aidera - Jeanne D'Arc.
    7. Re:It's about being truthful by CastrTroy · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The question is, if you have no idea what Ubuntu is, then why did you choose it?

      --

      Anthropic principle: We see the universe the way it is because if it were different we would not be here to see it.
    8. Re:It's about being truthful by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Troll

      Who is sopssa and why everyone seems to hate him? I'm curious.

      He's a paid Microsoft shill. You can read his comments and any story with Microsoft he would try to defend them and say it was okay what they were doing. He'll keep starting new accounts and reading with sopssa since it's a paid account he sees the stories early and that's how he gets the first post as SquarePixel. SquarePixel is not a paid account so there's no way they can get first post so often unless they have a paid account to read the plums with (that's the sopssa account). Basically his account went negative karma and kept going up and down as he would post seemingly helpful comments to non-microsoft articles and then step it with sheer stupidity when microsoft was involved.

      Long story short: paid shill for MS.

    9. Re:It's about being truthful by SquarePixel · · Score: 0, Troll

      The question is, if you have no idea what Ubuntu is, then why did you choose it?

      That is the exact point here. Dell is telling customers which OS they should choose so they are capable to make the choice. Personally I'm a little bit surprised they didn't note the games, but casual people buying a computer don't necessarily know that they need Windows for their apps to work. Dell is just helping these casual users.

    10. Re:It's about being truthful by oldspewey · · Score: 1

      Peer pressure mostly.

      --
      If libertarians are so opposed to effective government, why don't they all move to Somalia?
    11. Re:It's about being truthful by blai · · Score: 4, Interesting

      The question is, if you have no idea what Ubuntu is, then why did you choose it?

      Must a man seek alternatives with a reason other than a head full of curiosity?

      --
      In soviet Russia, God creates you!
    12. Re:It's about being truthful by spazdor · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The question is, if you have no idea what Windows is, then why did you choose it?

      See how everything's different when you switch the question around?

      --
      DRM: Terminator crops for your mind!
    13. Re:It's about being truthful by Frankenshteen · · Score: 1

      Spot on. Like the woman who tried to thaw a turkey in the clothes dryer shouldn't be allowed to own a dryer nor prepare food for human consumption.

      --
      "It's a doughnut stuffed with M&M's. That way when you finish the doughnut, you don't have to eat any M&M's."
    14. Re:It's about being truthful by Nadaka · · Score: 5, Insightful

      From my perspective, if all you need to do is surf, write emails and do some light word processing, then Ubuntu is far and away a better choice than windows 7.

      I chose to dual boot ubuntu and windows 7 for the following reasons:

      It cost me nothing because I had 10 win7 licenses from an MSDN subscription paid for by my previous employer.

      I like to play video games, windows has more of them, and wine is generally a painful experience when it does work.

      I need to keep my Visual Studio/C#/ASP.net skills fresh in case I need to find a new job and can't find a local java position quickly enough.

    15. Re:It's about being truthful by nashv · · Score: 1

      And that only reinforces the point that people who do not know what Ubuntu is , should be kept away from it for whatever reasons (ignorance, or as you say stupidity, or just not caring). So you're actually agreeing with the parent post?

      --
      Entia non sunt multiplicanda praeter necessitatem.
    16. Re:It's about being truthful by nashv · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately, marketing typically works better than facts in the short run. In the long run, software evolves far too much anyway.

      --
      Entia non sunt multiplicanda praeter necessitatem.
    17. Re:It's about being truthful by V!NCENT · · Score: 1

      I agree. People who don't even know what Ubuntu, let alone Linux is in the first place, shouldn't use Linux. Period.

      So this whole compare thing is just for the most stupid people. Most stupid people use Windows.

      Although when I search for Linux on the Dutch Dell website, The first result I get is the logo Tux, with the text: "Dell | Linux - Life made simple" and when I click on it I get this English website:
      http://www1.euro.dell.com/content/topics/global.aspx/alliances/en/linux?c=nl&cs=nlgent1&l=nl&s=gen

      But let's face it: People that can actually get to that website first have to search for it and when they do then they already know what it is in the first place. So who cares?

      --
      Here be signatures
    18. Re:It's about being truthful by Stormwatch · · Score: 1

      Ubuntu is probably the easiest Linux out there

      Mint is more newbie-friendly than Ubuntu, I'd say: the interface (only one taskbar, buttons on the right corner of each window) is more familiar to people who only know Windows. Also, it already comes with Flash and some hardware drivers that are separate downloads in Ubuntu (because they're proprietary).

    19. Re:It's about being truthful by A.+B3ttik · · Score: 1

      Basically, if you need a single, simple Website to tell you which OS to run, then run Windows.

    20. Re:It's about being truthful by eldavojohn · · Score: 5, Insightful

      That is the exact point here. Dell is telling customers which OS they should choose so they are capable to make the choice. Personally I'm a little bit surprised they didn't note the games, but casual people buying a computer don't necessarily know that they need Windows for their apps to work. Dell is just helping these casual users.

      The only problem I have with Dell's EU page is that it's been so oversimplified it loses any meaning.

      I find it curious that Ubuntu has two bullet points and yet from Dell's page on Ubuntu they have several positive caveats about Ubuntu that don't even get mentioned here. For example:

      6) Ubuntu is secure

      According to industry reports, Ubuntu is unaffected by the vast majority of viruses and spyware.

      Why isn't there a bullet point for using Ubuntu if you just want a machine to browse the internet? Could Dell at least toss Ubuntu a bone and say "Linux currently suffers from less viruses than Windows"?

      On top of that, why can I only pick two laptops with Ubuntu on them?

      Why do you even have a page for Windows 7 vs Ubuntu when I have to buying one of these two machines in the first place?

      Dell is telling customers which OS they should choose so they are capable to make the choice.

      Wrong. Dell is telling people not to use Ubuntu. Walk down the street and pick out a hundred random people and ask them if they are interested in programming open source. They don't even say "if you are interested in free open source software" they say "open source programming." Do you think you'd even find one person interested in actually programming open source? That's basically what Dell's "comprehensive" Ubuntu list amounted to.

      --
      My work here is dung.
    21. Re:It's about being truthful by DJRumpy · · Score: 1, Troll

      Your point is more insightful to my mind then they give you credit for. For a 'casual (new) end user', they won't know the value or benefit of either OS. Their needs are more result/goal focused and specific like (I want to play games), or (I wan't to check email and browse the internet), rather than (I'm interested in the philosophy of Open Source and it's associated communities).

      The site is simplistic, I'll give you that. Almost too simplistic as it limits the choices users make. I would think an approach with a few simple 'goals' in mind would have been better served, like

      Do you intend to play store bought games
      Do you plan to use it to check e-mail and browse the internet
      Do you plan to use your PC with productivity apps like Office
      Do you have plans to use your PC for media applications like authoring music, video, or other artistic applications

      Possibly from those, give them the option to browse examples of each, like Office, OpenOffice, various game examples like Bioshock 2 or Halo, etc. New users won't understand anything other than simple goals, and it's not realistic to assume they will quickly grasp everything needed in order to make the right choice.

      From those, give certain points based on user goals, where some might be mutually exclusive (for instance, a 'gamer' choice would exclude Ubuntu under normal circumstances, although they could certainly try it later once they have a better grasp, so Windows would be a good fit there), and before anyone goes there, I understand you can get games running under linux, but you certainly wouldn't expect a beginner to do so. PC's can be overwhelming enough to new users.

      They could also list the benefits of each in terms the user could understand. For instance, cost of software, software support, availability of software. Each choice represents both pros and cons in each of those areas. Let the user go as deep as they wan't, or leave it as simple as a few questions to be answered and spit out a choice based on those answers.

      I see that page as at least a step in that direction. Could have been done better, but I don't think it's a slap on the face of Ubuntu (at least not directly).

    22. Re:It's about being truthful by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the woman who tried to thaw a turkey in the clothes dryer...

      That would work if you had the shoe-rack option - beats cramming it in the microwave.

      How about the guy who cooked crab in the dishwasher?

    23. Re:It's about being truthful by nyctopterus · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I think you make a a valid point, in a way, but there are a couple of things to consider. I'm guessing (perhaps wrongly) that you were already pretty familiar with Windows when you started using W7. That makes it seem easier to use than it is. If you are used to something else entirely (Mac OS in my case), or nothing at all, Ubuntu is just as simple. In fact, I find Ubuntu slightly more straightforward than Windows 7, and I dabble in both very casually.

      The application management in Ubuntu is superb, providing what I think is exactly the right balance of safety and discoverability for novice and casual users. A huge problem on Windows is people installing malware. How do you provide people with a rule sheet on what is okay to install? I've never been able to boil it down to rules, I just figure it out on a case-by-case basis. With Ubuntu you can just tell people to use the applications in the app menu, of which there are plenty. It's simple, safe, and allows the novice user to have computing independence, because there's no need to consult with anyone before installing an application.

    24. Re:It's about being truthful by IICV · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Eh? What exactly is harder in Ubuntu than it is on Windows?

      I mean, just consider this problem I had: I was trying to run STALKER: Shadow of Cernobyl on my Windows desktop. It refused to work; my monitor would just pop up an error message saying that the refresh rate was higher than it could display when I tried to run the game. How could I fix that? There were no Windows monitor "drivers" for the monitor (it's old and shitty), so there didn't seem to be any way to force Windows to use a lower maximum refresh rate. I couldn't find an option that would force STALKER to use a lower refresh rate, either.

      Eventually I had to download a sketchy third-party program named Reforce that, despite being written for Windows 2000/XP, managed to do its job in Windows 7; I used it to manually set the highest refresh rate to something my monitor could handle, and STALKER finally respected that.

      That's not "just works"; other people completely gave up on the problem (STALKER had just been on sale on Steam, so there was a thread about this in the forums). Sure, it was due to a combination of old hardware and missing drivers, but it still stumped quite a few people who otherwise use Windows.

      Of course, in Ubuntu this just isn't a problem because there's no games at all, but that's another issue entirely.

    25. Re:It's about being truthful by mcgrew · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It would be stupid and bad service not to tell that to users, especially those who like things just to work and want to play games too.

      You seem to agree with Dell. From TFS: People should choose Windows, argues Dell, if: they are already using Windows, are familiar with Windows, or are new to computers

      Which would be everybody not using a Mac, and I say poppycock. KDE is very similar to Windows and has a tiny learning curve; it's trivial to switch. As to new users, I've had friends who never had computers before, and wound up infecting them over and over (despite Norton). After getting tired of reinstalling Windows for them I'd install Linux dual-boot and disable networking in Windows and not install Norton. Every single one liked Mandriva better, and they never got another virus.

      As to games, there have been games on Linux for a long, long time. Most people don't play anything much more demanding than Solitaire. And guess what? The Megatouch game machines you see in bars use Linux for an OS, and you can buy those games, but they're Apple and Linux only, as they've been written for *nix. They'll run on your iPhone but not your Windows PC.

      Most users would feel the same way when they thought that all their programs and games would work.

      There are free alternatives to almost all Windows programs. Plus, you can run most Windows programs in Linux through Wine or similar emulators, but you can't run Linux programs in Windows at all, unless you have a Windows compiler to compile the (open) source files with.

      I can't think of a single thing that would make Windows superior to Linux. Yes, it would be dishonest to make people think you can run WoW or IE in Linux, but why would anybody tell them that unless they just wanted them to hate Linux?

    26. Re:It's about being truthful by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Good customer service? Bull. All they say is "Use windows if you use windows, use ubuntu if you don't want to use windows."

      How is that good customer service? That's as close to "figure it out yourself" as it gets. There's absolutely no mention of the various open-source alternatives to Windows programs such as Open Office for word processing, or Evolution or Thunderbird for email. There's no comment that these programs work almost identically to Windows programs, except much faster because Ubuntu doesn't devour memory. There's no mention of security. They don't even point out that most disc-based games only work on Windows.

      The page isn't honest or informative, it's as simple and meaningless as they can get away with so they can avoid pissing people off while still offering "something" to help people with the choice.

      I dropped an 18 year old lifetime Windows user in front of Ubuntu without even telling him it was different. He's not the sharpest tool in the shed, but the only thing (literally) that he didn't do on his own was set up the MeMenu accounts, simply because he didn't know they were there. Once I pointed them out, he guided himself through the setup wizards and was flying. Zero effort, barely noticed the difference, but was constantly commenting on how fast my computer is. It's 5 years old.

    27. Re:It's about being truthful by EyelessFade · · Score: 1

      My only question is; what makes windows a better OS for people which have never used a computer before?

    28. Re:It's about being truthful by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, have you tried one of the netbook editions.

      You are *exactly 1 click* away from your favorite web application.

      Cannot get any easier than that.

    29. Re:It's about being truthful by dunkelfalke · · Score: 1

      Of course you can force Windows to use lower maximum refresh rate, even for a generic driver.

      And by the way, I develop embedded Linux applications for a living. But at home I use Windows 7 and develop for myself in c#.
      Less hassle that way.

      --
      "It's such a fine line between stupid and clever" -- David St. Hubbins, Spinal Tap
    30. Re:It's about being truthful by nyctopterus · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Like Windows!=newbie-friendly. The windows taskbar lacks discoverabilty, because practically everything is jammed into one menu (the start menu), or indecipherable little icons (system tray). Ubuntu's menus say what they are, by giving textual clues. For a newbie, it's actually better to have more on the screen with actual writing than a lot of icons.

      Many aspects of the Windows interface are a kludge to differentiate it from the classic Mac OS, with many inconsistencies and non-intuitive behaviours. Linux distros should not copy it for the sake of usability.

    31. Re:It's about being truthful by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I set my parents (RIP) long ago up with a Linux box (fedora as I recall) and they did the few things that they needed to just fine. Web surf, print, email. there was never a problem with this or that dumbass issue.

      Proper permissions, proper services and a static scope makes Linux a perfect choice for older generation. Plus, I was able to support it remotely, safely via ssh access over their router from a static IP address.

      For a teenager who is more concerned about what color shoes are in style, Windows 7 might be more appropriate.

    32. Re:It's about being truthful by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Eh? What exactly is harder in Ubuntu than it is on Windows?

      Getting my netbook's wireless card to work. That's why it has XP on it even though I'd really much rather not.

    33. Re:It's about being truthful by Lumpy · · Score: 3, Informative

      but it's not truthful... A new pc user should use ubuntu as it's EASIER than all version of windows.

      Install software is as easy as a single click. A proper Laptop or PC requires Zero configuration. Windows pc's come all pre-configured, so to be fair the ubuntu pc should be 100% configured as well.

        They can't get infected with 99.97% of all viruses and trojans out there which affect even seasoned professional PC users with multiple PHD's in PC use. Newbie Pc users click on everything and many trojans are designed to fool them. Those trojans are completely neutered under ubuntu.

      Plus there is a ton of free software that is a single click away in the application store. Something that Windows lacks. They can find almost everything they need there.

      BUT, it all lies on the back of having the ubuntu pc preconfigured like all windows boxes get.

      Doing a half assed default ubuntu install is only designed to screw the newbie. Unfortunately dell will give them a half assed install.

      --
      Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    34. Re:It's about being truthful by jedidiah · · Score: 3, Informative

      > especially those who like things just to work

      This pretty much rules out Windows completely.

      Once you get beyond the myth of Windows "just working", it's time to consider Linux or Macintosh.

      Windows is good for supporting something that is Windows only. This includes a lot of software and a small bit of hardware.

      If you are a new user with no legacy expectations, Windows is the worst possible option.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    35. Re:It's about being truthful by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just because someone makes positive comments doesn't make one a shill. It's funny that I've also been accused of being a shill for Valve, Steam, Google, and large amount of other companies or products I have good experience with. It's almost funny how often someones first defense on slashdot to some positive comment is to call him a "shill". But yeah, lets all be negative.

      [citations needed]

      and fyi, I stopped posting on slashdot because for the last three months some people followed me and down modded all my comments, even many days later, resulting in -1 karma and 2 posts limit.

      Right. You just happened to surface over a week after ... just happened to be reading this thread ... just happens that SquarePixel now has first post on all these stories without being a subscriber.

      And despite all this, you claim to be from Sweden. One of the most anti-Microsoft countries out there. I think that's a lie too as most people I know in Sweden speak better English than you.

    36. Re:It's about being truthful by lowrydr310 · · Score: 1

      I agree with that assessment. I'm a happy win7 user, but I have OSX and Ubuntu on the same machine. Despite being a technically minded person who knows a few things about operating systems (and Linux in particular), I have run into some headaches with Ubuntu - most recently I upgraded to Lucid and everything went smooth except that my wireless card stopped working. I can't say I ever had this issue with Windows or even OSX (which is running on non-Apple hardware!).

      On the other hand, for basic internet web browsing/email/light-word-processing, Ubuntu works great for this, and if it can save you $100 by not having to pay the Microsoft tax, then there's little reason not to go this route. A friend of mine has an older laptop that was running Windows, but one day XP took a big dump on him. It turns out the hard disk was starting to fail, with a large number of bad sectors. I tried some software tools to regenerate/repair the bad sectors, and had some success, but then when I went to re-install XP it simply refused to install because of the disk condition. Ubuntu, on the other hand, installed without any problems and now just complains that the hard disk is not healthy and that I should back up any important data. He's been running like this for almost a year with no real issues; just using the laptop for light web browsing duty. Even more surprising to me was the fact that this laptop was a Sony Vaio, and Ubuntu worked right out of the box. My previous experience with Sony systems, even with Windows, is that there was a proprietary driver for just about everything, and they weren't easy to locate.

    37. Re:It's about being truthful by Missing.Matter · · Score: 1

      Or you could have searched for "Refresh Rate" in the start menu.

    38. Re:It's about being truthful by sconeu · · Score: 2, Funny

      Because all these people told me that Windows 7 was "their" idea.

      --
      General Relativity: Space-time tells matter where to go; Matter tells space-time what shape to be.
    39. Re:It's about being truthful by jrade · · Score: 1, Interesting

      ...Walk down the street and pick out a hundred random people and ask them if they are interested in programming open source. They don't even say "if you are interested in free open source software" they say "open source programming." Do you think you'd even find one person interested in actually programming open source?

      And even pick out 100 random programmers and how many would answer yes?

      --

      Exception in thread "main" java.lang.NullPointerException at Sig.setCleverSig(Sig.java:42)
    40. Re:It's about being truthful by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      Grandma is more worried about her machine mysteriously slowing down due to malware infection.

      Grandma is probably also going to be more confused with the full screen of options that Vista/Win7 throws at you when you plug in a USB harddrive.

      Lemmings like to perpetuate the myth that a shiny happy interface necessarily means it's easy. It doesn't. The interface could be badly done (Microsoft) or the task could be inherently complicated or advanced. For grandma, automation is probably more important than a badly done GUI.

      For grandma, the box probably better be suitable for her as it comes out of the box.

      Some of the Windows download sites really put the whole "curated" Apple approach into perspective.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    41. Re:It's about being truthful by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      See, that's the exact opposite way as I look at it. If I just wanted to surf, write emails, and do some light word-processing, I'd have to say Linux would be fine for me. Why would I want to pay hundreds of dollars for an OS just to do a few basic things that any free OS can do as well??

    42. Re:It's about being truthful by mcgrew · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I don't get it.

      If you want security, then people are less likely to hack your Linux box than they are a Windows one, that's for sure, and you're not very likely to pick up a virus or be tricked into running some trojan... if I just wanted to surf, write emails and do some light word-processing, I have to say Windows 7 would be fine for me.

      If that's all you wanted to do, any flavor of Linux/KDE would be fine for anybody, without having to worry about your machine being infected like you would with Windows.

    43. Re:It's about being truthful by janwedekind · · Score: 4, Insightful

      A simple link to whylinuxisbetter.net would have done the job (truth and all).

    44. Re:It's about being truthful by the_womble · · Score: 2, Informative

      But if I just wanted to surf, write emails and do some light word-processing, I have to say Windows 7 would be fine for me.

      That is because you are a geek. For the average users it precisely the other way round.

      Linux gives them something that just works as much as any OS, is secure (and therefore easy because they do not have to think about things like anti-virus), is easier to install software on, and it is safer (you can research whether a download is safe, they cannot)

      On the other hand they should use Windows if they need specialist software that is not available for Linux: this could be anything from a Reuters terminal (they do install it on your own PC these days) to an app for running a clinic.

      That is why my father and my wife and my daughter use Linux.

      The underlying problem is that you are looking at Linux as a Gentoo user: the experience of using Ubuntu or Mandriva is very different.

    45. Re:It's about being truthful by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is the intended point that playing a buggy game is somehow easier on Ubuntu than Windows? I'm sure it's easier to do what you did (or just change the refresh rate properly) than obtain rights to the source code to the game, recompile it for Linux, and then play the game.

      So your own post is a good answer to your own question, as getting Steam and STALKER working in Linux is much harder than it is in Windows.

    46. Re:It's about being truthful by FourthAge · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Why isn't there a bullet point for using Ubuntu if you just want a machine to browse the internet? Could Dell at least toss Ubuntu a bone and say "Linux currently suffers from less viruses than Windows"?

      Well, this is a good point, but even for that relatively simple job there are big problems with Ubuntu. You only need to flick through the archives of Linux Hater to get some idea of what these are.

      When I first visited Linux Hater, I thought I was dealing with extreme ignorance. But it quickly became apparent that he/she is actually an expert authority on software in general and Linux in particular. Familiarity has bred contempt. These days I have to concede that he/she is basically right in most cases. One thing about Linux hasn't changed at all in the 14 years I've been using it: users still need to have in-depth knowledge to do basic stuff, like install new applications. Things got slightly better, but it's still way more difficult than it should be. Even with a user-friendly package manager you are still faced with a huge noise to signal ratio created by the large amount of applications that might do what you want, none of which are the application you've heard of. And I'm certain that the web-only user is going to want to use a few things other than the web browser.

      It pains me to say it, but Dell is right. Ubuntu could be a great web terminal but it still just isn't, and blaming Dell and Microsoft isn't going to change that. Linux is still for experts and keen amateurs, and that's what Dell is saying. Dell (and Linux Hater) are actually doing us all a huge favour by pointing out where improvements are needed. If only we'd listen.

      --
      The tao of democracy: the government you can vote for is not the real government.
    47. Re:It's about being truthful by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 3, Insightful

      You typically don't really "choose" Windows when you buy a PC. It's just there unless you ask otherwise (and even know that you can so ask).

    48. Re:It's about being truthful by INT_QRK · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I disagree too with the assertion that one should use windows if "You are new to using computers." Gnome on Linux as applied by the Ubuntu distribution is so user-friendly and functional that my very computer-challenged wife picked it up with no problem. If you're new starting out, Ubuntu may in fact be the easiest to learn and effectively employ, since it comes with such a rich application environment. Also, I put 3 daughters through the college with new PC's, and after the 3rd or 4th time I had to reload Windows in their Freshman year, because their machines got corrupted/owned/trashed from the college network environment, Windows would give me crap trying to reload from the OEM disk (probably a run-counter to thwart piracy, but not applicable in my case). So rather than repurchase Windows, I just loaded Ubuntu. All finished college just fine on Ubuntu with no further crashes. The interesting side-effect is that when they graduated, none of my daughters bought a Windows PC, instead going for Macs, the slicker *nix option, but *nix nonetheless. Also, "You are interested in open source programming" should be modified to say "You are interested in open source applications or programming."

    49. Re:It's about being truthful by Alanonfire · · Score: 1

      Irons with labels that tell you to remove your clothes before attempting to iron them are being truthful, too - but anyone who need a label to tell them that is probably too stupid to be allowed to get near an iron.

      I don't think this post was necessary.

    50. Re:It's about being truthful by Nadaka · · Score: 1

      Of course, in Ubuntu this just isn't a problem because there's no games at all, but that's another issue entirely.

      For now.

      Steam, the source engine (Half-life, portal, team fortress series and others) and steam tools are coming to linux soon.

      That means that more and more games that people are used to on windows will be able to work easily on linux as well.

    51. Re:It's about being truthful by marcello_dl · · Score: 1

      > My laptop which is primarily used for those things, has Windows 7 on it for this reason. If I need to do anything more on it, I just open a remote shell to my main system and use Screens and that's good enough for me.

      Nothing short of remote X through ssh and support out of the box for the growing range of printers around the office for me, so sidux kde light USB for the few boxes that do not dual boot is the rule here. I mean you have to print those email sometimes, or use an office suite, some dtp, keep everything up to date, exchange docs... on windows that means P A I N.

      --
      ---- MISSING MISCELLANEOUS DATA SEGMENT --- [sigdash] trolololol
    52. Re:It's about being truthful by StuartHankins · · Score: 2, Informative

      It cost me nothing because I had 10 win7 licenses from an MSDN subscription paid for by my previous employer.

      So these licenses are owned by a previous employer? It is my understanding that if the company owned it, your rights to use it were lost when you left the company. (from http://www.microsoft.com/downloads/details.aspx?displaylang=en&FamilyID=2b1504e6-0bf1-46da-be0e-85cc792c6b9d#Overview )

      And playing games on an MSDN OS is explicitly forbidden in the FAQ.

      Using the software in any other way, such as for doing email, playing games, or editing a document is another use and is not covered by the MSDN Subscription license.

      (from http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/subscriptions/cc150618.aspx )

      If you're looking for a valid reason to run Windows, "just because you happen to have an (unlicensed) copy" isn't it.

    53. Re:It's about being truthful by Xtravar · · Score: 1

      I can't see my mother complaining that she can't open a bash shell for example.

      Tell her to install Cygwin! http://cygwin.com/

      --
      Buckle your ROFL belt, we're in for some LOLs.
    54. Re:It's about being truthful by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just because someone makes positive comments doesn't make one a shill. It's funny that I've also been accused of being a shill for Valve, Steam, Google, and large amount of other companies or products I have good experience with. It's almost funny how often someones first defense on slashdot to some positive comment is to call him a "shill". But yeah, lets all be negative.

      [citations needed]

      http://games.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1524480&cid=30903080

      and fyi, I stopped posting on slashdot because for the last three months some people followed me and down modded all my comments, even many days later, resulting in -1 karma and 2 posts limit.

      Right. You just happened to surface over a week after ... just happened to be reading this thread ... just happens that SquarePixel now has first post on all these stories without being a subscriber.

      And despite all this, you claim to be from Sweden. One of the most anti-Microsoft countries out there. I think that's a lie too as most people I know in Sweden speak better English than you.

      Where did I say I stopped reading? I work in the IT industry and like technology and I am intelligent person, so slashdot with it's comments is a good place to check for the latest news and comments around them.

      Why would Sweden be anti-Microsoft? Just because The Pirate Bay guys tell you otherwise? Microsoft software is widely used in government offices and companies.

      -sopssa

    55. Re:It's about being truthful by LordVader717 · · Score: 1

      I need a lot from my OS so I use Linux. But if I just wanted to surf, write emails and do some light word-processing, I have to say Windows 7 would be fine for me. My laptop which is primarily used for those things, has Windows 7 on it for this reason. If I need to do anything more on it, I just open a remote shell to my main system and use Screens and that's good enough for me.

      That seems rather illogical. Shouldn't you be using your expensive proprietary Operating system for the more demanding tasks, and the lightweight free OS if you have modest requirements?
      FWIW, most all heavy-duty and job-critical software out there is made for Windows. If you want the latest multimedia tools you need Windows. If you want the best graphics drivers you need Windows. And If you play demanding games, they'll only work well on Windows.

    56. Re:It's about being truthful by DarkofPeace · · Score: 1

      because it was cheaper.

    57. Re:It's about being truthful by jedidiah · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      > users still need to have in-depth knowledge to do basic stuff, like install new applications

      1998 called. It wants it's FUD back.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    58. Re:It's about being truthful by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Eh? What exactly is harder in Ubuntu than it is on Windows?

      Purchasing a computer with Ubuntu preinstalled is more difficult than
      purchasing a computer with Windows preinstalled.

      More seriously, and leaving aside those 20,000 things that
      are crap in Windows, the following are easier in Windows:
      o Finding 3rd party software
      o Downgrading a recently installed update to the version that was installed previously. Say, because the computer can no longer connect to the network.
      o Getting patches for a moderately old release; Windows support lifetime is longer

    59. Re:It's about being truthful by csrjjsmp · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It's cheaper to install Linux on a Windows system than to install Windows on a Linux system.

    60. Re:It's about being truthful by Mongoose+Disciple · · Score: 1

      On the other hand they should use Windows if they need specialist software that is not available for Linux: this could be anything from a Reuters terminal (they do install it on your own PC these days) to an app for running a clinic. ... or if they want to run Office.

      Obviously, not everyone is in front of a computer most of the day at work, but people who do -- whether or not we'd like to argue that it's rational -- mostly don't want to try anything else. (My handful of friends who do factory work also do enough PC-based gaming that you're not getting them off a Windows machine, either.) Microsoft has a program that makes it dirt cheap (less than $10) to buy a home copy of Office if you use it at work, so price isn't even really a factor there either.

      It's often been said that Office is the life preserver keeping Windows afloat, and I don't see that changing very soon. Probably you need something like a generation of people to come up using OpenOffice or something that isn't Office in school to start a sea change there.

    61. Re:It's about being truthful by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Eh? What exactly is harder in Ubuntu than it is on Windows?

      Wireless Internet! /posted this on my Ubuntu laptop

    62. Re:It's about being truthful by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      > Basically, if you need a single, simple Website to tell you which OS to run, then run Windows.

      Nope. If you are that sort of person then you need a locked down environment even more.

      A rube running the "market leader" is just going to add to the zombie PC population.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    63. Re:It's about being truthful by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Pretty much everthing is harder under Linux. linux desktop is a mess, years of squabbling between KDE/Gnome and each distribution trying to be king and doing things their own (and different) way means a destabilised and fragmented market.

      This is where Apple and Microsoft win.

    64. Re:It's about being truthful by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What is that, like 15 games? Nobody but Valve uses Source because it's horrible to develop for.

    65. Re:It's about being truthful by Stormwatch · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Well, there's a difference between a regular newbie and a complete newbie. Lots of people rote-learn Windows; then, anything different, no matter how well designed, is "too complicated".

    66. Re:It's about being truthful by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Have you tried powershell; pretty slick in my opinion. Just sayin.

    67. Re:It's about being truthful by acoustix · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It cost me nothing because I had 10 win7 licenses from an MSDN subscription paid for by my previous employer.

      So these licenses are owned by a previous employer? It is my understanding that if the company owned it, your rights to use it were lost when you left the company. (from http://www.microsoft.com/downloads/details.aspx?displaylang=en&FamilyID=2b1504e6-0bf1-46da-be0e-85cc792c6b9d#Overview )

      And playing games on an MSDN OS is explicitly forbidden in the FAQ.

      Using the software in any other way, such as for doing email, playing games, or editing a document is another use and is not covered by the MSDN Subscription license.

      (from http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/subscriptions/cc150618.aspx )

      If you're looking for a valid reason to run Windows, "just because you happen to have an (unlicensed) copy" isn't it.

      That makes it pretty difficult to develop software for an OS if you're not allowed to use the OS.

      --
      "A plan fiendishly clever in its intricacies"- Homer Simpson
    68. Re:It's about being truthful by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      According to the Micrsoft site about software rights for MSDN licenses - If you partake in any non design, development, testing, and demonstration activity on the installed instance of Windows 7 then you "must also be licensed normally by purchasing a regular copy of Windows such as the one that came with a new OEM PC".

      http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-gb/subscriptions/cc150618.aspx

    69. Re:It's about being truthful by TrekkieTechie · · Score: 1

      On top of that, why can I only pick two laptops with Ubuntu on them?

      The Vostro v13 / Latitude 13 and the Latitude 2100 laptops' base models come running Ubuntu as well, but it is admittedly slim pickings. No desktops?

    70. Re:It's about being truthful by coerciblegerm · · Score: 5, Insightful

      ...but even for that relatively simple job there are big problems with Ubuntu.

      I've never had a problem surfing the web using any Linux distro, much less Ubuntu. This includes my days as a linux n00b when I had no understanding of the structure of the filesystem, didn't realize the advantages of a package manager, and feared the terminal. Browsing the web is NOT an issue for Ubuntu, and when compared to the heightened risk of malware/virus infection on a comparable Windows machine I find this to be an odd statement.

      When I first visited Linux Hater, I thought I was dealing with extreme ignorance.

      My first exposure to Linux Hater was your link, which led to a page where a lunatic is ranting about a font and declaring ogg sucks because it isn't mp3. I think your initial thoughts about that blog were correct.

      users still need to have in-depth knowledge to do basic stuff, like install new applications

      You consider clicking the 'Applications' menu and scrolling to and clicking 'Ubuntu Software Center' in-depth knowledge?

      Dell is right.

      Wrong. You've failed to measurably quantify what makes Ubuntu unsuitable for web browsing other than pointing to a blog with an anti-Linux agenda and making weird assertions about the level of expertise it takes to read and use a menu. Ubuntu is perfectly suitable for a wide variety of tasks, and surfing the web is certainly among them.

    71. Re:It's about being truthful by yuna49 · · Score: 3, Funny

      Eh? What exactly is harder in Ubuntu than it is on Windows?

      Opening a document someone sent you from work in Word 2007 and editing it in Word 2007. Where's the ribbon?

      The reply to this is not to say, "well, then, just open it in Open Office." It may look similar to its version in Word, it may not. When Open Office looks exactly like Word 2007+, and works exactly the same way as well, then you can ask your question again.

      How about people who have used Outlook for years in an office environment? Nothing, not even Evolution, will look exactly the same and work identically.

      You've obviously not dealt with people for whom moving a icon from one place on the desktop to another results in complaints that "my Windows is broken," usually followed by, "I can't do my work until it's fixed."

    72. Re:It's about being truthful by RabbitWho · · Score: 1

      Right. I think it's honest. My dad would read that and go "Right. Windows." I'd read that and go. "Hmmmmmmmmmmmmmm what's Ubuntu?" Look it up, read about it, realize it was free, try it, dual boot, then decide which I wanted to go with for my new computer.
      I think if you're not interested in looking beyond that page into what Ubuntu is then having Ubuntu would drive you insane. No matter how many steps they take towards usability it's still made for people who are naturally curious about it and patient and who are going to spend hours upon hours figuring out how to get something working and not care about that but be pleased that they're learning.

      For most people a computer is a tool, like a car. They don't care how it works they just want it to work. Some people want it to work amazingly and be beautiful like an Aston Martin, but most people just want to get to work.

    73. Re:It's about being truthful by cbhacking · · Score: 1

      So many things wrong here...

      KDE is reasonably close to Windows in terms of interface, but I'd hardly call it a "tiny learning curve" at all. Simple things, like dragging icons areound the taskbar (excuse me, "Kicker") don't work (on KDE4) unless you know where to click to make that work. The menu organization is sometimes good (for finding an app that you don't know what it's called, but know what it does) but it definitely takes longer for me to reach my more common tasks (part of this being because the WinKey doesn't work as I'm used to; I've been told this is fixable but it sure isn't easy). Having all three of Konqueror, Dolphin, and Firefox installed gets a bit weird; Konq makes both a pretty good file manager and web brower, but doesn't behave quite like other applications of either type. Dolphin is miles behind Explorer *or* Konqueror in functionality, but looks better and has a more intuitive interface than Konq... meaning I almost never use it, but regularly get annoyed by Konqueror things like its primitive navigation tree view. Plasma was a cool idea, but I've yet to see it show off its real power in any useful way, and meanwhile the new way of doing desktop icons is another hassle. Kmail/Kontact is a powerful email client, but takes *way* more configuration, especially to get IMAP working nicely (never have gotten it to handle my CS department's Linux-hosted IMAP server *quite* properly, in fact) than Windows Mail or Outlook.

      I can't run Linux programs on Windows at all, you say? Shit, I'd better close this bash shell that is ssh'd into my school server, and this other one where I was running ./configure && make on source code for a new GTK+ build that I pulled in from the web and unpacked with tar... Seriously, you can run about as much Windows code on Linux as you can vice-versa, and in most cases you don't need to recompile actually (never mind that Windows IDEs, let alone compilers, are available for free anyhow). OK, Windows doesn't come with an X11 server, but this isn't actually hard to remedy.

      There have been games on the TI-83 graphing calculator for a long time too, but that doesn't mean you can compare the quality or selection with those on Windows. Linux has some good games (which happen to be among the set of Linux apps also playable on Windows) but it doesn't have many good games compared to Windows (or even Mac), it has very few great games, and even with a supposedly platinum app in Wine, it's a bit of a crapshoot whether it will work correctly all the time. As for what "most people run" I've never yet personally seen a Linux convert that didn't need Wine for at least one program.

      Speaking of Linux apps vs. Windows apps, alternatives does not mean equivalents. Pidgin is great, but is *not* equivalent to Live messenger for those who use features besides basic chatting. OpenOffice is great, but it is *not* equivalent to MS Office for those who need to ensure they can open and save a file from anybody correctly, that need to handle macros in their documents, that need to handle Protected (DRMed) documents, that are familiar with the locations, appearance, and functionality of features in any version of MS office (some of us actually really like the ribbon, FYI), want a program that does more than the barest hint of OneNote's functionality, or so forth. For some languages, there are no IDEs that will run on Linux and are as good as Visual Studio. I don't like the DRM bullshit around BluRay movies, but they will play very happily on Windows. Windows Media Center is far easier to set up than MythTV, although I'll grant that for the dedicated user who has a compatible TV tuner, MythTV is pretty sweet. I could go on a lot longer here... there are actually fairly few non-trivial Windows apps that have a Linux app which can completely replace them.

      Your disparagement of IE and WoW shows just how out of touch with the real world you are. Leaving aside the people who actually like IE (I use Accelerators occasionally at work, and some people must

      --
      There's no place I could be, since I've found Serenity...
    74. Re:It's about being truthful by AltairDusk · · Score: 1

      Truthful is one thing, practicing what you preach is another. I find it amusing Dell is extolling Ubuntu when I was told my warranty for the hardware on my 3 day old Mini 1012 was void because I installed Ubuntu on it. Four hours and two managers later I finally got a return authorized and I won't be buying anything from Dell in the future.

    75. Re:It's about being truthful by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ... And I'm certain that the web-only user is going to want to use a few things other than the web browser...

      ...

    76. Re:It's about being truthful by HelloKitty2 · · Score: 1

      Not to mention the problems they will have when they discover that their next door neighbors kid doesn't know how to operate it, install some printer, and such.

    77. Re:It's about being truthful by marcosdumay · · Score: 1

      Why choose Windows if you also have no idea what it is?

      Let's face it, that announcement is targeted to a kind of audience that, despite we wanting not to exist, is way too common to be ignored.

    78. Re:It's about being truthful by HelloKitty2 · · Score: 1

      Software, someone tells them "Just get XXX and click install and it will do what you need.".
      With Ubuntu it's more like "Well if the program with an ugly interface doesn't exist in the repository, after you've added the extra repositories to /dslkjs/dölskjöslkjf/ldfjdljk.conf then just download the source and ...".

      I'm just being realistic here.

    79. Re:It's about being truthful by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ah, but didst thou not know of the cat, which curiosity killed?

      Moan not at your inconvenience, oh curious one. Moan not.

    80. Re:It's about being truthful by RichardJenkins · · Score: 1

      I can't see my mother complaining that she can't open a bash shell for example.

      Well if she ever does, point her towards Cygwin.

    81. Re:It's about being truthful by Svartalf · · Score: 3, Informative

      Heh... I question the mods that marked you "insightful"...

      One thing about Linux hasn't changed at all in the 14 years I've been using it: users still need to have in-depth knowledge to do basic stuff, like install new applications.

      I have in hand a .deb or an installer executable file for a given application. How does one install it?

      Open up a file browser (i.e. Explorer window...) and double-click on the package in question. In most instances (including many of the games being ported right now...), at this point the GUI package installer will launch or the installer in the bundle will do the same thing. If it's self-contained (meaning no external dependencies) it'll only need the administrator password to install said app. If it's got dependencies, it'll typically explain those up-front or tell you about what it needs pre-installed, much like the story on MacOS or Windows.

      What "in-depth" knowlege, I ask you?

      Ditto for pretty much all the other "basic" things you do with computers.

      And the same applies for pretty much any mainline and many niche Linux distributions.

      You said you've been using it for 14 years? Funny...I would have thought you'd have known this was the case then.

      --
      I am not merely a "consumer" or a "taxpayer". I am a Citizen of the State of Texas
    82. Re:It's about being truthful by lennier1 · · Score: 1

      Using the software in any other way, such as for doing email, playing games, or editing a document is another use and is not covered by the MSDN Subscription license.

      In other words: A subscriber is allowed to develop software on that install but he's supposed to use a different install to create/maintain the manual for that software???

    83. Re:It's about being truthful by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No way...the latest release of Ubuntu (10.04) has finally convinced me Linux is ready for the masses and that I can install it on people's computers and never get a tech support call again. Have been doing it aggressively since 10.04 came out, got about 10 people converted to the Way and still going. Cannot find a computer that it doesn't work on out of the box install...even if it isn't the point is moot as Dell guarantees compatibility. When I show people what Ubuntu can do, how it's free, how it has an app store with amazing programs that are all free, how it'll work on cheap hardware, old hardware, any hardware no problems, how their web browsing experience doesn't change, how they won't ever get a virus again, and most importantly how they'll never have to fucking call me for tech support again. I tell them the caveats about Microsoft Office, games, and losing their fav proprietary apps. However I show them the alternatives, I show them workarounds like dualboot/VirtualBox or the FOSS equivalent. The best people to nab are the ones that want to buy Macs but can't afford them, when you sit down with them and explain to them open source and what a scam apple is, they feel like they've been let in on some crazy secret! Few decline my offer, but most that I've sat down with are convinced. Oh actually I did have one issue with Netflix...got around it by install VirtualBox (isn't it convenient how Moonlight is always one version behind the one needed to play Netflix, whom has got to be Microsoft's only customer).

      Don't get me wrong, Win7 is a great release of Windows....but Ubuntu is soooo fucking sweet. It's amazing how everything is so integrated, and updates in the background with nagging me, and every fucking peripheral manufacture doesn't have a little stupid app in the system tray. I know a lot of people hate Gnome, but look at 10.04, it's perfect...I have a boner just typing this post using it. I'm really into aesthetics, and ubuntu to me at least seems to have blown away MacOS and Windows in the dust. Win7 looks cheesy as fuck to me, like a Vegas casino. MacOS just has this monotonous "everything is set in stone as Darth Jobs has ordered!" feel to it.

      Anyway, sorry for the ramble, but if you haven't looked at the latest release of Ubuntu, please do...best OS on the planet. Oh and take the time to tell people about Ubuntu and how you can make their computing experience better, "normal" users listen if you bring it to their level and explain to them how it can make their life better. All of us here are tech enthusiasts and should try to get people to have technology help people enrich their lives as it has enriched ours.

    84. Re:It's about being truthful by samoanbiscuit · · Score: 1

      You consider clicking the 'Applications' menu and scrolling to and clicking 'Ubuntu Software Center' in-depth knowledge

      But these applications aren't weighted by popularity, something that should seem obvious to anyone, especially after the example the Apple App Store, Adroid Marketplace and Firefox Addons website show us. Also, most screenshots fail to load, and the summary/blurb about the applications, particularly the more obscure ones, are less than helpful. To a user uncomfortable with linux, and computers in general, this is very intimidating.

      My first exposure to Linux Hater was your link, which led to a page where a lunatic is ranting about a font and declaring ogg sucks because it isn't mp3. I think your initial thoughts about that blog were correct.

      Had you followed the links, you would have seen it was lunatic ranting about lunatic ranting across certain less intelligent sections of the FOSS blog world. In the last few weeks, there has been much ado about nothing regarding some fonts Canonical is proposing to use in Ubuntu 10.10, probably in their drive to strengthen branding. But of course, because they didn't roll it out EXACTLY like those idiot bloggers would like, you'd think Canonical was violating the GPL or something...

      From the GP:

      Even with a user-friendly package manager you are still faced with a huge noise to signal ratio created by the large amount of applications that might do what you want, none of which are the application you've heard of.

      This is so true, even though lots of good progress has been made, they're close but no cigar. It's funny, because Mozilla does it so well for their addons, and then Apple and Android do it for smartphones, you'd think linux distro makers, who've used repositories for ages, would get it right before them. I'm filled with hope for 10.10, and the Linux Mint derivative of that release...

    85. Re:It's about being truthful by Svartalf · · Score: 1

      You have to be a business user or order the business lineup to get serious models configured with Linux on them right at the moment. They do sell Linux desktops- and a lot of them, but just not at the consumer sales level right at the moment.

      --
      I am not merely a "consumer" or a "taxpayer". I am a Citizen of the State of Texas
    86. Re:It's about being truthful by Blakey+Rat · · Score: 1

      There were no Windows monitor "drivers" for the monitor (it's old and shitty), so there didn't seem to be any way to force Windows to use a lower maximum refresh rate.

      Display Settings -> Advanced -> Monitor -> "Screen Refresh Rate"

    87. Re:It's about being truthful by Svartalf · · Score: 1

      It does...

      However, the GP-poster's remarks still are very much valid. If he didn't receive the licenses himself, then he's not really licensed to them. If he's doing something outside the license grant's requirements to be licensed, he's not really licensed to the software in question. Now, if they bought it for him and it really was licensed to him and not the employer, it's okay on that level- but not on the other.

      It is irrelevant to the discussion as to whether he's developing software with it or not. The only exceptions to that licensing would probably be if you were developing WINDOWS games and you were playing/testing the same. Anything else would be a breach of the MSDN license grant.

      --
      I am not merely a "consumer" or a "taxpayer". I am a Citizen of the State of Texas
    88. Re:It's about being truthful by ffreeloader · · Score: 0, Troll

      Wow. Can anyone say, Microsoft Shill?

      If someone wrote a WindowsHater's Handbook highlighting all of Window's weaknesses you'd be accusing them of mindlessly hating on MS, and be using any slur you could think of to discredit the book. Of course that book would of necessity be a few thousand pages long, but that's besides the point. I bet you wouldn't be regretting the fact that MS wouldn't be reading it and responding to it by making changes in their priorities.

      Me? I have to laugh at both the Unixhater's handbook and at Linuxhaters.com. A lot of the Unixhater's Handbook is tongue-in-cheek. Many of the supposed problems with Linux are nothing more than the unrealistic expectation that when a user changes operating systems they shouldn't have learn anything new to administer their system, or pretending the Unixhater's Handbook is 100% serious and so hating on Linux for the same reasons, as if MS is the only entity to ever do computing the "right way", and ignoring that fact that a lot of the "problems" with both Unix and Linux have been fixed years, if not more than a decade, ago.

      Well, I guess you could figure MS's way is the only way if you agree with the idea that security vulnerabilities should be built into the system and called "features", as that's what MS did for decades and their software still suffers from that beginning vision. (Don't complain about this being from the past as you point to Linuxhater.com as valid and it contains problems fixed long ago.) It still suffers from Gate's idea that the only reason people will buy new software is if it has bloat, err, I mean new features, and so bugs and security are historically relegated to secondary priorities.

      --
      "while democracy seeks equality in liberty, socialism seeks equality in restraint and servitude." de Tocqueville
    89. Re:It's about being truthful by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Eh? What exactly is harder in Ubuntu than it is on Windows?

      Getting your freshly-downloaded malware to run. chmod is a bitch.

    90. Re:It's about being truthful by xmorg · · Score: 1

      "not as easy" is relative compared to what you are trying to do.

      Consider:
      *Finding that CD key that you wrote down after the one under your laptop got scratched off
      *Getting rid of a virus that wont let the computer boot without it, when you only have a "Professional CD" and a "Home Edition"
      *Joining a domain at the office with your "home" edition, so you can sync your files.
      *(windows 7) attempting to dual boot
      * Doing anything in the registry
      * Finding out how to get your "network connections" back once they disappeared due to malware, yet still exist in ipconfig
      *doing something fairly basic like converting a jpeg to a png or a wav to an mp3(without contracting spyware/malware)

      The list goes on but you get the point. While most of these are possible in windows, they are definitely NOT as easy as in linux/bsd.

    91. Re:It's about being truthful by Obfuscant · · Score: 1
      Eh? What exactly is harder in Ubuntu than it is on Windows?

      Knowing whether a system that shuts itself off every few hours all by itself and has a 3G modem that just stops working after an hour or less is broken or not, and getting Dell to deal with the problem.

      I have a system in a remote place now, bought with Win7 because that is all that Dell would sell it with, loaded with Ubuntu because that's the only distro I had with me at the time that pretended to deal with the 3G USB modem. That system turns itself off even though I've removed every APMD or other demon that I can think of that would be trying to "save power". The 3G modem loses connection after 15 minutes to a few hours and the device simply disappears from the system.

      I have no idea if this is some "normal" behaviour I've just not found the right setting for in Ubuntu, but I know it would be broken in Win7 and SuSE and CentOS. It doesn't help that Ubuntu came as a "desktop-only" system (with no hint of that on the DVD) and has re-standardized itself into two runlevels (stop and go) and has all kinds of "managers" to do what used to be standard, simple things. (E.g., I want a system without X running. On everything else, change /etc/inittab so the initial runlevel is 3. On Ubuntu, go find this file over under /etc/something or other and comment out the lines that start up the x server, and make sure you don't bugger the if/else block they are in. Why do I want X not running? Because I don't want to have a monitor connected, and if X runs on Ubuntu and the monitor isn't there, the boot process stops with a warning about "low resolution display" or something like that. Sigh.)

      What I DO know is that it would be a complete waste of time to call DELL to talk to them about it, since it isn't running Win7 like it was shipped with.

      Of course, in Ubuntu this just isn't a problem because there's no games at all, but that's another issue entirely.

      Really? This system runs Tux Racer and Frozen Bubble and a bunch of other games just fine.

    92. Re:It's about being truthful by AssClown2520 · · Score: 1

      Mod parent up even though it is already at 5. This post is spot on. I am an avid Linux user (Slackware) and for the vast majority of what I do and how I like to do it I use Linux. However, I have come to learn that Linux is definitely not for everyone and in my opinion it shouldn't strive to be like Windows. Ubuntu please take note.

    93. Re:It's about being truthful by Beardo+the+Bearded · · Score: 1

      I have four computers in my house. My wife's runs Win 7, mine runs Mint, and the kids use Puppy. (I have puppy on my laptop too, but it's a P2 366 w/ 64 MB of RAM.)

      Linux is a pain in the ass to use. That's all there is to it. It doesn't handle Flash or ATI cards very well at all. The solution is "lol buy a better card" or "Flash is all Adobe's fault for having proprietary drivers".

      When is DOES work, which is in all fairness most of the time, there are a few quirks:
      1. Only the main HDD is mounted at boot.
      2. The display keeps defaulting to 1078 x 768 @ 60Hz. Flickery.
      3. File transfer windows close before file transfers are complete.
      4. It won't generate playlists for my walkman. ("lol, that's Sony's problem for not using XML playlists with an open standard.")
      5. Ocassionally, the web browsers will stop displaying links properly, for example on PBS Kids Curious George.
      6. The Internet connection drops out randomly.

      So there are some quirks. It works most of the time, and I can stream HD video from my desktop to my TV without many issues.

      The real issue with all flavours of Linux is that there's basically fuck all marketing and fuck all support. Sure, there's a forum that you can go to to try and resolve issues by entering random commands from strangers.

      MS and Apple make their market share by selling their product to people who don't give a fuck about their computers. They want their stuff to work. They don't care or want to hear about installing a codec after enabling the multiverse, and ignore the warning about proprietary code, and then it will work. Oh, if it didn't work, just edit /etc/conf/fucker/ and comment out the lines referring to USB.

      Meanwhile, the ads say "Macs just work" and people flock over. Yes, I know that it's Unix-based. Interesting how a little marketing and support would make it into a pretty damned fine product, eh?

      --

      ---
      ECHELON is a government program to find words like bomb, jihad, plutonium, assassinate, and anarchy.
    94. Re:It's about being truthful by http · · Score: 2, Interesting
      You say,

      ...users still need to have in-depth knowledge to do basic stuff, like install new applications. Things got slightly better, but it's still way more difficult than it should be. Even with a user-friendly package manager you are still faced with a huge noise to signal ratio created by the large amount of applications that might do what you want, none of which are the application you've heard of.

      Ya know, I have had that exact same problem using MS Windows since forever. I recommend dropping that from your list of arguments, as it doesn't do what you think it does.
      I do volnteer work educating seniors about using computers, and let me tell you, the amount of knowledge required to follow such directions as `right click on the icon and select "Properties" from the context-sensitive menu' is not trivial. These are not stupid people, they just never have been taught before. The real eye opener for me was finding myself teaching a (retired) physicist. I never had to repeat myself, but I still had to explain a lot. Just because you and I know it and consider it basic doesn't mean it's not in-depth.

      --
      If opportunity came disguised as temptation, one knock would be enough.
      3^2 * 67^1 * 977^1
    95. Re:It's about being truthful by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, because Linux 'just works', and Apple 'just works'. Anyone who is interested in perpetuating any of those myths has not worked in computing and certainly hasn't worked in tech support.

      This kind of comment is the type I expect to see between 14 year olds debating PS3 vs Xbox, not rational adults discussing operating systems.

    96. Re:It's about being truthful by Requiem18th · · Score: 1

      The parent is right and wrong.

      Honestly stuff breaks under Ubuntu/linux kinda often, usually desktop stuff and it's usually specific problematic software. Fixing those problems properly require quite some knowledge of Linux.

      Since it's specific to problematic software it shouldn't be a problem but it is when the thing that fail is, the the window manager for instance.

      Of course compiz usually breaks because of some other programs fault but if you refuse to use problematic software under Linux must of the bling fades aways very fast, a rock solid Linux desktop is a limited desktop.

      Properly fixing compiz, or gnome-panel, or nautilus, or even X requires knowing about ttys, ps, kill and or killall and being capable of reading ps output.

      But then, Windows software fails too and the cooler stuff breaks the most. Fixing those require you to know about Windows own task manager, and if explorer fails you'd need to know what it was and how to run it again.

      The standard solution for common users is rebooting and that tends to work equally fine on both OSes but Windows breaks less often on reboot. session management in Linux attempts to do much more and thus has a higher failure rate. (One of the downsides of the network oriented nature of X)

      Of course installing software under Linux is way easier than Windows I don't know where did the parent pulled that from and I don't want to find out.

      But it's true that the "web user" does need a couple things beyond just a browser.

      Microsoft fonts is an often overlooked example. a PDF reader, a media player with codecs, plugins, including silverlight and shockwave, heck, I even have run into needing a PPT reader went I lent my linux netbook to my mom.

      But then again, many web users don't need those and if they were more numerous developers would provide adequate alternatives.

      --
      But... the future refused to change.
    97. Re:It's about being truthful by coerciblegerm · · Score: 1

      But these applications aren't weighted by popularity, something that should seem obvious to anyone, especially after the example the Apple App Store, Adroid Marketplace and Firefox Addons website show us. Also, most screenshots fail to load, and the summary/blurb about the applications, particularly the more obscure ones, are less than helpful. To a user uncomfortable with linux, and computers in general, this is very intimidating.

      The Software Center is pretty straightforward, with applications sorted by category (and subcategory with 10.04) complete with descriptions and the ability to search. It even includes some proprietary stuff like Adobe Reader and Flash. There are certainly some kinks that need to be worked out, and I agree that sorting by popularity would be nice, but this is far from the only criteria of user-friendliness and it certainly doesn't constitute "in-depth knowledge". If pointing and clicking is intimidating, perhaps we need to go back to the DOS/CLI era. In any event, this side argument fails to demonstrate Ubuntu's alleged shortcomings in terms of web browsing.

      Had you followed the links, you would have seen it was lunatic ranting about lunatic ranting across certain less intelligent sections of the FOSS blog world. In the last few weeks, there has been much ado about nothing regarding some fonts Canonical is proposing to use in Ubuntu 10.10, probably in their drive to strengthen branding. But of course, because they didn't roll it out EXACTLY like those idiot bloggers would like, you'd think Canonical was violating the GPL or something...

      I did, in fact I read several of his blithering rants. Be that as it may, you were using the site as the centerpiece of your argument that Ubuntu isn't suitable for a user who only needs to browse the web. I was kind enough originally to ignore the fact that the status you ascribe to him as an "expert authority" on software doesn't mitigate the fact that he clearly has an unreasonable bias, casually using loaded terms like freetard and employing spotty logic (such as that ogg isn't mp3, therefore it's bad) in many of his writings. Some of his criticisms are valid, or at least understandable, but it becomes clear very quickly that he has an automatic, borderline dogmatic disdain for anything open-source, especially Linux; hence the title of his blog. You're deluding yourself if you see anything other than an ignorant, ranting lunatic posting on Linux Hater.

      I'll take your silence on Ubuntu's alleged "big problems" with surfing the web as an admission that you were blowing smoke and spreading FUD, by the way.

    98. Re:It's about being truthful by TrekkieTechie · · Score: 1

      True, the business-level workstations - i.e. Precisions - can come with Red Hat, I was referring to Ubuntu in particular. They have a lot of FreeDOS as well.

    99. Re:It's about being truthful by coerciblegerm · · Score: 2, Informative

      Sorry, for some reason I thought I was replying to the same person I did above. Please disregard any statements with that implication. :-(

    100. Re:It's about being truthful by NoZart · · Score: 1

      that is just replacing the troll with a troll of a different color, really.

    101. Re:It's about being truthful by exomondo · · Score: 1

      The question is, if you have no idea what Ubuntu is, then why did you choose it?

      Must a man seek alternatives with a reason other than a head full of curiosity?

      But it's an idiot who jumps, head-first, into a pool without checking it's depth.

    102. Re:It's about being truthful by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 1

      Actually, I don't have too much of a problem with the Ubuntu that was shipped on my machine, aside from the fact that it was 32-bit. I wouldn't have too much trouble recommending a system like that to a newbie.

      Apparently, Dell does.

      --
      Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
    103. Re:It's about being truthful by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 1

      That presumes the only reason to use Linux or Mac is to have things "just work". Once you remove the one myth that makes Windows a superior alternative to the new user, we can start to compare things on actual technical merits.

      Though, yes, Linux and Mac do tend to "Just Work" more often than Windows.

      --
      Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
    104. Re:It's about being truthful by jmorris42 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      > Even with a user-friendly package manager you are still faced with a huge noise to signal ratio
      > created by the large amount of applications that might do what you want, none of which are the
      > application you've heard of.

      So? Stop thinking in the Windows box. Do what I do in such a situation and just install every app that might do what I want and spend an hour or two playing with them. Once I pick one I remove the others. Doing that sort of promiscuous software installation on Windows would lead to disaster so people quickly learn not to do that, as you apparently have internalized. With Linux's superior package management and the lack of much malware 'in the field', the 'install em all' tactic is rational.

      --
      Democrat delenda est
    105. Re:It's about being truthful by Envy+Life · · Score: 1

      Your point is well taken, and is probably Dell's reason for doing all this... they threw in the towel because they have better help desk support personnel for Windows than Ubuntu.

      Is your response a sad acknowledgement that most people are incapable of learning multiple variations of the same skill?

      "I know Outlook but that Evolution thing is just WAY over my head."
      "I've been driving a Ford truck for years, but this here Chevy has the speedometer in the wrong place so I can't drive it."

      Is this where we are in society? I don't buy it.

    106. Re:It's about being truthful by shish · · Score: 1

      Must a man seek alternatives with a reason other than a head full of curiosity?

      People being curious is not a problem; the complaint is people having no idea, and then being angry at other people for their own decision

      --
      I mod down anyone who says "I will be modded down for this", regardless of the rest of their comment
    107. Re:It's about being truthful by oztiks · · Score: 1

      2 years ago you'd have a different tune being sung by myself, but time has passed and the guys at Ubuntu have not only created a great system but in many ways it shows a more current feature set than XP or OSX combined.

      Its' Indicator feature (2 steps a head of what XP or OSX is doing), Ubuntu Software Centre (the appstore without the bullshit), It's media friendliness (the only thing i don't want it supporting is fing quicktime but it still does), Its font support (as good as windows if not better).

      Ubuntu is following down the same vein as Android with its Broadcast features, so much praise can be said about Unbuntu and it's deserved.

      I really take my hat off to the community that created this, Very Very Well Done. I'm gald to see someone like Dell offer credit where credit is due.

    108. Re:It's about being truthful by dfsmith · · Score: 1

      Hmm. Not that I want to get too involved in reading MS licenses, but...

      • The first link is to Visual Studio 2010 licensing: VS2010 is not an OS.
      • The second link says that licenses are granted to a user, for perpetuity. So no problem there.

      And if the GP is developing games (or email) then the license hasn't been broken. Now volume licensing is a completely different kettle of fish, and depends on what your employer has negotiated....

      But before we delve too closely into the second link, we can read the actual agreement here.

      Some notes:

      • Section 1.b confirms the "per user basis".
      • Section 2.b.i says that you inherit the original licenses that comes with the software, unless mentioned elsewhere in section 2. Windows 7 is mentioned, but only in the context of other license agreements in relation to media gizmos.
      • Section 2.g.ii says you can use production desktop software with MSDN if you buy it.
      • Section 9 on activation is interesting. We do a lot of hardware work with MSDN, so when we called for support about the hassle of having to reactivate 20 times a day, the recommendation was to not activate.
      • Section 16 is hilarious. You may not "work around any technical limitations in the software". Umm... isn't that the definition of software development?
      • Section 22 says you may transfer the license.

      What did I miss?

    109. Re:It's about being truthful by rainmouse · · Score: 1

      But if I just wanted to surf, write emails and do some light word-processing, I have to say Windows 7 would be fine for me. .

      Interesting enough for me, I am the opposite of this. I use Ubuntu in fact for exactly purposes.

      I am a new user to linux though I still mostly use windows 7, largely because I already know how things work. I have recently set up a dual boot Ubuntu and use it when I can to try and teach myself some linux. The biggest problem I stumbled over using Ubuntu was that a lot of things just didn't work right away. Getting my graphics card drivers to install and actually work in 3d took me a long time and a lot of frustration and googling up for help often left me with seemingly needlessly complicated instructions telling me to copy paste scary looking things into a terminal and replace this part with whatever was relevant to my system. Where as in windows 7 if I hit an error or problem and google it, I end up usually with a brainless step by step guide with screenshots of every stage, sure I don't really learn anything from those but it gets the job done without investing lots of time.

      What I'm trying to say is that the support for the idiot level user just was not there for me and any online help seemed to require existing levels of competence. Previous failed attempts at getting Ubuntu working left me feeling that I was neither tech savvie or intelligent enough to use it, placing it on a shelf slightly out of reach.

    110. Re:It's about being truthful by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      You've obviously not dealt with people for whom moving a icon from one place on the desktop to another results in complaints that "my Windows is broken," usually followed by, "I can't do my work until it's fixed."

      Obviously this problem can only be solved by implementing Desktop Space Layout Randomization(DSLR). Each time the user clicks an icon on the desktop, all other icons including the icon they clicked are rearranged using a cryptographically secure PRNG.

    111. Re:It's about being truthful by Nadaka · · Score: 1

      The MSDN licence is mine, in my name, my former employer however was the one to pay for it.

    112. Re:It's about being truthful by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You've obviously not dealt with people for whom moving a icon from one place on the desktop to another results in complaints that "my Windows is broken," usually followed by, "I can't do my work until it's fixed."

      This is true, for all the doubters out there.

      I too once believed that no one could be that stupid, but then I saw it for my self and realised that not all people had the sense of curious exploration that I have; some learn only how to do one thing, one way and have no interest in the underlying concepts.

      That being said, it's not an argument against ubuntu. It's an argument for "don't use Ubuntu because it's not exactly like windows". If the staff in question were originally trained with Ubuntu then you'd have the same problems converting them to windows.

    113. Re:It's about being truthful by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Other than at work where software is standardized, I complain to people who send me MS Word documents. I have never had a case were PDF, Text or HTML weren't more than capable of handling the content. I have an old copy of MS Word that I got for dirt cheap through academic licensing. I never use it now that I am out of school. Other than in a work environment (and even then it is infrequent) I cannot think of any use for it.

      Now Outlook + Exchange is a great (and pricey) product, I haven't seen anything that compares to it.

    114. Re:It's about being truthful by Tubal-Cain · · Score: 1

      I disagree too with the assertion that one should use windows if "You are new to using computers."

      I guess that depends. If the user is going to purchase a printer or DSL or something and "need" to run the CD (because the packaging says I must run the disk first!), they'll get confused when it doesn't run. And when they call tech support over the useless software, the techs on the other end won't be able to help.

    115. Re:It's about being truthful by samoanbiscuit · · Score: 1

      In any event, this side argument fails to demonstrate Ubuntu's alleged shortcomings in terms of web browsing.

      Oh, I realize you thought I was eldavojohn... Using linux (and even FreeBSD), I have never ran into problems browsing the web, I would never say that... Neither would I say that desktop linux has "big problems". I would say that desktop linux has many, many small problems, that projects like a thousand papercuts try to address. Tiny interface quirks that would never even give pause to your average slashdotter can confuse and frustrate many less able users.

      From personal experiece (yes I know, anecdotes are not data), I am a linux/windows dual booter. I do most things in linux, but keep a windows partition for games. Whenever someone I know, mostly uni students non-CS fields (like medicine, biology, etc) , wants to use my PC, I'll let them use it, often leaving them to use it alone. When I come back to them, they've booted into windows to continue reading/watching/listening to whatever it is. When asked, they usually mention some small irritation or surprise (e.g the screensaver coming on while a movie is playing, or the web browser not supporting some windows feature like middle-scrolling).

      Often a lot of interest is shown, but this falls sharply upon encountering a "missing" feature, or a little quirk.It may be true that 80% of users use 20% of an app's features, but this seems to be a different 20% for different users...

    116. Re:It's about being truthful by Penguinclaw · · Score: 1

      I Don't really see anything complicated with Linux. My Mother-in-law uses it (and always has an updated system) and yet she is the most computer illiterate person you could probably imagine. All she want's to do is surf and write emails, letters and print..... openSUSE has those covered easily on her second hand HP machine that only just managed to run xp . As for games.... come on if you're serious stop wasting your money on the top spec video cards and get yourself an Xbox, etc. They're built specifically for this purpose..... I use windows for one thing only..... I'm a sucker to try different OS's and there is one piece of software important to me that isn't compatible with *nix.... Corel Painter......

    117. Re:It's about being truthful by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      adobe flash sucks on linux. if you sell your computers to the average user, and they have no ability to watch netflix, and watch still-motion video on youtube/hulu, there are gonna be a lot of returned products.

      not linux fault, but still, windows is the logical choice for most users as the vast extent of computational work involves "clicking the funny link" and updating farcebook etc...

    118. Re:It's about being truthful by samoanbiscuit · · Score: 1

      Well this seems like a day for mistakes, my reply to this post is below. I accidentally replied to myself...

    119. Re:It's about being truthful by FourthAge · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Any comment criticising Linux is bound to be controversial here and I really don't have the energy to respond to everyone who has called me a Microsoft shill.

      The people who make a living from Linux, like myself, are those who are best placed to point out where it is lacking. On the server side or for embedded systems, it is great. For me, on my home computer, Linux is also great. Or at least better than the alternatives. But then I have a lot of experience with it, as I said. I'm one of the people who can dump Windows, and indeed that's exactly what I did.

      To me, Linux (1996-2010) is a sad story. Both Windows and MacOS have made huge leaps forward in terms of usability, stability and security, and Linux has hardly moved. The "year of the Linux desktop" has turned from something we all hoped for into something that will clearly never happen. In fact, it already happened with those Linux netbooks: but, once again, Linux just wasn't ready to do that. There was no Linux environment ready to go on a netbook that would do everything a netbook user wanted to do, and I'd say there still isn't.

      Linux is hamstrung by idiotic free software politics and the problem that nobody wants to do the unattractive but important work, like usability testing or making a stable platform for commercial software. And what do we do when we hear of these problems? We say "That's FUD" or "You're a Microsoft shill". Until we can admit that the problems are there, we are never going to get any improvement.

      --
      The tao of democracy: the government you can vote for is not the real government.
    120. Re:It's about being truthful by darkpixel2k · · Score: 1

      Walk down the street and pick out a hundred random people and ask them if they are interested in programming open source. They don't even say "if you are interested in free open source software" they say "open source programming." Do you think you'd even find one person interested in actually programming open source? That's basically what Dell's "comprehensive" Ubuntu list amounted to.

      I picked a street in California totally at random (chosen by fair dice roll). I walked down Amphitheatre Parkway in Mountain View asking everyone I saw. They all said they loved open source programming.

      --
      There's no place like ::1 (I've completed my transition to IPv6)
    121. Re:It's about being truthful by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What if it is in the repository? It is a few clicks to search and install, you will be notified if there is any updates, and you can uninstall it through the same location you installed it from. Editing a single line for repositories is not hard at all.
      Typical for windows.. search around the web, once you find it, select from a mirror that promises to open a new window for your download to begin. You are asked what you want to do with the file. Select run or download. Downloading the file to c:\users\username\downloads. Open explorer, expand the c drive or click on your user directory, browse to the location you downloaded it to (I hope you remember), double click on the exe install, get a warning about being untrusted, being asked several question during the install where you want it, what options you would like to be installed, would you like to luach the application now? Restarting the machine if required, then launching the application from a new submenu that has 5 other icons to click on that will not run the program. Asked on first startup if you would like to get updates and it asks if you'd like to check every time you start the app. It might have a helper app or service that checks for updates that is always running as well (adobe, google). If you don't like the software, cruise over to control panel, select the installed program options, select uninstall, get warning or confirmations about a file may or may not be in use what would you like to do (pick one at random), uninstall the program, get a warning about some files that were not able to be uninstalled or asked if you would like to delete them. Once done, take a look at the install directory (C:\Program Files\company name\some app\ and see there are files still there. Browse the registry and I bet you still find references. The funny thing is, apps for Linux that are not repository based can be installed in the same manner as Windows so what's the difference? Google Chrome is one of them, you can install it on Ubuntu just as you can with Windows, click on it, download it, and choose to run it and install it from the app manager.

      Neither one is hard and we all do it but to someone that has never used a computer before, I bet the Ubuntu way is much easier.
      Just being honest.

    122. Re:It's about being truthful by darkpixel2k · · Score: 1

      I picked a street in California totally at random (chosen by fair dice roll). I walked down Amphitheatre Parkway in Mountain View asking everyone I saw. They all said they loved open source programming.

      Because I got such strange results, I decided to survey another street--just to see if my results were due to some strange vortex or something. I randomly picked Infinite Loop Drive in Cupertino. Everyone I asked said they hated open source programming. As a side note, I also decided to poll them about the use of Flash on websites. Strangely, I got no answers. They were all too busy watching YouTube on my Nexus One...

      --
      There's no place like ::1 (I've completed my transition to IPv6)
    123. Re:It's about being truthful by yuna49 · · Score: 1

      Is your response a sad acknowledgement that most people are incapable of learning multiple variations of the same skill?

      Yes and no. One problem with computer training is that it's largely fairly rote. "Click X to do Y" types of training. Unfortunately American schools seem to think that this is the best way to train people looking for clerical and similarly skilled positions to deal with the computer demands that they will face on the job. It's still a Microsoft world, and most "training" consists of telling people how to do something with Word or Excel, not how to think about the actual "skills" involved as you suggest.

      On the other hand, I also think many people fear their computers and worry that doing anything out of the ordinary will "break" them. I'm always impressed by how many fall for scams like the phony virus scan. Just the other day I was speaking with a friend whose wife fell for this. They're both attorneys, so it's not a question of intelligence. It has much more to do with trust. The profusion of Windows malware over the years has led people not to trust their computers. When told that they need to take some step to further protect themselves, they don't trust Windows or the software they've already installed to protect them.

      So, in answer to your broader question, I don't think a lot of people think about computers in terms of generic "functions" or "skills" as you put it. Perhaps this is a generational thing (I'm 60, and most of my friends are 50+.), but I've had many conversations with people in support positions who encounter the reactions I mentioned in my earlier posting every day. The people they support are usually not as old as me.

      I'd also say your Ford/Chevy analogy somewhat misses the point. It's not a question of where the speedometer is located. Differences between Outlook and Evolution concern things like address books. What if the person is tied into a company-wide address book on an Exchange server? What if they're used to using Sharepoint? What about workflow applications? There's a lot of "stuff" out there that relies on a Windows infrastructure; moving to Linux is not easy for people in situations like these.

    124. Re:It's about being truthful by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not sure whey the above post is marked Troll. It makes more sense than Dell's current 'choice' screen.

    125. Re:It's about being truthful by Penguinclaw · · Score: 1

      Then again if the user was to quote "new to computers" is windows the best option? The Linux kernel has so many drivers pre-installed its a breeze to install in most cases if you have standard equipment (and let's face it if manufacturers weren't so windows orientated, everything would work out of the box). I spend less than an hour doing a total install of Linux, including office software, drivers, photo manipulation and have repositories of thousands of useful software packages at my fingertips, all free. Doing a windows from scratch install takes 6 - 7 hours if you're lucky. No internet drivers for the motherboard....... So many other driver updates that each require a system reboot..... then the windows updates and version updates...... and once you've done that..... Anti virus and other security software (the latter, the average novice wouldn't have a clue about)..... then the installing of the separate packages (remember no central repository)...... And who explains the importance of keeping each of these software products up to date...... And the importance of scanning for nasties? Nah, this is windows marketing nonsense. I have installed Linux on people computers and they have, after a few minutes training, commented how simple it was. They can cope with the updates as most modern distro's warn when they are available. Most modern distros come pre-loaded with all the software that the average Joe need... surfing, emailing, photo- management etc. I think if Linux was the default, manufacturers would provide all the drivers (makes marketing sense to me after, all who wants to buy a machine that doesn't work?) and computing would be easier. There would still be room for those that provide a great product and charge for it ie Corel Painter and as they were paid for products would encourage them to provide something special!

    126. Re:It's about being truthful by yargnad · · Score: 0

      Setting up that new USB WiFi N adapter you just bought from BestBuy with a Broadcom chipset in it. Most people aren't going to bother with NDIS wrappers and shite like that. I give Linux a shot every year or so and a good one at that; I will try to use it at least a month before I feel compelled to be more productive in a hassle-free way. I have no issues with Windows. Everything I use just seems to work with it, hardware or software. I don't mind paying developers for their hard work and most want to be monetarily compensated for their ideas. I know this from personal experience. Windows users are the largest audience I can have for my ideas and projects. So while some endlessly argue pedantically over OS choices, some people actually accomplish things no matter what the platform of choice is. When is the last time you cared about which OS foursquare used to let you check in?

    127. Re:It's about being truthful by mjwx · · Score: 1

      Ubuntu is probably the easiest Linux out there, but it's not as easy as Windows 7

      Lets not kid ourselves here,

      Almost anyone under 40 could run Ubuntu if it came pre-installed. Computers have been around that long, so everyone has the basics down pat. If a person has trouble with a pre-installed Ubuntu instance, they will also have trouble with a pre-installed Windows instance.

      The big problem is still hardware support. Yes this is a lot better then it used to be but you still get odd bugs and a few frustrating configurations. Whilst Ubuntu works on almost all my hardware straight out of the box, there are still a few issues. My last issue was months ago with a new media centre PC, I had no sound through HDMI on an integrated Geforce 8200 which I fixed with a conf file I found on a forum, not a solution for the average user. Windows also has small issues like this but has a simpler way of fixing them. If Ubuntu needs to improve anything, it needs to be a simpler way of fixing bad conf files.

      --
      Calling someone a "hater" only means you can not rationally rebut their argument.
    128. Re:It's about being truthful by yuna49 · · Score: 1

      Knowing whether a system that shuts itself off every few hours all by itself and has a 3G modem that just stops working after an hour or less is broken or not, and getting Dell to deal with the problem.

      I've had a similar problem with my Linksys USB wifi adapter that uses the Ralink 2500 chipset. This device worked flawlessly though Ubuntu 9.04, but has not worked reliably since then. In WPA2 networks like mine, it won't establish a connection at full speed and will randomly disconnect for no apparent reason. I'm now running Maverick whose kernel seems to include a fix for this problem, but it's taken almost two full years to get this issue resolved.

      While I'm a long-time Linux user and supporter of open source, this example is precisely why Linux fails to establish itself with ordinary users over the long run. Even given my dedication to Linux and open source, having a device that suddenly stops working for no good reason is exasperating to say the least. Unfortunately the Ralink chipset is very common, so it's hard to find competing devices. I always choose Intel wireless if given the opportunity because its support in Linux has been rock-solid. I've done numerous searches to find an equivalent PCI or USB device using the Intel chipsets, or the Atheros ones which are highly rated, and they're very hard to find. Mainstream manufacturers like Linksys use Ralink devices which work under Windows but are more flaky under Linux.

      Until every mainsteam hardware device works flawlessly out of the box, and continues to work flawlessly regardless of changes to the kernel, even the most adventurous Linux users will ultimately fall by the wayside. Personally I think it's unconscionable to rewrite drivers and interfaces between kernel releases without sufficient testing to insure that the installed base of hardware continues to work correctly. Microsoft gets a lot of derision for its commitment to backwards-compatibility, but I'd like to see a bit more emphasis on maintaining compatibility with the installed base among Linux developers.

    129. Re:It's about being truthful by shelterit · · Score: 1

      Funny thing, I was working on the train on my Toshiba P300 laptop on a SharePoint connector in Visual Studio running in a Vista VM under Ubuntu 10.04. A guy and a girl were standing up in the aisle waiting to get off on the next stop, and he burst out, "Hey, he's working in Ubuntu!" This is on the South Coast line south of Australia! Computers are still a novelty down here. This is a sure sign of either the apocalypse or the coming of the messiah. Not sure which one.

      --
      -- Home, James - it doesn't matter where that thing has b
    130. Re:It's about being truthful by PinkyGigglebrain · · Score: 1

      maybe he meant he was still using a 14 year old distribution.

    131. Re:It's about being truthful by ToasterMonkey · · Score: 1

      They don't even say "if you are interested in free open source software" they say "open source programming." Do you think you'd even find one person interested in actually programming open source?

      I don't know, isn't open source kind of a big selling point of open source software? If that's not of interest to the average person, then what's left, the free as in no cost part? Why don't we just coin a new term with the meaning "free as in no cost" and start migrating from "old" free/OSS to "new" free if that's the reality of it. Do you really want OSS to _just_ be free?

    132. Re:It's about being truthful by westlake · · Score: 1

      You typically don't really "choose" Windows when you buy a PC. It's just there unless you ask otherwise (and even know that you can so ask).

      The Apple II was launched in 1977.

      Three years before the IBM PC. The Macintosh in 1984.

      Eleven years before Windows 95.

      Apple has never been known for hiding its light under a bushel. Yet in 2010 it holds a bare 5% of the PC market.

      That can't be explained unless the Windows buy is a real, conscious, choice.

      Walmart carried the flag for OEM Linux in big box retail for the better part of ten years.

      Nothing ever came of it.

      Though, mind you, most of those years were spent selling carloads of overstock junk to the geek who thought he could spin straw into gold.

    133. Re:It's about being truthful by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      That can't be explained unless the Windows buy is a real, conscious, choice.

      So, are we talking about 1977, 1984, 1995 or 2010? Because all those are very different time periods, and what was true in one of them is not necessarily still true in the others.

    134. Re:It's about being truthful by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Let me enlighten you fucktard. Read your own post, here. You might sound positive in your head, but for others you are a blatant troll.

      Spouting bullshit like

      'Microsoft still spends millions into R&D while Apple does nothing like that. Google isn't really that innovative either.'

      is what getting you down modded. You are trying to disguise your trolling with 'positive' commenting. Sorry, writing lies like Apple not investing into R&D is trolling. Anyone can search for two seconds using whatever search engine they want and find out fast that Apple is spending billions in R&D. Yet you ignore facts in your zeal to be first poster.

      And no, you are not a shill. Shills are quite smart. You are just a stupid troll.

    135. Re:It's about being truthful by westlake · · Score: 1

      The windows taskbar lacks discoverabilty, because practically everything is jammed into one menu (the start menu), or indecipherable little icons (system tray)

      I take it you haven't tried Win 7.

      Hover over a small system tray icon and I see a label. Hover over a large system tray icon and I see - in miniature - every open instance of an app.

      When I open the Start menu what I see is "Search programs and files."

      Instant access to pretty much everything.

      There are large - labeled - icons for my most frequently used programs and folders. If I hover over Google Chrome what I see is are lists of my most frequently visited sites and recently closed sites.

      It all works very well.

    136. Re:It's about being truthful by icebraining · · Score: 1

      Even with a user-friendly package manager you are still faced with a huge noise to signal ratio created by the large amount of applications that might do what you want, none of which are the application you've heard of.

      Yes? And where is the application on Windows that solves this problem?

    137. Re:It's about being truthful by icebraining · · Score: 1

      That is true, but Dell isn't deciding between Ubuntu and Android/iPhone/Firefox, it's between Ubuntu and Windows, and both suffer from the "large amount of applications". In fact, I'd say that Ubuntu while not perfect, at least it has the Software Center, while Windows has nothing.

    138. Re:It's about being truthful by IANAAC · · Score: 3, Interesting

      To me, Linux (1996-2010) is a sad story. Both Windows and MacOS have made huge leaps forward in terms of usability, stability and security, and Linux has hardly moved.

      I don't know how you can honestly say that with a straight face if you've actually used Linux on the desktop since 1996.

      We've come a LONG way in terms of the desktop since then. The first "usable" Linux desktop I used was Caldera's Looking Glass Desktop (I think that was the name of it) back in 98-99. And I put usable in quotes for a reason: It was absolutely laughable compared to either current Gnome or KDE desktops of today. I can't speak for KDE's stability - I settled on Gnome quite a while ago, but it's every bit as stable as any current Windows or OSX desktop I've recently used.

      Out of curiosity, what huge leaps in security are missing in Linux that are present in either OSX or Windows? I'm asking honestly.

    139. Re:It's about being truthful by Envy+Life · · Score: 1

      I'd also say your Ford/Chevy analogy somewhat misses the point.

      The speedometer change is analogous to the missing desktop icon referenced by the parent--any person with common sense should be able to figure out how to run a program by using their eyes, so why don't they?

      There are two valid themes here.. ease of use and security. Lets start with ease of use. I always liked The Great Ubuntu-Girlfriend Experiment

      I've had to train my mom on Windows over the phone and can say that even though I've used windows since v2.0, I find it maddening that it is neither intuitive to her nor easy to explain without sitting in front of her. She has also asked me about the phony virus scan trojan. Similarly I got a call from my Aunt, an adept Mac user, who was utterly frustrated that she couldn't figure out how to run a program in Windows.

      As far as crusty MS Office users unable to use Open Office, I wholeheartedly disagree. I find Open Office refreshing that it mimics 99% of the pre-2007 MS Office look and feel. The ribbon menu concept smacks of MS simply trying only to differentiate itself from rote copycats like OO.

      Security? Ubuntu has one-click 100% system updates for the latest security patches and bug fixes. There is a multi-billion dollar industry made out of protecting and repairing malware infested Windows PCs and that industry is largely unnecessary for Ubuntu. Simplicity is not having to deal with it.

    140. Re:It's about being truthful by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He said he's being using Linux for 14 years. He never ever said he updated it since that time...

    141. Re:It's about being truthful by FrangoAssado · · Score: 1

      That makes it pretty difficult to develop software for an OS if you're not allowed to use the OS.

      Indeed.

      But that's beside the point. If you want to use the MSDN subscription license, you must follow its rules (as stupid as they might be), or convince MS to change them. Otherwise, just pay for the full license or simply don't use Windows.

    142. Re:It's about being truthful by Rutulian · · Score: 1

      While I like the point you are trying to make--I love linux and have been using it exclusively for many years--this is a bad example. A .deb distributed by somebody, unless specifically tailored to the distribution+version you are using, will quickly put you in dependency hell if you install by this method. This has long been a problem with linux. The solution has been to package as much as possible in the repositories, but it's not a complete solution. Something needs to be done to facilitate cross-distribution packaging. Several ideas have been proposed in the past, but none have really come to any fruition, sadly.

      A commercial distributor, currently, is left with only a few less desirable options:
      1) Package for every possible distribution+version they can.
      2) Package for only one or a few specific distribution+versions and state this clearly on the download page.
      3) Statically bundle everything to prevent the need to worry about dependencies, which defeats the purpose of using a package manager in the first place.

    143. Re:It's about being truthful by Draek · · Score: 1

      The reply to this is not to say, "well, then, just open it in Open Office." It may look similar to its version in Word, it may not. When Open Office looks exactly like Word 2007+, and works exactly the same way as well, then you can ask your question again.

      When Word 2010 looks exactly like Word 2007 you can ask that question again.

      How about people who have used Outlook for years in an office environment?

      May God have mercy on their souls.

      You've obviously not dealt with people for whom moving a icon from one place on the desktop to another results in complaints that "my Windows is broken," usually followed by, "I can't do my work until it's fixed."

      I have, with an axe, though some recommend a shotgun. Seriously, anybody *that* incompetent already went to work to another field after the XP->Vista and Office 2003->2007 UI switch, and newly-born idiots can be safely ignored for being a tiny minority of the overall workforce.

      --
      No problem is insoluble in all conceivable circumstances.
    144. Re:It's about being truthful by samoanbiscuit · · Score: 1

      Sorry, let me clarify what I was agreeing with. I was agreeing that it's difficult for new users to find good/appropriate applications when using package managers. Community forums and blogs have done a great job of informing people that want to do the research, but for less motivated/capable people, it's a crapshoot whether they'll find something awesome or horrible. I don't think this is because of large amounts of applications, but rather that they are not arranged and indexed, with maybe tags, and hierachies based on at least: popularity (downloads), popularity (ratings), last updated, and update frequency. Several steps in the right direction were achieved in 10.04 with the software centre, but more work is needed. Hmmm, what I described above sounds like the sourceforge project search page.... Imagine that!! With more coherent settings management (a la YaST) and the aforementioned features in the software centre, thats my dream for 10.10.

      In fact, I'd say that Ubuntu while not perfect, at least it has the Software Center, while Windows has nothing.

      While I agree with this, there's a cultural difference between the platforms. For Windows, application vendors generally advertise and deliver apps to the users, whereas for most linux distros, distro makers must tweak and distribute the apps themselves through their repositories. What I mean is that, on windows, someone is pushing for a user to install program X, whereas on linux, a user installs program Y if and only if they can find it and understand that it does what they want. There's a tradeoff between apporaches, but I think it would be best if the application makers were to deliver their apps tuned and bugfixed into the repositories of the larger distros, rather than the distros having to do this. It would eliminate downstream bugs cropping up as a result distro's tweaking (Remember the debian openssl debacle?), and the distros would get the latest app versions alongside windows and mac os...

    145. Re:It's about being truthful by Dr.+Evil · · Score: 1

      The MSDN licenses are there to make it possible to test target platforms without having to buy licenses for every permutation and combination of Microsoft software which it might happen to run on.

      So yeah, if you want to run a wordprocessor to document your new MS Word plugin, you install OpenOffice.

    146. Re:It's about being truthful by PrecambrianRabbit · · Score: 1

      Actually, my last Ubuntu install (in December) pleasantly surprised me: it picked up all the drivers immediately, except for a USB wireless adapter, which I was able to get working with a quick Google search. Contrast Windows 7, which didn't have a driver available, so I was SOL on that component. Last time I tried a Linux was 2005, I think, and trying to get the wireless going involved a descent into ndiswrapper hell from which I never recovered. Of course, these were two different machines, and two different distros, so who knows what was really going on, but I did feel that Linux has progressed in the intervening years.

      Of course, it's an academic question for me, because after my wireless debacle of years ago I realized I could throw money at my problems and buy a Mac to get Unix in a shiny box :-).

    147. Re:It's about being truthful by darkpixel2k · · Score: 1

      A guy and a girl were standing up in the aisle waiting to get off on the next stop, and he burst out, "Hey, he's working in Ubuntu!" This is on the South Coast line south of Australia! Computers are still a novelty down here. This is a sure sign of either the apocalypse or the coming of the messiah. Not sure which one.

      It's only a sign if the girl had seven heads or the guy was wearing a funny hat. ...or something like that.

      --
      There's no place like ::1 (I've completed my transition to IPv6)
    148. Re:It's about being truthful by Draek · · Score: 1

      When I first visited Linux Hater, I thought I was dealing with extreme ignorance. But it quickly became apparent that he/she is actually an expert authority on software in general and Linux in particular.

      Try reading it sober then.

      Just to handpick an example, in his post about Ogg he rants about Vorbis the codec before quoting an article discussing Ogg the container. That's not a mistake a first-year CS student would make, let alone an "expert authority" on Software and/or Linux, nor a mistake a 14-years user of Linux would've ignored.

      Had he been sober, of course ;)

      --
      No problem is insoluble in all conceivable circumstances.
    149. Re:It's about being truthful by Nursie · · Score: 1

      "To me, Linux (1996-2010) is a sad story. Both Windows and MacOS have made huge leaps forward in terms of usability, stability and security, and Linux has hardly moved"

      What utter rot!

      Complete rubbish. The linux desktop is now extremely usable and realy quite attractive. I prefer it to Windows or Mac, you may not, but it is now a thing of preference rather than utility (or just plain ugliness, like a decade ago). If linux's stability has hardly moved it's because it had no stability problems to begin with, and the security model has always been pretty good too.

      I'm not going to argue that it's the perfect OS or suitable for everyone in all situations - choice is good, monoculture is bad - but your argument there is crap.

    150. Re:It's about being truthful by IICV · · Score: 1

      For you and the sibling posters who said the same thing: no, that doesn't work. All it does is set the current refresh rate. STALKER was badly written; when run, it tries to set the current refresh rate to the maximum refresh rate. Because I didn't have the Windows "drivers" (they're really just a list of supported resolution/refresh rate tuples) for my monitor, Windows made the retarded assumption that my monitor's max refresh rate was 85 MHz when in reality it can't do more than 60 MHz. Thus, STALKER would run, set the current refresh rate to 85 MHz, and my monitor would crap out, refusing to show anything. Reforce lets you directly edit what Windows thinks your monitor is capable of, so I was able to use that to tell it that no, this monitor can't actually do 85 MHz ever. After that, STALKER worked fine.

      I actually had more fun figuring that out than I've had playing STALKER. There's probably something wrong with me.

    151. Re:It's about being truthful by mwvdlee · · Score: 1

      If it's got dependencies, it'll typically explain those up-front or tell you about what it needs pre-installed, much like the story on MacOS or Windows.

      Why doesn't it install those dependencies for me?
      It knows the required dependencies better than I do and if it can tell me what to install, why can't it install that itself?

      --
      Slashdot social media options: AIM, ICQ, Yahoo, Jabber and Mobile Text. Why no MySpace?
    152. Re:It's about being truthful by larsemil · · Score: 1

      Couple of years ago my father came to me and he said - I am tired of using this Windows XP, do you think i should buy Vista? I answered that it would not run on his hardware, so he would need to get a new computer as well. Instead i recommended Ubuntu, saying i live nearby i come over when you need it. Also we can change XP back when needed. So i sat down with him, put in the cd and made him install it himself. He asked me what to do on each page of the install, and i just said - do what you think is the correct and he managed to install Ubuntu all on himself. Luckily enough he had hardware that worked flawless out of the box. So since 8.04 he has been a regular Ubuntu user, calling me less often then from when he was using XP. My mother on the other hand did not want to touch his computer with linux. I dont know that, she said, i barely even understand Windows she claimed. Last christmas my dad bought her an eeepc with Windows 7 on it. Even though it was new it was hellish slow, could use a minute to open filebrowser and all the OEM software included in the installed just slowed it down. I said, we can format it and install Windows 7 again, but couldnt we just install Ubuntu instead and try it, and if you dont like it we go back to Windows 7. Now my mother is one of these that before getting a laptop had used a computer 25 times, and those times on windows. So this was a challenge. After install i went home and left for her to experience things abit on its own and one hour later she called "I had no idea my computer could be so fast, and this does not seem so difficult, its the same webbrowser! But its says i dont have flash what is that?" So over the phone i got her to install flash. Easy as that she understood the concept of package manager. That is for me proof that two 50+ people, one with dayly use of computers at work with outlook and one with no experience at all both prefer Ubuntu compared to windows. My father even say "i hate it during the days using windows xp at work" my two cents

    153. Re:It's about being truthful by nobodie · · Score: 1

      Sorry, you are just another shill for W7. I have a houseful of newbs, from age 48 to 7. We use Ubuntu, Kubuntu and Fedora. My wife (age 48) has trouble using a mouse, just not a close enough connection to make sense to her so she is only comfortable with a trackpad. She will tell you that you are a fool to use anything other than Ubuntu: and she knows since she has used windows xp, os 9, and osX. My older daughter is at university in the US and was suckered by her boyfriend into Win 7. Her computer barely works and she has begged me to replace it with ubuntu. Her 17 year old sister here in China japes at her and uses Kubuntu, although she doesn't even try to use all the config functions, she doesn't want to. Sure she lusts after an iBook, but only because her stylish friends have them. This spring however she has noticed that their iBooks are looking a little tatty and shabby while her rig is still sleek and stylish, to her anyway.

      Finally, my 7 year old has been here at work with me in the mornings all week. He switches with ease between Fedora, linux Mint (Dr Ting over in IT, one of my son's buddies), Windows xp and Win7, depending on exactly whose computer it is. He can show people how to do things on IE, Firefox or even Epiphany or Midori. He was just setting up a QQ account yesterday afternoon (IM and email here in China, shabby trash) with some help from another teacher. He is comfortable helping and being helped and with teaching the teachers that computers are just here to do a job, not to be a statement.

      --
      Subversion of spatial scale luxury decoration ideas.
    154. Re:It's about being truthful by dave87656 · · Score: 1

      especially those who like things just to work

      So, you are promoting Ubuntu?

    155. Re:It's about being truthful by zmollusc · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I believe that your instructions allow one to choose from a list of refresh rates. The problem was more how to alter that list to remove the highest values. The game in question tries to use the highest available refresh rate that windows reports, one needs to alter the values windows reports if those higher refresh rates are not actually supported by the monitor.

      --
      They whose government reduces their essential liberties for temporary security, receive neither liberty nor security.
    156. Re:It's about being truthful by dave87656 · · Score: 1

      The question is, if you have no idea what Ubuntu is, then why did you choose it?

      That is the exact point here. Dell is telling customers which OS they should choose so they are capable to make the choice. Personally I'm a little bit surprised they didn't note the games, but casual people buying a computer don't necessarily know that they need Windows for their apps to work. Dell is just helping these casual users.

      A lot of casual users use the computer for web-based email and browsing. Some will also use it for managing their fotos. And they just want it to work and not get infected. For those people, Ubuntu is a better choice. Even if you "know" how to use Windows, you are still going to run into problems when the first virus strikes (no, AV programs don't always know about the latest viruses in time).

    157. Re:It's about being truthful by dave87656 · · Score: 1

      My girl-friend and my daughter use my linux machine all the time to surf the web and check their email. Neither has a problem with it and all I needed to do was show them where the firebox button was.

      A windows fanboy friend of mine also calls me once a year or so because his Windows box doesn't work anymore (presumably infected) so I can download his drivers for him. He feels that's normal that you have to reinstall an OS once a year or so.

      If you have to use a site called Linux-Haters to finally find something to criticize about Linux, perhaps you need to reconsider your position. Linux works and works pretty well for most hardware and anyone who isn't predisposed from the start to "hate" linux.

    158. Re:It's about being truthful by FourthAge · · Score: 1

      Actually I use Linux every day, at work and home, by choice. I still think it is the best of all available options for me, I just don't think it's perfect and in some respects it is still in the mid 90s.

      --
      The tao of democracy: the government you can vote for is not the real government.
    159. Re:It's about being truthful by FourthAge · · Score: 1

      Detecting all the drivers is one of the most basic things the OS should be able to do. This has improved on Linux but other aspects of usability have not. This is an ideal place to wistfully remember recompiling the sound module to change the default SoundBlaster IRQ to 7 instead of 5, because back then it wasn't even a command line option. That's got better. But this is basic stuff.

      Wireless continues to be a pain; I bought a specific brand of laptop in order to have a supported chipset and avoid ndiswrapper but was still stung by the clusterfuck of wpa_supplicant, its horrible configuration file, Avahi (the Pulseaudio of the network world), and of course a slew of half-working GUI wireless network managers which are only useful under very specific circumstances. But I dealt with it. I threw out all the GUIs (after trying them all) and I edit the wpa_supplicant.conf file by hand for each network I need to connect to. It works for me, but there's no way it would work for a typical user.

      People who switched from Linux to MacOS, such as yourself, are very well placed to point this sort of thing out, if they can be bothered to deal with the inevitable rage it will kick up. I'm not a fan of MacOS but must admit that a great deal of effort has been put into making things work nicely. Everything has been considered; there has been a lot of usability testing, and the result is that every user gets an excellent baseline. Same on Windows. Just creating this baseline of usability and stability seems to be the sticking point for Linux.

      --
      The tao of democracy: the government you can vote for is not the real government.
    160. Re:It's about being truthful by FourthAge · · Score: 1

      Right. Although I wonder if option (3) is really so undesirable. We save space by having packages that use libz.so depend on "zlib1g" or whatever... but how much? Not so much that it's really a big issue in these days of terabyte hard disks and gigabytes of RAM.

      Static bundling trades a small amount of space for a huge amount of usability, because the same package will work on any Linux with a minimum kernel version. It's not a good strategy for the core packages on the system, but for every "after market addon", you really want exactly one package that will work on all Linuxes forever: a bit like a Windows program on Windows ;).

      If we don't like option (3), then the only other option is to have a fixed, well-known baseline of packages that are always installed and always the same version on every distribution. But getting people to agree what these packages should be is a politically impossible problem, solvable only by a Steve Jobs/Linus Torvalds-style "dictator". And while Linus' dictation works well in the kernel, and has kept everything nicely backward compatible, it doesn't apply on the other side of the system call barrier.

      --
      The tao of democracy: the government you can vote for is not the real government.
    161. Re:It's about being truthful by AYeomans · · Score: 1

      But that Dell page does not tell the whole truth.

      It advertises "Windows® . Life without WallsTM . Dell recommends Windows 7." but then goes on to have a screenshot of Windows XP.

      And if you go to the Euro Dell site and try to look for Ubuntu systems
      http://www1.euro.dell.com/content/topics/topic.aspx/emea/segments/gen/client/en/ubuntu_landing?c=uk&l=en&s=dhs
      you find all the ones offered are only Windows 7.

      So it advertises two operating systems (XP and Ubuntu) which it does not supply.

      --
      Andrew Yeomans
    162. Re:It's about being truthful by icebraining · · Score: 1

      That can already be done: the upstream developers just need to offer themselves volunteers to package their own apps for the distros.

      Awesome, for example, is packaged for Debian by the writer of the software (Julien Danjou) and the updates are usually in Unstable the same day the software is released. The fact is that application developers most of the time don't care (and rightfully so) about all the OSes/distros their application will be packaged for. OpenSSL, for example, isn't even originally developed by Linux users, but OpenBSD.

      Besides, I think what you need to get faster updates isn't upstream developers doing it themselves; distro packagers are fast enough most of the times. No, the problem is that distros only update stuff on a regular schedule (like Ubuntu, 6 in 6 months), and therefore you can't get a new version of an app even if it's packaged already.
      But usually, that's the best option for most people: having the latest and greatest version of OpenOffice or Firefox isn't *that* important, especially if they get security updates. More important is having the stability so they know the software won't have an important bug the next time they'll launch it, and believe me: you don't have that security on Windows, and it sucks.

    163. Re:It's about being truthful by Nursie · · Score: 1

      If there is any substance to your opinion there - which bits?

      Because I don't really see that. The mid 90s saw Win 95 showing up, and linux is more stable, usable and secure than that by a million miles. More so than NT 4, 95's contemporary. Compared to the UNIX workstations of the time, which largely ran X and CDE, X.org and Gnome/KDE are leaps and bounds ahead of where CDE ever got to, to the extent that Gnome is now an option on solaris machines and the KDE libraries (if not the whole system) are found everywhere from big iron to embedded devices.

      I really don't see it....

    164. Re:It's about being truthful by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Remember the shitstorm about the ribbon? Microsoft themselves can't manage to keep their applications' look and feel similar between versions, so how could this possibly be a valid argument? Nothing but obnoxious people refusing to learn something new.

      When corporate IT upgrades their MS office to the latest version, they are forced to learn the new software. As long as that upgrade doesn't forcibly happen, those people will utterly refuse to give up their damned Lotus 1-2-3. If corporate IT would decide to forcibly switch them to OpenOffice, they'll have to learn it, just the same.

      And no, I don't honestly think OOO is ready for mainstream corporate IT, I was just using it as an example.

    165. Re:It's about being truthful by shnull · · Score: 1

      Windows is a necessary evil for people who play games. Don't get me wrong, they came a long way, windows 7 is pretty stable from what i've experienced, nothing like the good old days of bsod98, but it's a hog, it eats resources, and the desktop environment is impractical and hasnt really changed since 3.11 as far as i can see, just some bells and jingles. If microsoft grew a brain and they released some 'windows for games' version, without all the crap that gets loaded but you really don't need i'd switch in an instant. If publishers ported games to run on linux i'd probably get rid of windows alltogether. To me it's the desktop that makes ubuntu so much more fun and practical to work with. Monopolysoft made a great move by providing a 'standard' platform for games with directx ...

      --
      beware he who denies you access to information for in his mind, he already deems himself to be your master (SMAC-ish)
    166. Re:It's about being truthful by psbrogna · · Score: 1

      Windows isn't a choice- it's an OEM default.

    167. Re:It's about being truthful by WhitePanther5000 · · Score: 1

      [...] in some respects it is still in the mid 90s.

      I may be missing what you consider to be stuck in the 90's, but by all means, if you see places for improvement... jump in and help. Or at the very least, make suggestions at somewhere like http://brainstorm.ubuntu.com/ and file bug reports.

      I completely disagree with your statement "Both Windows and MacOS have made huge leaps forward in terms of usability, stability and security, and Linux has hardly moved," but regardless of its (in)validity, Linux doesn't progress magically, or even by the funding, direction, and marketing of a 220 billion dollar corporation. It moves forward thanks to a few small companies and strong community involvement. So again, feel free to jump in and help if you somehow don't think it has moved forward in the past 14 years.

    168. Re:It's about being truthful by ti1ion · · Score: 1

      Believe it, or not, a not so long time ago (like, oh maybe 2 years ago) there was a "news" story broadcast on US TV about a young woman who bought a Dell. She was a university student and was somehow "convinced" by a Dell sales rep (over the phone) that she should get Ubuntu. The news anchors could not even pronounce Ubuntu (and joked about the crazy name) and the story ran as one of those "big company screws consumer and won't fix the problem" issues. They made Dell look pretty bad. So, I am not surprised that Dell is coming out with this sort of information. They are tired of stupid people deciding to get Ubuntu and then demanding Dell give them Windows free of charge to "fix" the computer.

    169. Re:It's about being truthful by Blakey+Rat · · Score: 1

      Well, refresh rates aside, I don't see anything in the argument that makes any point against Windows. Ok: so a game was hard to get working in Windows, when you have an admittedly shitty setup. But the same game doesn't work *at all* in Linux*... so you're still better off with Windows where you at least have a fighting chance of getting it working.

      *) Of course that's not fully true; it might work in Linux *only* because there's a project to replicate the entire Windows API in Linux. But it certainly never was designed to work in Linux, never was tested in Linux, doesn't have any support for Linux, etc etc.

    170. Re:It's about being truthful by smi.james.th · · Score: 1

      Agreed, I've recommended Mint to several people who had had problems with Windows (Viruses, too expensive to upgrade, etc.). The ones who took the recommendation are very happy, one of them is actually my techno-phobe mother.

      The advantage to Mint is that pretty much anything written (either software packages or documentation / howtos / etc) for Ubuntu will also work for Mint, and as you mention, things such as Flash and mp3 playback come standard so it isn't a huge hassle. It's the only reason I don't recommend Ubuntu to Linux newbies.

      The only case I recommend that someone uses Windows is if they absolutely have to use a certain software package, and for most people, dual-booting is too much of a pain.

      --
      One thing I know, and that is that I am ignorant...
    171. Re:It's about being truthful by LinuxIsGarbage · · Score: 1

      Another example is the Office 2007 / 2010 Ribbon. Yes it's from MS, but it's designed to be more usable, more discoverable, and most people once they get used to it love it. However there's still some people who rote-learned unorganized cluttered menus and toolbars and are upset that things changed.

    172. Re:It's about being truthful by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      The question is, if you have no idea what Ubuntu is, then why did you choose it?

      Because it's cheaper?

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    173. Re:It's about being truthful by Chordonblue · · Score: 1

      Yeah... I'm not getting this...

      A few years back, I set some folks up with a computer running Linux Mint (basically Ubuntu with restricted extras). Last month, they decided to replace it and were surprised/dismayed that they simply could not go down to Best Buy and get a machine with that pre-installed. They rejected Windows because they were used to using Mint, and furthermore, all of their friends who have Windows seem to get infected by this virus or that spyware fairly often. In the two or so years they used Mint, they never had a problem with the OS and certainly no viruses.

      Now these were people who had NO experience whatsoever with computers and maybe that's key. Maybe people are so ingrained with the way Windows works that anything else becomes a chore - no matter how easy it is.

      --
      "...Well, there's egg and bacon; egg sausage and bacon; egg and spam; egg bacon and spam; egg bacon sausage and spam..."
    174. Re:It's about being truthful by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That is why my father and my wife and my daughter use Linux.

      Heh, actually, I suspect it's more because you'd interrogate them endlessly if they didn't :)

    175. Re:It's about being truthful by LinuxIsGarbage · · Score: 1

      users still need to have in-depth knowledge to do basic stuff, like install new applications

      You consider clicking the 'Applications' menu and scrolling to and clicking 'Ubuntu Software Center' in-depth knowledge?

      While my username may show a certain bias, one thing I have to give to Linux (including Ubuntu) is that the package management system does make software installation extremely easy. As long as it's in the repo. See how popular the concept is with the general public in the form of "App stores" (sic). No really, the name makes me sick.

      Package management was almost born out of necessity because of dealing with dependency hell, which is much worse than dll hell ever was. That's where package management fails, if you step outside the box. If an application isn't in that distro's repos for that release, manually installing applications becomes exponentially more difficult. Even major programs like Firfox and Open Office aren't backported to LTS releases of Ubuntu. Simply "upgrading the OS" isn't the best answer, particularly when LTS versions are supposed to be for the stable environment businesses demand.

      I do wish that there was an easy package management for Windows, of course without losing the ability to manually install applications. The best I can due to try and minimize the risk of users installing malware, is recommend they only install software from sites like download.com or softpedia. Of course that's no gaurentee, and there's plenty of safe applications not on those sites.

    176. Re:It's about being truthful by INT_QRK · · Score: 1

      I see what you're saying and you make a good point. Of course you don't really "need" to run the stupid CD, but the sales pitch tries to convince you that you do. I went around and around with my DSL installer (then FIOS) and finally demanded: "just give me the SSID and WPA key and leave me alone." It wasn't the installer's fault since the CD was all he knew. I also understand why providers prefer that customers use the CD software, since it helps them in assisting "lowest common denominator" customer troubleshooting by "lowest common denominator" tech support. So, my family transition to Linux was enabled by a pathfinder family member who learned through forums, trial, and error, and much web search. That said, I recall much the same dynamic learning DOS then Windows, minus the rich user forums and web search (but there were "bulletin boards"). The ability to listen to what a tech supporter is describing and mentally running in-line translation to a Linux paradigm has been essential on a number of occasions. So, new WIndows (or Mac) users are better off than new Linux Gnome or KDE users only in that commercial tech support by ISPs and other services are limited to nonexistent. I don't know of a mechanism for improving that situation.

    177. Re:It's about being truthful by Rutulian · · Score: 1

      Static bundling trades a small amount of space for a huge amount of usability

      Well, you're right, it's not really about space anymore. The problem is really one of distribution and security. If every add-on package has to bundle their own libz.so, then a security bug in libz requires every package to recompile and update instead of just a core system library. One of the strengths of linux, in my opinion, is the superb management of critical security updates. And also, when you start getting into dependencies other than small libraries, like python distributions and glx versions, static bundling quickly becomes a big mess to manage and keep up-to-date.

      If we don't like option (3), then the only other option is to have a fixed, well-known baseline of packages that are always installed and always the same version on every distribution.

      I don't think this is really true. What you need is consistent versioning and good information about what the packages are capable of doing. There is no technical reason a third-party app can't say, "requires zlib>=1.0" using some standard descriptor and query. The problem is each distribution names the library differently, and each distribution versions the library differently. So simply agreeing on a standard way to describe what packages are available on the system would go a long way toward supporting cross-compatibility.

      Cross-distribution of core libraries is a more difficult situation, because every distribution installs and configures them differently. But it's not a problem for third-party apps. You just need a way for applications installed in /opt to know where to look for shared libraries, and be able to get them from the distribution's repository when necessary.

    178. Re:It's about being truthful by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Where's your answer to Svartalf's question? You specifically stated installing a .deb package is "way too difficult", he countered that you double click it, no different or harder than windows. Are you going to back up your breathless claims, or continue to rant about completely unrelated topics because you have no answer?

      Both Windows and MacOS have made huge leaps forward in terms of usability, stability and security, and Linux has hardly moved.

      Windows is still trying to catch up to Linux in terms of stability and security, and has a long ways to go. MacOS has pretty much caught up. Usability in Windows is actually pretty far behind too - they've only gotten worse at usability since XP.

      The only thing Linux really lacks compared to Windows is application compatibility and support from 3rd party software.

    179. Re:It's about being truthful by Yacoob+Al-Atawi · · Score: 1

      There are free alternatives to almost all Windows programs. Plus, you can run most Windows programs in Linux through Wine or similar emulators, but you can't run Linux programs in Windows at all, unless you have a Windows compiler to compile the (open) source files with.

      The majority of those free alternatives exist in Windows too, along with all the proprietary software. And a lot of Linux's best programs have Windows versions too. If we're talking about both quantity and quality of software available for both platforms, then Windows will be better for the majority of users.

    180. Re:It's about being truthful by Shompol · · Score: 1

      And you know what? I'd recommend Windows 7 to most people.

      I recommend Ubuntu, but they choose Windows. Then 6-12 months later they come back to me, because their computer is overrun with worms and locked down by nasty trojans. Since I don't feel like cleaning trojans from windows in my spare time, they get switched to Ubuntu. And guess what, a typical user (not a gamer) only needs an internet browser to work.

    181. Re:It's about being truthful by Jake+Griffin · · Score: 1
      I could make the same argument for Ubuntu:

      Eh? What exactly is harder in Windows than it is on Ubuntu?

      Opening a document someone sent you and editing it in OpenOffice. I opened it in Word 2007, but what's this ribbon thing?

      The reply to this is not to say, "well, then, just open it in OpenOffice." Because you have to INSTALL OpenOffice on Windows. On Ubuntu, it comes preinstalled. When Word 2007 looks exactly like OpenOffice, and works exactly the same way as well, then you can ask your question again.

      How about people who have used Evolution for years? Nothing, not even Outlook, will look exactly the same and work identically.

      You've obviously not dealt with people for whom moving a icon from one place on the desktop to another results in complaints that "my Ubuntu is broken," usually followed by, "I can't do my work until it's fixed."

      To argue "Windows is better because I'm used to it and so are most people" is a Bandwagon Fallacy. Look it up.

      --
      SIG FAULT: Post index out of bounds.
    182. Re:It's about being truthful by Jake+Griffin · · Score: 1

      That is the exact point here. Dell is telling customers which OS they should choose so they are capable to make the choice.

      If "Dell is telling customers which OS they should choose", then how are they "making the choice"? It sounds like Dell is making the choice for them.

      --
      SIG FAULT: Post index out of bounds.
    183. Re:It's about being truthful by hazah · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure if the deliberately crippled file formats are Ubuntu's responsibility. If anything, this unnecessary burden had been placed on us all by Microsoft. Why do you not blame the source of the problem? Why do you blame what basically amounts to being the victim of these actions? Are the waters really that muddy?

      Is it really that difficult to understand that the environment, given the legal landscape as it is, guarantees failure for topics such as closed file formats, closed drivers, and closed code in general?

      The very fact that the legal system is involved is in telling developers what they can and cannot write and use is quite telling of just how badly we failed as a society to keep one of our most invaluable assets, freedom.

    184. Re:It's about being truthful by westlake · · Score: 1

      Because all those are very different time periods, and what was true in one of them is not necessarily still true in the others.

      The point is that you cannot say that there has been no clearly visible - commercially viable - alternative to Microsoft - when Apple has been in the PC market for thirty years.

    185. Re:It's about being truthful by franki.macha · · Score: 1

      Why is this flamebait? Other than the incorrect use of an apostrophe it's spot on.

      I get hideously confused installing anything on OS X, and don't even dare try on Windows, whereas Linux package managers are incredibly simple.
      And before anyone says "That's because you're a 1337 Linux user and you can't understand normal people", I'm definitely not, I'm an idiot.

      Although, I do have problems understanding other people...

    186. Re:It's about being truthful by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You said you've been using it for 14 years? Funny...I would have thought you'd have known this was the case then.

      Yeah, but he's still running RedHat 3.0.3

    187. Re:It's about being truthful by halltk1983 · · Score: 1

      Since it wasn't his OS to begin with, having been paid for by the previous employer, I'd say that's not Microsoft's problem. If he wants to continue developing, perhaps he should get a copy of the OS which is licensed for his use. It's not that expensive, really, especially when considering the overall value of your time when developing and testing software.

      --
      Watch for Penguins, they eat Apples and throw rocks at Windows.
    188. Re:It's about being truthful by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Getting patches

      lololol

    189. Re:It's about being truthful by FrangoAssado · · Score: 1

      What did I miss?

      Well, apparently, section 2.a:

      One user may install and use copies of the software to design, develop, test and demonstrate your programs. You may not use the software on a device or server in a production environment.

      Your GP said "I like to play video games, windows has more of them", so it seems obvious that he's installing Windows to play games he's not developing, clearly contradicting section 2.a of the license you linked.

      The second link you didn't "delve too closely into" makes section 2.a more explicit: it says you can only use the MSDN-licensed software for development (and testing, etc.). No other uses are allowed, like reading email, playing games, etc.

      I'm the last person wanting to force a MS contract on someone else, but in this case it seems obvious that your GP is using the MSDN license irregularly (not that it's any of my business). Unless I completely misunderstood what he meant with "I like to play video games, windows has more of them [...]".

    190. Re:It's about being truthful by franki.macha · · Score: 1

      I don't really see why Ubuntu, or some other distro, shouldn't try to be like Windows.

      Sure, I wouldn't use it, but isn't that the point of Linux? It can be anything that you want an operating system to be.

    191. Re:It's about being truthful by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is something I find slightly humorous in this - although "open source programming" is a spectacularly stupid way for Dell to promote Ubuntu to the general public, it is exactly what I do with my Dell Ubuntu machine. I have a Mini 9 that I bring along to ward off boredom in various settings (in lieu of, say, a novel), and I mostly use it to hack on one of my OSS projects. Here's to git and distributed SCM!

      DSB

    192. Re:It's about being truthful by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You can actually run Linux programs in Windows. You could use CoLinux, which is a Linux kernel patched to run as a process on Windows (there are a couple of distros based on CoLinux, but I can't remember their names), and of course you can use a VM to run Linux on Windows, just as you could use one to run Windows on Linux.

    193. Re:It's about being truthful by l0b0 · · Score: 1

      The GNOME menu is great, but I wish Synaptic was anything near as navigable. Or maybe they should simply drop it for Ubuntu Software Center, since it's clearly superior unless you're already at the apt-get level.

    194. Re:It's about being truthful by jedidiah · · Score: 2, Interesting

      There have been shiny happy installers for Linux since the 90s. If you want a Windows style
      installation experience, it's there. Now a lot of the Linux "shareware" doesn't have this
      sort of thing. That's where package managers come in. These are great and easy and very
      automated.

      Sorting out extra 3rd party freeware crap for Windows is a royal pain in the *ss. The sorts
      of sites that like to present Windows software seem to be all hip deep in popups and spam to
      the point where it's hard to know what link you should click on. It really puts all of that
      "curated" experience nonsense with the iPad into perspective.

      Macs are a bit better. The websites are not quite as spam infested.

      Although both are not nearly as automated.

      Not all Mac or Windows shiny happy installers take care of all of the dependent bits.

      So you end up search and sorting this stuff out your self.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    195. Re:It's about being truthful by FourthAge · · Score: 1

      By "stability" I do not mean resistance to crashes, I mean the other definition, as in "a stable base for third party applications".

      In this area, Linux's record is nowhere near that of Windows. Although the system call API is extremely stable, the user space APIs (provided by layers and layers of libraries) are not. In this, I include everything that might be needed to run an application: not just libc but also the GNOME/KDE libraries, SDL, libstdc++, Alsa, Pulseaudio, i18n stuff, libkitchensink, and so on.

      On Linux we typically rely on recompiling each application to match each distribution, and this way there is a perfect match with the available libraries. But that approach can only ever work for a minority of applications, and it also encourages the distributor to make modifications, which could break the software -- and I know you're a professional so you will already know how fragile it can be. This could be a matter of releasing something that isn't ready, as happened with the Ubuntu Pulseaudio fiasco, and it could even be extremely serious and undetected for years, as with the Debian OpenSSL fiasco.

      Really, to support third party applications, Linux needs to provide an incredibly stable Microsoft-like environment for those applications. Even - especially - if they are closed-source. It must be possible to rely on an application not breaking from release to release, distribution to distribution, and we shouldn't need to rely on installing the old libraries and using LD_LIBRARY_PATH to bring them in. Windows provides this because Microsoft are rightly paranoid about it. But Linux user space developers often do not care, because "you can recompile everything that matters". Some even actually want to break support for third-party commercial software because they are ideologically opposed to such applications: Flash would be the prime example of this.

      Why are such applications important? Because free software hackers shouldn't waste their time reimplementing commercial software. Instead, the commercial software should come to us. That means welcoming it: "no, you don't need to test against the two most recent versions of the ten most common distributions, because all of those distributions share bit-for-bit identical versions of the same core libraries".

      That's part of what I'm getting at. But it goes further. I grant that Linux installers and working environments have got better, but still if something breaks, you are editing configuration files. It's expert friendly, not user friendly. In any Linux distribution you are always hoping that the distributor won't break something in an upgrade, and unfortunately this hope is often shattered. For instance, Ubuntu upgrades are notorious for breaking graphics and sound drivers. The problems can be fixed, yes, but not by the unlucky average user whose digital sound output has stopped working. In that sense we are still in the 90s: we have clever installers that do most things right (but so did Mandrake circa 1999). However, when things break, the user-friendly GUI tools are no help and an expert's help is required. This really hasn't changed. A Windows user reinstalls an application or driver; an Ubuntu user goes on the forums to beg for the arcane incantations that will get his WiFi working on Wanking Walrus ("they worked on Pissed Panda, why does this break every time I upgrade!??!").

      Of course, none of this applies to the embedded systems maker who has absolute control of every component of Linux that's on the system. Linux succeeds in that environment, and it also succeeds in the server environment where the real users see only a web interface and the admins are all experts. But on the desktop or the netbook? Only if an expert owns the machine. For everyone else there isn't the stability nor the usability. The issue of providing these things hasn't been considered holistically. In Linux, we all do our own thing and hope that somehow it will all come together. But it doesn't. As the last decade shows.

      --
      The tao of democracy: the government you can vote for is not the real government.
    196. Re:It's about being truthful by FourthAge · · Score: 1

      It works like that in theory, but not in reality. Just fixing minor bugs is not the answer. To fix up Linux, you need an overall vision of how things should work. But when you try to impose that on the people who already developed parts of Linux, you encounter political problems. They think you are wrong! Their way of doing it is already the right way. And if their component doesn't fit very well with its surroundings, well, the surroundings must be wrong. Not them.

      Now, if you are Steve Jobs and they work for you, then you can cut through this bullshit by giving them orders. "Do as I say or hit the road". Result: in a few years you get the system working how you want, and (for some reason) a large number of former free software fanatics migrate over to it.

      That doesn't work on Linux. Well, it works in the kernel, with Torvalds as the Jobs figure. But not in user space, and user space is just as important. You can fork everything to create what you want, but you can expect a lot of spite from everyone whose code you have forked, because they don't accept your vision and are angry that you've tried to impose it.

      I think that Shuttleworth started out with a vision and good intentions. But he's run into exactly this sort of political problem, where you can't fix X, Y and Z because your fixes don't match the vision of maintainers A, B and C, and the FSF is constantly bitching at you for not conforming to their ideal of "freedom". So now he is just tweaking things, like the fonts, because although minor changes are pointless, they don't create a political Armageddon in our "meritocratic" software utopia.

      --
      The tao of democracy: the government you can vote for is not the real government.
    197. Re:It's about being truthful by juhaz · · Score: 1

      Any comment criticising Linux is bound to be controversial here and I really don't have the energy to respond to everyone who has called me a Microsoft shill.

      One person, modded troll, called you a shill. Clearly, that's everyone. Or maybe it's just an easy way of waving away all the others without answering the perfectly valid questions they asked?

      Critizicing Linux is reasonably likely to raise some controversy around these parts, but that's not what caused the outrage. Stating dubious opinions like "Linux hasn't changed at all in fifteen years" and "installing applications requires in-depth knowledge" as facts without reasoning them at all is what does that. If you want to criticize, then do so by all means, but your post was NOT criticism, that implies analysis and evaluation.

    198. Re:It's about being truthful by pehden · · Score: 1

      You can run IE6 and WoW in linux. I don't feel like getting the links but you can.

    199. Re:It's about being truthful by JasterBobaMereel · · Score: 1

      Just wait for Outlook 2011 then it will look as alien as Evolution and both will look as different ...

      The ribbon was my *reason* for stopping the upgrade treadmill on Office and changing to OpenOffice ... I hated it wil a passion, a bad idea badly implemented - I could use menus, I could usually find things, with the ribbon I cannot ...

      --
      Puteulanus fenestra mortis
    200. Re:It's about being truthful by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Of course installing software under Linux is way easier than Windows I don't know where did the parent pulled that from and I don't want to find out.

      I don't know about _way_ easier. Downloading and double-clicking a single .exe, then clicking next a few times isn't terribly more complicated than starting a repository browser and clicking install in there. But, sure, I can accept a marginal "win" for the repository system.

      The problem with Linux when it comes to installing, manifests itself when you want something that hasn't been packaged for your distribution. Or even when you want something that's just not in the official repository. You end up with anything from doing it the Windows way, downloading a package and double-clicking to get it installed, to having to compile it from scratch.

      While Linux has made great strides for desktop use in the distributions of recent years, for the vast majority of people it's still a matter of Linux "being able to do most of what they need" as opposed to "all they need". For the amount of money Windows is, Linux just isn't worth the hassle.

      If you want "just works", you get a Mac or Windows system. If you enjoy tinkering, you get Linux. At a certain point, most people grow tired of wasting time tinkering, and opt for "just works". Until Linux gets there, it's going to remain a niche product (on the desktop). That said, it's a brilliant niche product and most definitely deserves a place.

    201. Re:It's about being truthful by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You know, most of us are still stuck on good old fashioned 60 Hz monitors. You should count your blessings.

      Sorta on topic: last I tried Ubuntu I had to manually fiddle with permissions for a config file to even enable proper multi-monitor support. The GUI gave me no hint as to why it just forgot the settings every time I rebooted. And that fix broke about once a month due to some, apparently unrelated, update being pushed. Three times in half a year did another Ubuntu installation have some update corrupt GRUB, forcing me to boot from a Live CD and run half a dozen shell commands to bring my machine back to a bootable state. I pay my Windows tax gladly for all the time it saves me.

    202. Re:It's about being truthful by lotho+brandybuck · · Score: 1
      hahahaha,

      Started really using Linux around 1997... I started with Caldera. Back then it took me a week to get a mouse to work. Since then, I've used Redhat, Suse, and Ubuntu.

      I haven't had to compile a kernel or mess with any xconfig files for about 6 years now. Basically, you just stick in an Ubuntu CD and turn the computer on.. it's easier than installing windows, becuase you don't have to enter a 16 character random value correctly.

      Popped in an Ubuntu 10.04 the other day, and wow.. they paid someone to come up with pretty colors and readable fonts. It's there, in terms of useablility and ease of install.

      Linux distros have come a LONG LONG way since 1996.

      I would agree with you that Windows has come a long way since the days of plugging a machine into the network and getting instantly owned thru default open ports.... but I still won't network a windows box. Why take the risk?

    203. Re:It's about being truthful by Nursie · · Score: 1

      Few people release their commercial desktop software for linux because it has a tiny market share and not a very large proportion of that market share even wants commercial desktop software. There may be a few exceptions (Photoshop springs to mind, though I don't believe many home users have actually ever paid for that either).

      The way to get closed source stuff to work reliably across linux distros is either to build it for them, or do what most commercial linux software vendors (including my team) do. Pick a couple of the stable distros, usually Redhat and SuSE, and build for them. They provide the stable business desktop.

      Debian is a hobbyist OS at heart. Ubuntu still needs to figure out what it is as it's less stable than debian but is aiming to be an everyman desktop.

      "no, you don't need to test against the two most recent versions of the ten most common distributions, because all of those distributions share bit-for-bit identical versions of the same core libraries"

      Whilst that is an admirable goal, outside of the mainframe world it doesn't seem to be like that in practice. Commercial UNIX ends up doing the same, as does windows. Maybe it's unusual for the user to see it, maybe the APIs themselves don't change but the implementations do. It happens a lot and makes testing software on any platform (other than s390) a pain in the arse.

      "an Ubuntu user goes on the forums to beg for the arcane incantations that will get his WiFi working on..."

      Well, some ubuntu users do. But then, remember that Ubuntu users aren't being forced to upgrade their OS. A lot do because they must have the latest and greatest, but they don't have to. This is not something that most windows users do. The LTS releases are an attempt to address some of your concerns though, I think, and it speaks of the different audience that linux currently has. The OS moulds it's audience, and then the audience mould the OS...

        Hell, I had much the same experience when I upgraded my laptop from Vista to 7, half the stuff stopped working, I had to trawl forums to find how other people had done things with limited success and I still have to boot twice if I want the webcam to work.

      I still fundamentally disagree that linux is stuck in the 90s. A hell of a lot of progress has been made in terms of device support, user experience and ease of use, ease of install, threading capabilities (thank god), software install and update (Synaptic is a joy to use compared to what went on in the 90s). I take your point about API stability, particularly where it involves sound, but I still think you're way out of line.

      Once it runs, it runs, and even none experts can use it quite happily, these days.

  2. amazing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Choose UBUNTU if:

            * You do not plan to use Microsoft WINDOWS

    Difficult to argue with this logic.

    1. Re:amazing by V!NCENT · · Score: 1

      Actualy, it's more like:
      "Choose UBUNTU if you do not plan to use Microsoft WINDOWS [, ever, no matter if it is your own computer]."

      As in:
      "Ubuntu is not compatible with the Windows platform. Given the fact that you needed this website then you'd be so computer iliterate (I mean; you could have Googled it, dumbass!!!), and therefore stupid, that we would like to avoid a lawsuit from a moron who tried to install his ilegal Microsoft Office copy from his baseball buddy, because he needs that for doing *snif* MSXML filled with macro files-work on a 'grief card' in Microft Publisher because his wife died and now he can't do that because you didn't warn this *snif* poor guy, you evil Dell company!"

      Empathy for the stupid... makes me kinda brilliant...

      --
      Here be signatures
  3. It will stay small by kamukwam · · Score: 0

    This is also the reason why Ubuntu, or Linux, will never become a major player in the consumer OS market.

    1. Re:It will stay small by spazdor · · Score: 0, Troll

      Faulty reasoning is faulty.

      --
      DRM: Terminator crops for your mind!
    2. Re:It will stay small by kanto · · Score: 1

      This is also the reason why Ubuntu, or Linux, will never become a major player in the consumer OS market.

      Way too early to make that call. People are constantly getting more computer savvy, Linux distros more easily accessible for the layman and companies more attuned to people having Linux. Also the problems of switching from Windows to Linux when you're a novice computer user are often overstated; not a huge step to use a web browser or an email client in Linux compared to Windows and let's face it, that's what most people use their computer for.

    3. Re:It will stay small by PenquinCoder · · Score: 2, Interesting

      One of the 'reasons' Ubuntu (or any Linux) distro won't become a major player in the consumer OS market, is because it is not SOLD in the consumer OS market. Linux will become more of a mainstream desktop/laptop consumer choice (key word, choice) when you can drive down to the 'big box' store and buy a computer pre-loaded with Linux on it. Until then, the majority of people will use windows, not necessarily because it's easier, or better, but because that is what was SOLD to them. For the casual user, Windows == my computer. Period.

    4. Re:It will stay small by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      causality FAIL

    5. Re:It will stay small by Hijacked+Public · · Score: 1

      When do you think the right time will be to make the call?

      I ask because since I've been coming here various people on Slashdot have been suggesting that widespread acceptance of Linux on the desktop was just around the corner. Like here, in 2003. Certainly before that, at least by a couple of years.

      In the 7 years since the link, what progress has Linux made on the desktop? In terms of either overall market share or in closing the delta between it and Windows/OSX?

      I've not seen any really convincing arguments. Most of them fall back on some grand conspiracy to keep Linux down, or on people just being too stupid to understand the advantages of Linux. I'm genuinely interested in why, during the worst global economic times any of us will probably ever see, free software has not made great strides.

      --
      "Sacrifice for the good of The State" - The State
    6. Re:It will stay small by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What is "this"? Dell's recommendation? Advice from Slashdot trolls? What?

    7. Re:It will stay small by spazdor · · Score: 1

      I'm confused, mods. I thought I was posting to Slashdot.

      --
      DRM: Terminator crops for your mind!
    8. Re:It will stay small by Superken7 · · Score: 1

      Maybe in the Desktop market, if we are talking about the near future.

      I'd say Linux has a great chance of becoming the major player as a mobile OS in the near future. (Android is selling millions of devices every month, hundreds of activations per day. And nokia will be replacing Symbian - the most widely used mobile OS - with Maemo in almost all of its phones)

    9. Re:It will stay small by Superken7 · · Score: 1

      Ugh, I meant to say hundreds of THOUSANDS activations per day - I better check that preview button twice next time ;)

    10. Re:It will stay small by kanto · · Score: 1

      Ah, 7 years ago, I was a complete Linux noob... but I do remember that majority of mainstream programs weren't available on Linux; download pages always wanted me to specify my Windows-version if even that, not so anymore. In 2003 I didn't have proper drivers for most of my hardware, admittedly just generic stuff like sound/graphics cards, not so anymore. It would've been an absurd idea to walk around a supermarket back then and expect to find a laptop sporting Linux let alone have Linux power home-entertainment systems... It does seem like the userbase has grown enough to force the software/hardware/retail people to take Linux from the back of the store to the front.

      Free software has made great strides throughout it's conception, it just doesn't always take the front seat. In the beginning it's just innocuous stuff like libraries, web browsers and web servers (GPL/Linux are not, separately or together, the whole of free software). Then when you've been weened off of IE, the neighbor's kid shows you Linux and tells you it can run circles around Windows on your old hardware with the browser of your choice... who's to say no? Just for the hell of it I'm using a Pentium3 550MHz 384MB 4G harddrive machine with the _latest_ Ubuntu. Having had no problems or unbearable slowdowns, hell it even recognized the mobile broadband modem my Windows-machine shunned, I think the theory does lend to practice.

      From my point of view, now is the worst time ever to call it since Linux is finally something I can just pop in and start using. Sure I won't have all the software I could have on Windows, but a) that's life though the situation is getting better e.g. there are ports and better substitutes b) chances are that in 7 years time you won't be able to run them either on the Windows of the future.

  4. Repositories for the win by nyctopterus · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I'm a Mac user, but I certainly wouldn't hesitate to recommend Ubuntu to someone new to using computers. It really is as simple to use as Windows, and repositories are huge win for usability and security.

    1. Re:Repositories for the win by ArcherB · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I'm a Mac user, but I certainly wouldn't hesitate to recommend Ubuntu to someone new to using computers. It really is as simple to use as Windows, and repositories are huge win for usability and security.

      I'm an advanced user and I don't every want to know what a repository is. My mom definitely doesn't give a shit.

      You don't have to know what a repo is. The default works just fine for 99.999% of users. However, if you are curious and want something the repo doesn't offer, you are free to add whatever repos you like.

      Then again, an "advanced" user would know this.

      --
      There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
    2. Re:Repositories for the win by McDutchie · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I'm an advanced user and I don't every want to know what a repository is. My mom definitely doesn't give a shit.

      So call it an "app store", except all the apps are free. Your mom will eat it up.

    3. Re:Repositories for the win by nine-times · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I think there are a couple Linux distributions that really are "ready" and will actually provide a better experience for normal stuff (e.g. web browsing, email, word processing). A bunch of free apps, kept up to date through a single updater, all free.

      However, I've still had some problems with hardware support in a couple cases (each Ubuntu release seems to fix some problems and introduce others) and you're still missing some commercial packages that might be vital for a lot of users (e.g. Photoshop, where GIMP is pretty good but might still not be a viable alternative).

      I wouldn't hesitate to recommend it for someone to try out, but I'd hesitate to claim, "this will do everything you want and you won't have any problems". But to be fair, I'd hesitate to claim that about OSX or Windows, either.

    4. Re:Repositories for the win by nyctopterus · · Score: 1

      Uh, dude, it's what allows Ubuntu to have a (free!) app store sitting right there in the menu bar. You don't need to know what it is to use it. Adding apps is as simple as searching or navigating by category and clicking 'install'. It's seriously easy to use, and has big advantages for security. The apps in the default repository are screened, and cover most things you'd ever want to do. No more searching the internet, downloading random app that 'looks ligit', and istalling it manually.

      I wish Macs had something similar. In fact, I bet it's going to be in the next release of OS X.

    5. Re:Repositories for the win by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm an advanced user

      Yeah. Probably not.

    6. Re:Repositories for the win by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You don't need to know what a repository is, you just go to Ubuntu Software Centre and double click to install apps

    7. Re:Repositories for the win by bigrockpeltr · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      switch (AC) {
      case NOT_ADV_USER :
      case LOW_ENGLISH_CAPACITY:
      case WINDOWS_FANBOY:
      case SUPER_ADV_USER: /*writes own byte code*/
      case TROLL: printf("I'm an advanced user and I don\'t every want to know what a repository is.");
      printf(" My mom definitely doesn\'t give a shit.");break;
      default: break;
      }

      --
      $ unzip, strip, touch, finger, grep, mount, fsck, more, yes,fsck,fsck,fsck,umount, sleep
    8. Re:Repositories for the win by Dorkmaster+Flek · · Score: 4, Informative

      That's exactly what Ubuntu is moving towards. They're integrating the entire Synaptic Package Manager and Update Manager GUIs into the "Ubuntu Software Center", where you can search for, install and upgrade apps in one place. It's actually not a bad idea, though I still prefer the extra information that Synaptic provides on progress.

      --
      I like to think of online DRM as something akin to a college -- you pay for lessons until you learn something.
    9. Re:Repositories for the win by NNKK · · Score: 2, Interesting

      However, I've still had some problems with hardware support in a couple cases (each Ubuntu release seems to fix some problems and introduce others)

      At this point, Linux hardware problems are not significantly different from Windows hardware problems (e.g. a fresh install of Linux on any given PC is at least as likely to run fine as Windows, probably more likely since more up-to-date drivers are included), but they're harder to fix when they do occur due to lack of direct manufacturer support.

      In Windows it's usually "go download the driver from the manufacturer's site", in Linux that's less likely to be an option, and if it is, the installation process is probably going to involve the command line, which scares people.

      and you're still missing some commercial packages that might be vital for a lot of users (e.g. Photoshop, where GIMP is pretty good but might still not be a viable alternative).

      If you already own such packages, most of them work well in Wine these days (and Wine is a lot easier to use than it was in the past, though still not what it should be).

    10. Re:Repositories for the win by nyctopterus · · Score: 1

      I agree with you. I would try to find out what someone wanted to do with their computer before recommending anything. But I thing Ubuntu has got killer features for the novice wanting to do internet-centric stuff.

      Novices probably don't need Photoshop, Krita seemed pretty good to me when I played around with it.

    11. Re:Repositories for the win by Unordained · · Score: 1

      You're not an advanced user, you're a masochist. And so's your mom.

      Would you happen to have her number?

    12. Re:Repositories for the win by StayFrosty · · Score: 1

      While I agree with most of what you said, I think Photoshop is a terrible example of a commercial package that a lot of users have. I don't know a single "average" user who has shelled out the $650 for a Photoshop license. (I do, however, know a few above-average users who have a pirated copy.) Most average users in my experience use something like Picassa (which has a Linux version) or don't bother to edit their photos at all.

      --
      "Frequently wrong, never in doubt."
    13. Re:Repositories for the win by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      Warning: Anecdotal evidence

      My Ubuntu laptop's drive was failing, so I bought a new one. Since it was so much bigger, I decided to install Windows 7 and Ubuntu 10.4.

      I had trouble finding a video driver for the Windows side. Not all that much trouble, but some. I had to open up the networking control panel and change a setting for Ubuntu. (Why didn't it come with DHCP set by default, I may never know.)

      So, my anecdote is that setting up Ubuntu was easier than setting up Windows 7, and didn't require the use of the command line or a text editor.

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
    14. Re:Repositories for the win by Linker3000 · · Score: 1

      Having spent two days last week trying to untangle the mess that Windows created when I tried to install SQL Server 2008 Management Studio on my Win 7 PC, leaving me with a copy of Office 2007 with no program icons and a "can't uninstall, can't reinstall" mess that I still haven't resolved, I am not sure that I consider Windows program installs to be totally pain-free all the time.

      --
      AT&ROFLMAO
    15. Re:Repositories for the win by nine-times · · Score: 1

      ...but they're harder to fix when they do occur due to lack of direct manufacturer support.

      I have no doubt that many of the hardware problems I've experienced have been related to this, but that doesn't necessarily help me. I had one problem with the latest release of Ubuntu that prevented me from installing it or even booting the LiveCD. Turned out it was some bug using NVIDEA cards with dual monitors.

      So whoever we want to blame, it can still be a bit of a problem. However, I'll also note that I've had situations where Windows required that you download a driver from the manufacturer's site, but Linux just detected it on install. Hardware support isn't bad, but still I don't feel like you can just assume that your hardware will be supported. Of course, the situation is improved if Dell is selling you a computer with Ubuntu pre-installed.

      If you already own such packages, most of them work well in Wine these days

      WINE is great, but it's not to the point where you can take it for granted. You can just assume that it will run any program you throw at it, trouble-free. And I wouldn't bet money on my mom being able to figure out how to install WINE and install applications in WINE and troubleshoot whatever problems are likely to arise from that process.

    16. Re:Repositories for the win by Flea+of+Pain · · Score: 1

      Hey! I'm an advanced user and I can't understand what that means! My Mom definitely doesn't either.

      --
      Do not argue with an idiot. He will drag you down to his level and beat you with experience.
    17. Re:Repositories for the win by PenquinCoder · · Score: 1

      You cannot call yourself an 'advanced' user without knowing even the basic terminology associated with whatever operating system of choice you use. Don't know what a repo is (and no we're not talking about the guy coming to get your moms car back)? How about a filesystem, or hell, a config file?? No?

      Hint: Does anyone besides your mom call on you for computer help? No? Well then...

      PS: http://allmyapps.com/ -- for your non-repo knowing self.

    18. Re:Repositories for the win by DrgnDancer · · Score: 1

      To be fair you don't have to know. that's the nice thing about repositories. You open up the pretty thing that says "Install Software" and it greets you with options for hundreds of things you can install absolutely free. No hassle, no mus, just lots of stuff you can install if it interests you. This is definitely something Linux does better than Windows. A centralized software repository (even if on Windows some of it cost money) would be great for Windows systems (Or Macs for that matter). Obviously you couldn't put EVERYTHING in it, but you could make a slick buy and install interface for a variety of popular titles.

      --
      I don't need a million points of light, just two points of multi-mode fiber and a 10 Gig-E router.
    19. Re:Repositories for the win by Crudely_Indecent · · Score: 1

      I'm an advanced user...

      No you're not.

      --


      "Lame" - Galaxar
    20. Re:Repositories for the win by Vnuce · · Score: 1

      How is it possible to call yourself an advanced user without wanting to know what a repository is? An advanced user of what? The calculator app?

    21. Re:Repositories for the win by PagosaSam · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I teach computers at the local senior center. They are all running windows and so I get to fix them too. Grandma just can't say no to an install request. Invariably I have to clean off a half dozen tool bars from IE and clean out god awful trojans pretending to be useful tools. I have to lecture about free anti-virus programs (which I install for them) only to find they have later signed up for professional/commercial level AV products they really don't need and can't afford (senior center!).
      .
      I bought a real nice Dell Inspiron N series laptop with Ubuntu pre-installed. I think I'm starting to win some hearts and minds here. Everyone who uses it, loves it.

      --
      :q! Oh crap, not again...
    22. Re:Repositories for the win by Locutus · · Score: 1

      If Dell extended that "new to computers" recommendation to phones and any other device they would be saying, 'everyone use Windows because others are', only those who know how bad Windows really is should be using something other than Windows. They should use Ubuntu, the iPhone, Android or anything but Windows.'

      Dell had it right when they first said that because Windows is a target for virus's and spyware, Ubuntu was more secure.

      LoB

      --
      "Anyone who stands out in the middle of a road looks like roadkill to me." --Linus
    23. Re:Repositories for the win by nine-times · · Score: 1

      I used to work for an advertising company which needed the full Adobe suite, and I know a lot of graphic designers. I also know a bunch of audio engineers who aren't happy with their Linux options for audio editing/processing.

      I'm not saying that Photoshop is a good example of "Linux sucking" as though everyone needs Photoshop. It's just... you know... if you need Photoshop, then Linux might not be the OS that will serve your needs best.

      All things being equal, if you know your hardware will be supported on both systems and... let's say you're mostly using Firefox and OpenOffice, I'd probably recommend Ubuntu over Win7 for most people. I'm just pointing out that it depends on what you need.

    24. Re:Repositories for the win by nine-times · · Score: 1

      Yes, no doubt Ubuntu's hardware support is pretty good, and Linux generally doesn't make you install as many drivers. However, I've had a rocky road with wireless drivers, video cards, and even sound cards (even some problems as of Ubuntu 10.04).

      Of course, a big chunk of the problem is hardware vendors refusing to open the source for their drivers.

    25. Re:Repositories for the win by Lumpy · · Score: 1

      not really....

      I find it's more of a " we dont support that hardware under windows 7" so I have to go and search for who else remarks that hardware as their own and try 10-12 different drivers to get that damn scanner to work.

      "neat recipts" scanners are made by Plustek. Plustek supports the hardware for years... Neat tells you to sick it up your rear and buy a new one from them...

      I have more trouble getting hardware to work with windows 7 than Linux.

      --
      Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    26. Re:Repositories for the win by lowrydr310 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      There is one issue with the Ubuntu Software Center; it doesn't always get everything you need. In my case, I wanted to set up Eclipse with the Android ADT plugin. The version of Eclipse that gets installed via the Software Center is missing a ton of dependencies that the ADT plugin needs, and trying to manually get all these dependencies led me down a rabbit hole. The only pain free solution that worked for me was a manual installation of Eclipse, by downloading the 'fully-loaded' version from the eclipse site.

      Then again, the average joe probably has no need or desire to install Eclipse in the first place, so maybe that software center isn't such a bad idea.

    27. Re:Repositories for the win by hairyfeet · · Score: 1

      The problems I had, which ultimately led me to not carry Linux in my shop, wasn't the repos. The repos with Synaptic front end was fine for the average Joe. No the problems I had were twofold: One the crazy 6 month update schedule breaking more than they fix, and the inability of the average person to tell what would work and what wouldn't.

      As for the first, out of the four machines I had set up to test Ubuntu as a product on off lease PCs, I don't think I ever got it to update without it breaking something be it sound, graphics, networking, wireless, printer, something. Now every time I'd bring this up someone would compare it to going from WinXP to Windows 7, but they ain't the same thing at all. I still have plenty of customers using XP, and it'll still be supported until 2014. You only get a year and a half on non LTS releases, and even on LTS you will end up getting stuck with old (and possibly vulnerable) apps because the newer programs are expecting kernel foo+1.

      And of course the ONLY way to fix the problem hardware was to trawl the forums, find some huge CLI "fix" and then tweak it, because it was built for hardware A and rev B when you have hardware A+1 and Rev F. Does anyone truly believe, I mean really, that the average Joe is just gonna start tweaking Bash code? Or that they won't end up screwing something up if they even get up the nerve to attempt it (because I've found most users are scared to go to Windows control panel, they sure as hell ain't gonna be comfortable with a blinking CLI) because there is no spellcheck or autocomplete?

      As for the second, buying hardware for Linux at retail is a nightmare from hell. And please don't say "shop online" because normal folks simply won't. They want to see it, read the box, look at other models, and THEN buy. Out of all the customers that have come through my shop I can count those that shop online with both hands and have fingers left over. And the hardware compatibility lists are so out of date it is doubtful you'll find any of the products listed at your average mall. This makes Linux a living hell to shop for.

      So I have to agree with Dell, for some jobs Linux rocks, but the average Joe's desktop just ain't one of them. Linux rules in embedded devices, makes a damned fine web server, and I'm sure its nice for programmers (although most of those I know use Visual Studio) but until there is a Linux equivalent of the Apple stores I just don't see Linux working for average folks. I charge $35 an hour and it didn't take long for the headaches to equal more than the cost of Windows Home. And as the Best Buy guys will tell you home users do NOT buy support contracts, so any problems will come out of your pocket. After dealing with it myself from Ubuntu 6-9.04, as well as adding up the time used, it was just cheaper in the end for me not to carry it.

      Oh and if you look at one of those Dells you'll see they actually disable the Ubuntu repos. Their answer to "update foo broke my hardware" was to simply disable all updates. So those Dells won't be getting any security patches and will probably end up pwned anyway, it'll just take longer.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    28. Re:Repositories for the win by mister_dave · · Score: 1

      I certainly wouldn't hesitate to recommend Ubuntu to someone new to using computers.

      I would. When they want buy the latest game, take a evening class that uses software, or run Sage/Quickbooks for their business they're going to find their new computer is only good for web browsing.

      I've often come across inconveniences like this as a Mac user, Linux users must get it 24x7.

    29. Re:Repositories for the win by jellomizer · · Score: 1

      That is unless Ubuntu fails to auto detect properly... Then your screwed, and unfortunately Ubuntu Auto Detection is as good as Windows 2000. And the UI doesn't have much in advanced options to make it work.

      --
      If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
    30. Re:Repositories for the win by Dorkmaster+Flek · · Score: 1

      That's not an issue with the software center itself, but rather with Ubuntu's repositories not containing everything you need for that particular plugin. I think it's a great idea, though.

      --
      I like to think of online DRM as something akin to a college -- you pay for lessons until you learn something.
    31. Re:Repositories for the win by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      obviously you've never programmed. (HTML and Photoshop don't count as programming)

    32. Re:Repositories for the win by hhedeshian · · Score: 1

      People stopped calling me for computer help when my response was "who should I bill for this?". Or when they left something on my desk and I threw it away.

    33. Re:Repositories for the win by kent_eh · · Score: 1

      I'm an advanced user and I don't every want to know what a repository is. My mom definitely doesn't give a shit.

      So call it an "app store", except all the apps are free. Your mom will eat it up.

      Or call it something else.
      You say "store" to most normal people, and they automatically thing "buy things" not "get things for free"


      Yes, I know that the iPhone App Store does have some free stuff, but it's intention is to sell things.

      --

      ---
      "I can't complain, but sometimes still do..." Joe Walsh
    34. Re:Repositories for the win by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm an advanced user and I don't every want to know what a repository is. My mom definitely doesn't give a shit.

      He said repository not suppository

    35. Re:Repositories for the win by PagosaSam · · Score: 1

      Oh and if you look at one of those Dells you'll see they actually disable the Ubuntu repos. Their answer to "update foo broke my hardware" was to simply disable all updates. So those Dells won't be getting any security patches and will probably end up pwned anyway, it'll just take longer.

      My Inspiron updates by itself quite nicely and has done so from right out of the box. Maybe Dell has improved since you last look at it?

      --
      :q! Oh crap, not again...
    36. Re:Repositories for the win by McDutchie · · Score: 1

      This is true, but "app stores" are all the rage right now and the term has enormous "brand recognition". It does make it immediately obvious to most anyone's mom that this is a place where you can get shiny new software. Besides, there is actually commercial software for Linux too, and I don't see a reason why commercial packages shouldn't be available under a tab of their own in the same place. I think Linux distros can learn a lot from the iPhone and Android and other smartphones. They were the first to figure out a truly user-friendly way to install software. And since app stores are just glorified repositories, the transition should be easy.

    37. Re:Repositories for the win by houghi · · Score: 1

      Something like openSUSEs webpin?

      --
      Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.
    38. Re:Repositories for the win by Alanonfire · · Score: 1

      You have a false sense of security. Mac and Ubuntu are not nearly as secure as you think. You're just not a target. Once you become a target, you'll be dead in the water.

      I believe you need itunes to upgrade your iphone and use the itunes store and update this and that. As far as I know, there's no native way to run itunes on linux. If there is, please let me know.

      - Ubuntu User

    39. Re:Repositories for the win by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I'm a Mac user, but I certainly wouldn't hesitate to recommend Ubuntu to someone new to using computers.

      Do you imply the scenario of a newly bought PC with Linux preinstalled? Because aside from that, recommending Linux to someone runs a fairly significant risk of them finding out that some piece of hardware is not supported, or supported poorly (usually it's either WiFi or sound, though more recent kernels have caused some havoc with wired networking).

      This can be accounted for by checking hardware compatibility lists, of course, but then you have to forget about buying Best Buy junk, and willing to spend time checking for compatibility - and we're talking about "someone new to using computers", right?

    40. Re:Repositories for the win by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      > I don't think I ever got it to update without it breaking something be it sound, graphics, networking, wireless, printer, something.

      If it isn't broke, why try fixing it?

      It's not like you have to be worried about the lastest innovation in viral infection vecotors (like shortcuts).

      Any Unix can be pretty much treated like an appliance and left alone. Don't put up any "kick me" signs like running a DNS server, a badly broken email server, or an RDBMS that is subject to worms and you won't have to worry so much about having a Windows user approach to updates.

      That might be one valid criticism of Ubuntu: poor separation of critical updates from everything else.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    41. Re:Repositories for the win by ArcherB · · Score: 1

      First, Ubuntu is not Linux. Sure, it is a Linux distro, but it is not the only one. If you don't like the Ubuntu update schedule, try another Distro with a less frequent update schedule or simply don't update and stick with the LTS. Many people are still using Felching Foxhound or Chirping Chipmunk or whatever with no problems.

      As for customers wanting hardware compatible hardware... well, couldn't that be your job? Since you are in the business of selling this stuff, you could carry stuff that is compatible and ensure to your customers what works and what doesn't. Sounds like an opportunity that you are missing out on. People will buy hardware from you because you can show them it working on a Linux box. This is something that Best Buy won't do.

      As for compatibility, nearly every piece of hardware I own is compatible with Linux. That includes the usual video cards, keyboards and mice to the more difficult to make work printers, scanners and webcams. For that matter, the old printer that worked great in XP for some reason doesn't work in Windows7. I've never had a Linux update break a hardware driver. Windows, on the other hand is well known. I have an old AMD, AGP A-bit motherboard. A very popular board in its day. Worked great in both Linux and XP. Since upgrading to the latest Ubuntu, everything still works. In Windows7, however, the processor scaling doesn't work for some reason. Worked great in XP, works great in Linux, but Windows7 tells me that it is not compatible with Windows. Strange, it worked before.

      --
      There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
    42. Re:Repositories for the win by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      This is hilarious.

      The iPhone app store is just a glorified apt repository. This really becomes obvious once you jailbreak an iPhone and install Cydia.

      Their "app store" exposes the guts.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    43. Re:Repositories for the win by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      > take a evening class that uses software

      I was successfully dodging nonsense like this before there was a Linux.

      It's not that hard as long as you understand tasks as such rather than manipulating a particular brand of software.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    44. Re:Repositories for the win by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      If you are personally a target, nothing will stop anyone.

      That's not to say that avoiding STUPID THINGS won't help your physical or computing security.

      Microsoft is in the habit of doing really STUPID THINGS. Their latest hole is a good example.

      They seem pathalogically incapable of creating secure and robust software.

      Malware needs a means to propagate in order to be successful. No amount of Lemming excuses will alter that.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    45. Re:Repositories for the win by McDutchie · · Score: 1

      Yeah, that is precisely my point. Hilarious or not, user friendliness is all about presentation. Linux software repository = impenetrable, only for geeks. iPhone app store = your mom can use it. It's a fact. Linux is not succeeding on the desktop because programmers fail to understand this.

    46. Re:Repositories for the win by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      Nonsense.

      You aren't going to find anything in either store unless you use the search option.

      Once you find stuff, you need to sort through the CRAP.

      The shiny happy interface doesn't really do squat to help this.

      Either "store" is going to be manageable and usable mainly due to 3rd party sources of information and reviews.

      The difference is mainly marketing. Although Apple Stores do offer a lot of handholding.

      An 'iTunes class' is an interesting sight to behold (as if such a thing should even be necessary).

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    47. Re:Repositories for the win by geminidomino · · Score: 1

      I'm a programmer and I still can't figure out WTF that means.

      Nor why he bothered to use a case statement instead of just the printf...

      Every case just falls through to "TROLL" and prints it anyway, and then falls into the extraneous "default:" case.

    48. Re:Repositories for the win by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And how many years have the 'linux' crowd had to come up with that idea? And yet they didn't and still haven't made it as slick as the Apple app store.

      That's why Apple and Windows are more succesful.

      Ubuntu maybe technically beautiful, but it needs some 'swish' - unfortunately us geeks are too obsessed with the oily bits instead of the flash paint job.

    49. Re:Repositories for the win by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, repository-based software management comes with the obvious trade-off that some of the more exotic software isn't so readily available. Though I have to say that I'm very happy with my current distro, OpenSUSE, in that respect, due to 1-Click-Installs and the BuildService. Does Ubuntu provide similar features these days?

    50. Re:Repositories for the win by westlake · · Score: 1

      So call it an "app store", except all the apps are free. Your mom will eat it up.

      The FOSS programs his Mom will be looking for are all available for Windows and damn near as easily accessible.

    51. Re:Repositories for the win by yuna49 · · Score: 0, Redundant

      Turned out it was some bug using NVIDEA cards with dual monitors.

      A common setup found on, oh maybe, 0.05% of all Windows machines.

    52. Re:Repositories for the win by jmorris42 · · Score: 1

      > And please don't say "shop online" because normal folks simply won't. They want to see it, read the box,
      > look at other models, and THEN buy. Out of all the customers that have come through my shop I can count
      > those that shop online with both hands and have fingers left over.

      You probably don't want me saying it this bluntly but.... you don't see the customers who shop online because they aren't customers anymore. I know I haven't been in one of my local chop shops in years. Got tired of hearing em say "I don't have that but I can have it in a couple of days." To which I replied on my last visit, "So can I, but I hoped to actually buy one today."

      Realized there really wasn't a problem they could actually fix that I couldn't with a bit of help from Google and I can build a machine from parts as good as they can, and I pick out better parts.

      > You only get a year and a half on non LTS releases..

      That is because Ubuntu doesn't understand the term 'long term release'. Put Centos on and see the difference. Way beyond what you will be supporting the hardware for, probably longer than the original buyer will own the hardware.

      > Their answer to "update foo broke my hardware" was to simply disable all updates.

      I dunno, Ubuntu is about as bad as Fedora in that dept, so I can see why Dell did it. On this Fedora install I'm about one regression away from nuking the install with a fresh load from the F12[1] DVD, taking the most recent Firefox that doesn't start dragging in a crapload of deps and then just raising the IPtables shields to max and hoping for the best.

      [1] F13 isn't an option because of a regression in the kernel that breaks docking on this Thinkpad. Hope that one gets fixed before F12 goes dead in the fall or I'll have no choice but to hunker down and run without updates.

      --
      Democrat delenda est
    53. Re:Repositories for the win by MogNuts · · Score: 1

      Not to belittle your point, because it's very valid, but there have been tons of times I found that it said hardware was supported and it just didn't work anyway. It's Linux, it happens.

      Even something as simple as this. I have standard 15 and 17 inch laptops (meaning Intel graphics, no SSDs, on-board audio--not the unsupported creative stuff). The newest Ubuntu won't even boot on it, never mind do particular specific things.

    54. Re:Repositories for the win by MogNuts · · Score: 1

      I'm with you on the repos. I think synaptic and yum are one of the best things ever created. And they don't have any of the problems they used to have. But when they do, they show the problems with repos. When something doesn't work, it's a total bitch to get it to work. I remember the hoops I had to jump through to get Firefox (not an obscure package, and on another machine it worked) to upgrade, on the next-to-newest ubuntu, was hell. Then I remembered why I stopped using Linux years ago.

    55. Re:Repositories for the win by nine-times · · Score: 1

      Let me put it this way: of the 4 computers that I've installed Ubuntu 10.04 on, not a single one recognized all the hardware and functioned properly without fiddling. Now maybe each of those computers only represent a tiny percentage of possible configurations, but that's not really the issue, is it?

    56. Re:Repositories for the win by NNKK · · Score: 1

      Let me put it this way: of the 4 computers that I've installed Ubuntu 10.04 on, not a single one recognized all the hardware and functioned properly without fiddling. Now maybe each of those computers only represent a tiny percentage of possible configurations, but that's not really the issue, is it?

      And you're going to claim Windows recognized all the hardware and functioned properly without fiddling?

      Pull the other one.

    57. Re:Repositories for the win by Alanonfire · · Score: 1

      So Apple and Linux have fewer security holes than Microsoft?

    58. Re:Repositories for the win by retchdog · · Score: 1

      I'm exclusively a ubuntu user and I, both unfortunately and certainly, would not recommend ubuntu to someone new with computers.

      Wireless is flaky. Sound is (sometimes) touchy. Updates sometimes kill X.org or other crucial components. The official way to simulate a mouse wheel in gnome doesn't install by default (?!) and even after installing it, it won't persist after a suspend. This is all with a thinkpad x61s, which is one of the better laptops for linux.

      OpenOffice sucks, and telling someone that they would need to pirate and/or buy Crossover Office and MSOffice to "easily" run a decent office suite is embarrassing and awkward, especially since it comes after you tell them that repositories are a good idea in general (which yeah, they are).

      Finally, I just want to say that the first thing I add to the panel on a fresh install is the Force Quit applet. There's a reason for this, but even this isn't enough. I also need to writeup and add scripts to run stuff like "killall -r flash" and "killall -r chromium".

      --
      "They were pure niggers." – Noam Chomsky
    59. Re:Repositories for the win by nine-times · · Score: 1

      Depends. Does running "setup.exe" and clicking "next" a bunch of times count as "fiddling"?

    60. Re:Repositories for the win by dhavleak · · Score: 1

      Grandma just can't say no to an install request.

      You gave Grandma admin access?

    61. Re:Repositories for the win by shish · · Score: 1

      The last several times I've set up windows boxes, there have been several hours of googling for drivers (on a couple of occasions, googling from an ubuntu livecd since windows had no networking support...), before eventually clicking "next" several times. Same hardware with ubuntu has had 90% work fully out of the box, 10% work in a limited fashion and then pop up a message saying "The driver for your video card isn't installed, shall I get that for you?", to which I click "yes" and it is done. Yay anecdoal evidence \o/

      --
      I mod down anyone who says "I will be modded down for this", regardless of the rest of their comment
    62. Re:Repositories for the win by shish · · Score: 1

      Of course, a big chunk of the problem is hardware vendors refusing to open the source for their drivers.

      If having the source is such a big benefit, then why do so many official drivers on windows still suck? :P

      --
      I mod down anyone who says "I will be modded down for this", regardless of the rest of their comment
    63. Re:Repositories for the win by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's because, for the average Joe/Jane, Ubuntu is much simpler.
      1) It comes with all the basic software you need: browser, word processor, music player, video player, PDF viewer.
      2) The Software Center is relatively straight-forward and uninstallation is pretty easy too.
      3) Plug-and-play drivers are on par with Windows 7 for modern hardware, and far surpassing all versions of Windows on older hardware.
      4) The low incidences of Linux malware means that most people don't need to worry about a firewall or AV program.
      5) Updating is pretty straight-forward and requires restarts less than Windows updates do.

      That said, for anyone comfortable with Windows, yes, a new OS is gonna be wonky. Mac OS has this effect as well.

    64. Re:Repositories for the win by PagosaSam · · Score: 1

      Most of them are running XP SP3 (at least I make sure they are upgraded to SP3) and they are using admin level accounts. I tried to explain about having two accounts, but most of them think it's to complicated... sigh.

      --
      :q! Oh crap, not again...
    65. Re:Repositories for the win by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm a linux user, and my recommendations are the following:

      If you know what you want, use it (almost all non-newbies fall into this category)

      If you want to play non-casual games, use Windows
      If you don't want to play non-casual games, use OSX

      I've watched newbies with minor problems who are genuinely curious and motivated to move from windows be absolutely crushed by problems in linux (ubuntu) and go back to their original OS - after significant time spent searching. Linux is great if you're in IT, have someone in IT to watch over you, or nothing goes wrong. If something does go wrong... good luck. You're going to need it - the problem might be trivial, it might be arcane, or the one bit of help you do need is lost in the chaff of irrelevant commentary.

      Linux is fantastic if you have the mental history to go with it (a bit like in order to use Windows you have to be virus-savvy), but for a low-overhead computer that just does the basics without dicking around, it's OSX. I personally don't like Apple stuff, but that doesn't mean it's not right for others.

    66. Re:Repositories for the win by Andorin · · Score: 1

      Having to download and install each program individually is nowhere near "as easily accessible" as using Ubuntu's software repositories to automatically do the same thing.

      --
      That Anonymous Coward guy is pretty annoying. Can we have the government censor him or something?
    67. Re:Repositories for the win by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, the Ubuntu Eclipse is missing something, but it's very simple to fix. No need to do a manual Eclipse install.

      Simply go to Help -> Install New Software, and enter the repo "http://download.eclipse.org/releases/galileo/". Then when you install the Android ADT all the dependencies will be automatically resolved.

    68. Re:Repositories for the win by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm a Mac user, but I certainly wouldn't hesitate to recommend Ubuntu to someone new to using computers. It really is as simple to use as Windows, and repositories are huge win for usability and security.

      I'm an advanced user and I don't every want to know what a repository is. My mom definitely doesn't give a shit.

      Then you're not an advanced user, plain and simple. Repositories, are used across the board in 'advanced' computer usage not just linux. You do not qualify as an advanced user just because you run World of Warcraft and know how to download mp3's.

    69. Re:Repositories for the win by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In fairness, I've done a lot of amateur-level graphics editing and audio production. For what I use, GIMP is perfectly fine for graphics editing and I've not encountered places where I needed Photoshop -- times that I could have *used* Photoshop to make my life easier, but none it was required. For audio production, I get out of Linux. I'd use my Mac but I don't have the software, whereas I do still have a lot of audio production software on Windows. So I use Windows for it.

      I keep trying the Linux alternatives (on and off, I've not checked for a year so I'll do that when I get all my equipment shipped to my new home, my usual first port of call is to see what's in dyne:bolic these days) but there's nothing that makes me want to use Linux for sound engineering any more than I want to repeatedly hammer nails into my scrotum. Sure, I can do it, but it's not worth the pain...

      But then I'm amateur level at both and professionals might know more.

    70. Re:Repositories for the win by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You must be new here.

      Attempting to be reasonable and platform-agnostic on Slashdot??? Good God. I'd mod you up but I forgot my password and haven't been bothered getting a new account.

    71. Re:Repositories for the win by bigrockpeltr · · Score: 1

      well i might excuse you since i couldnt get the tabs or space to show up in the 30 secs i tried. So it might have been a bit confusing to read.
      however, i really hope you dont program in C/C++/JAVA/PHP (or any other language with C-Style syntax) for a living.

      but anyways im in a good mood this morning so let me educate you (or anyone that understood the snippet in the same way you did)
      It would only go through to the printf statement IFF (if and only if) one of the cases were true. OTHERWISE it would go to the default stement which would be to print/post nothing. the AC probably triggered the NOT_ADV_USER case.
      ( which i guess hsould be renamed to CLAIMED_ADV_BUT_NOT_REALLY_ADV_USER)

      --
      $ unzip, strip, touch, finger, grep, mount, fsck, more, yes,fsck,fsck,fsck,umount, sleep
    72. Re:Repositories for the win by FoolishOwl · · Score: 1

      Totally agreed. Centralized repositories and intelligent package management are the biggest practical advantages to using a coherent Linux distribution like Ubuntu. The second biggest, which is related, is that the basic installation of Ubuntu includes all the standard applications a typical user needs: Firefox, Evolution, OpenOffice, etc.

      You can complain about those applications -- in fact, you probably will -- but they do their jobs.

    73. Re:Repositories for the win by geminidomino · · Score: 1

      but anyways im in a good mood this morning so let me educate you (or anyone that understood the snippet in the same way you did)

      Actually, the flaw was in my mental evaluation of the constants.

      I was treating NOT_ADV_USER == !SUPER_ADV_USER and thus figuring that one of those two would have to be true.

      So thankfully I do program in C-style languages and not "natural-language" style :D

    74. Re:Repositories for the win by westlake · · Score: 1

      Having to download and install each program individually is nowhere near "as easily accessible" as using Ubuntu's software repositories to automatically do the same thing.

      It is easier than migrating to a new OS. Root canal.

      Ubuntu's repositories are not really automatic.

      Simply accessing the repository requires entering a password.

      Searching the repository can be tedious and uninformative. Many - many apps - are not supported by Canonical. No automatic upgrades.

      There will be another hurdle or two to jump before the app you choose is installed and accessible.

    75. Re:Repositories for the win by bigrockpeltr · · Score: 1

      ooh ok figured it was just a simple misunderstanding :)

      So thankfully I do program in C-style languages and not "natural-language" style :D
      i agree!! no other way!! :D

      --
      $ unzip, strip, touch, finger, grep, mount, fsck, more, yes,fsck,fsck,fsck,umount, sleep
    76. Re:Repositories for the win by mister_dave · · Score: 1

      The point I was trying to make is, that while you can get by without MS Windows, you save yourself a lot of aggravation by having MS Windows.

    77. Re:Repositories for the win by Andorin · · Score: 1

      Let's compare.

      Windows:
      1. Assemble a list of apps you want.
      2. Pull up your browser of choice.
      3. Search your favorite search engine for one of these apps.
      4. Find a download link that looks legitimate.
      5. Download the installer.
      6. Run it as administrator (enter password here -if- one is set).
      7. Tell Windows that, yes, you want to run this executable.
      8. Click "Next" a whole bunch, or alternately configure various installation settings.
      9. Repeat steps 3-8 for each app on the list.

      Ubuntu:
      1. Assemble a list of apps you want.
      2. Pull up the Software Center.
      3. Search for the name of one of these apps.
      4. Click "Install" (enter password here).
      5. Repeat steps 3 and 4 for each app on the list. Password entry is only required for the first app.

      It doesn't take a stroke of brilliance to see which of the two processes for program installation is more user-friendly, more convenient, and offers better system security.

      --
      That Anonymous Coward guy is pretty annoying. Can we have the government censor him or something?
    78. Re:Repositories for the win by tjma2001 · · Score: 1

      I actually liked the way they packaged it in ubuntu. The eclipse update manager is the best way to installing plugins and manage updates for it. All you have to do then is add the "repos" in eclipse, search for the plugins you want.. and bobs your uncle. They probably cant have all those plugins in the ubuntu repos due to license restrictions as well as they seem to be worked on quite regularly.

    79. Re:Repositories for the win by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is one issue with the Ubuntu Software Center; it doesn't always get everything you need. In my case, I wanted to set up Eclipse with the Android ADT plugin. The version of Eclipse that gets installed via the Software Center is missing a ton of dependencies that the ADT plugin needs, and trying to manually get all these dependencies led me down a rabbit hole. The only pain free solution that worked for me was a manual installation of Eclipse, by downloading the 'fully-loaded' version from the eclipse site.

      Then again, the average joe probably has no need or desire to install Eclipse in the first place, so maybe that software center isn't such a bad idea.

      You should have tried using "aptitude" command at command-line. Its similar to apt-get but it can resolve lot of dependencies on its own.

    80. Re:Repositories for the win by CrazedSanity · · Score: 1

      The software center isn't really designed for developers, but rather for the "normal" user (i.e. the ones that reach out to geeks like us to fix their printer/monitor/iPod/foot pedal). For developers, using Synaptic, apt-get, or Kpackage Kit, or whatever is probably more desirable, even though we generally end up needing to pick through all those extra libraries that aren't pertinent.

      --
      Sanity is like a condom: rather have it and not need it, than need it and not have it.
    81. Re:Repositories for the win by hairyfeet · · Score: 1

      I'm afraid you are falling for the "Why don't you bundle" trap, and while it might sound logical at first glance, unless your last name is Dell it is doomed to failure. The shop down the street tried it, I have a nice selection of parts I got at their going out of business sale. You see the average Joe don't know jack shit about economies of scale, and frankly they don't care. They want to know why they have printers for $35 at Walmart and why yours costs $80. Not to mention thanks to the breakneck pace of tech anything you buy for X today is worth X-y in a couple of weeks, so you quickly find keeping large inventories is a losing game.

      And while I have no doubt your hardware story is true, believe me it is NOT typical. And how much CLI do you use when a new release comes out? In fact when was the last time you used Bash? This week? Today? If the answer is "at all" then I'm afraid it is a fail, since every instance of you using bash would equal the machine coming to me, and my having to fix it on my own time or burn the customer, since as I said home users don't buy support contracts. that also doesn't count all the times they go buy something at Walmart and then YOU have to tell them "Sorry, you just lost your money. Have a nice day!" Believe me, that doesn't go over well with customers. Just try looking up say...the top 20 peripherals on Walmart.com on Ubuntu forums. You'll find that MAYBE 30% have support, if you count "support" as "Put in this three pages of CLI, tweak the hell out of it, and maybe it'll work. But probably not"

      The problem with Linux is this: it is great for geeks and DIY types, but how many of the general pop is that? Not very many, which is why Linux numbers are so low. If you want to get the numbers (which you do, because even 10% would mean that companies would have to support you and things would be better for everyone) that OSX has these problems will have to be addressed, but instead of the OS adapting to the customers you either get nicely (like you) or rudely (Like RTFM Winfag!) that instead YOU should adapt to the OS. I'm sorry but that won't happen in a million years. As I said I figured up the hours I spent in bash on a single machine and it quickly added up to more than a copy of Windows Home. That made Linux a losing money proposition for me. But Linux needs retailers if it is gonna succeed, and it simply won't get them staying on its current course. It is too CLI and server centric for a desktop.

      If you would like to read it I wrote an article expanding on the subject, but even then the only answers I got was "DIY" like I am gonna shut down my business, build a distro, and set up my own websites promoting Linux...for what? The goodwill of the community? I'm sure that would pay my rent. And that is the problem, most folks don't care about "free as in freedom" and only care about having their PC work consistently. And despite the FUD for a good 90% of the population Windows works. To get those folks to switch you're gonna have to do better than "it's free" because Windows is free to them too so you need to be easier, faster, and better. Right now IMHO Linux just isn't. Sorry. And you watch, even though we are both being civil and stating our convictions I'll probably be modded for daring to say anything other than "Gee isn't Linux swell? It sure is!". But how are the problems ever gonna get fixed if nobody talks about them?

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    82. Re:Repositories for the win by juhaz · · Score: 1

      Depends. Does running "setup.exe" and clicking "next" a bunch of times count as "fiddling"?

      Perhaps not, but knowing that a "setup.exe" is even required for the computer to function properly and where to find it certainly does require above average knowledge.

    83. Re:Repositories for the win by dissy · · Score: 1

      I'm an advanced user and I don't every want to know what a repository is. My mom definitely doesn't give a shit.

      Well, in plain English 'repository' is defined as simply "A place where things are stored"

      You can then qualify the word with another, to describe what 'things' might be.

      For example, a book repository would better be known as a library or book store. A place that has books for you to go get.
      In the same light, a software repository is a place software is stored at for you to go get.

      Unless your mother works in the computer field, or otherwise would be considered computer knowledgeable, then she most certainly would give a shit. Even if not, it would make life easier on her.

      The best way to describe a linux software repository specifically, would be to describe the problems they solve.

      Just ask her about the last couple times she had to install software on her computer.
      Ever go to install a program, and it complains that it requires some other program installed first? So you go hunt down that program and try to install it, and then that one complains some DLL is missing or the wrong version, so you go download that and install it, then install the dependency, and finally install the original program you wanted, all while hoping you don't forget why you even wanted to install that program in the first place...

      A repository will have all of those programs in it, and will know which software needs what other software.
      When you tell the repository you want to install something, it will check what you have already and go take care of all those dependencies for you so that no more clicking is involved.

      Then there is the problem when her hard drive starts getting full, and she wants to clear stuff out to make more room.
      Well if you just uninstall the main program, all that other crap it required is still left on the system taking up space. Generally one forgets what had to be installed ahead of time, what is or isn't needed still, and what can be removed without breaking other programs. The end result is "I tried cleaning some programs I don't use out, but it didn't free up very much space at all! Things are still running slow, and now when I reboot I get these file missing errors!"

      With a repository, since it is tracking all of that anyway, will know what dependencies the program used, And if any other programs installed since require those dependencies.
      Anything that was installed for the original program you are removing, will also be removed. If something has been installed in the mean time that also requires that dependency, then it will Not be uninstalled so nothing breaks.

      The third problem, which we all have had, is teaching mom the difference between legit websites to download from, and 'bad' websites that are full of viruses.

      Repositories eliminate the need to know the real source of a program, as no websites are involved.

      Finally, for people that simply install software by hammering the next button, keeping all options default (Or worse, crappy broken installers that don't give you options), you no doubt have seen after a few months they end up with 10 auto-update programs down in the tray, which all at once bug you to check for updates when you turn on the computer and are just trying to get some work done. Then mom wonders why Word takes an extra 5 minutes to open and she keeps getting out of memory errors.

      Repositories solve that problem because the repository interface is the one and only app that checks for updates. It handles all updates for you at once, AND grabs the updates from the same original legit places the software originally came from.
      Granted, this isn't much of an issue anymore with updater programs, but still to this day are updaters that only inform you a new version is available, and clicking the notice opens a browser to their webpage, expecting you to manually download and install the new version.

      In summary, software repositories handle all o

  5. Typical Microsoft price lobbying by guruevi · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If you don't change your mind we'll stop providing you with cheap licenses and Gold Partner status and cut off your MSDN subscription. I worked for a couple of Gold Partners and it's the same everywhere, Microsoft uses it's monopoly status and high prices to force people into compliance.

    Ubuntu is good enough for most people especially when pre-installed on a computer. Unless you're just plain stupid you will be able to work with it and do whatever you need to do. Sadly Windows is so ingrained in users that are resistant to change that it's hard to change platforms for a lot of people.

    --
    Custom electronics and digital signage for your business: www.evcircuits.com
    1. Re:Typical Microsoft price lobbying by Kepesk · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Agreed. And I'm amused by the fact that Dell's #1 reason people would want to use Ubuntu is that they do not plan to use Windows. Really informative guys. Great job. If they were really interested in marketing Ubuntu, they might have displayed at least one actual reason they might want to get it that didn't involve terms like 'open-source programming' which most people don't understand.

    2. Re:Typical Microsoft price lobbying by nashv · · Score: 1

      Microsoft uses it's monopoly status and high prices to force people into compliance.

      Umm, yeah. That's kinda the point of creating a monopoly.

      --
      Entia non sunt multiplicanda praeter necessitatem.
    3. Re:Typical Microsoft price lobbying by VGPowerlord · · Score: 1

      Well, of course. Dell doesn't sell Apple computers, so they're not going to advocate OSX!

      They're also too lazy to support multiple Linux distros.

      --
      GLaDOS for President 2016! "Well here we are again. It's always such a pleasure." -- GLaDOS, 2011
    4. Re:Typical Microsoft price lobbying by Monkeedude1212 · · Score: 1

      Unless you're just plain stupid

      Well, I think the correct term would be "computer literate" - some people just don't know how to read whats on screen, don't know that there are help files, or that the internet is full of this kind of information (or they don't know how to search for it).

      But yes - that is basically the reason why most people don't use Linux based Operating systems, and also why so many people hate computers.

    5. Re:Typical Microsoft price lobbying by Kookus · · Score: 1

      ...Sadly Windows is so ingrained in users that are resistant to change that it's hard to change platforms for a lot of people.

      It even goes further than that, look at the people unwilling to upgrade from XP. We're just creatures of habit, unless there's something new new you can't do on your current system, why change? I think that's a good way to win over people though, and that's by supporting their software that won't work anymore once their old platform no longer works. As in, when support for XP dies, and people are forced to change.

    6. Re:Typical Microsoft price lobbying by hhedeshian · · Score: 1

      Mach Microkernel + BSD userland + Proprietary GUI != Linux

      Mach Microkernel + BSD userland + Proprietary GUI != Unix either (if SCO has anything to say about it)

    7. Re:Typical Microsoft price lobbying by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bingo. Gold Partner status is a big motive here. Dell put some effort into the Ubuntu partnership when the media was slating MS for Vista's failings, and customers were demanding old XP instead. Microsoft was in the dog house with computer retaillers. Now 7 is out, and it's not bad -- possibly the best Windows ever. Dell, a sensible business, is returning to the fold.

      I've got friends and family who tried Ubuntu during those dark days. I insisted they must not replace their old, malware-plugged XP machines with Vista. It was good advice - then. More recently they've been able to get new machines with 7. And you know what? They're happy. Printing works now! All of it. None of this rubbish where there are lists of "Linux compatible" printers that don't tell you the ink levels like they do in Windows, or manage to print duplex.

      And no more rubbish like a file manage without Undo. My god, Nautilus has about a dozen small failings that should have been taken care of years ago. Sure, they're mostly small things, but that bloody app is the face of Ubuntu. It communicates immediately to the new user that Ubuntu is a second-tier compromise.

    8. Re:Typical Microsoft price lobbying by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 0

      One's right to life, liberty, property, speech, press, freedom of worship and assembly may not be submitted to vote

      Can one's right to vote be submitted to vote?

      What about right to self-defense?

      Basically, where do you get the list from, and how do you conclusively show that it is both sufficient and not overextensive?

    9. Re:Typical Microsoft price lobbying by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      If you don't change your mind we'll stop providing you with cheap licenses and Gold Partner status and cut off your MSDN subscription. I worked for a couple of Gold Partners and it's the same everywhere, Microsoft uses it's monopoly status and high prices to force people into compliance.

      Admittedly I only worked for one MS gold certified partner, but I didn't see anything like that there at all. Indeed, the company was heavily invested into other development tools - most notably Flash on client and J2EE for web apps - and continued to do so despite gaining partner status and spinning off a bunch of projects based on MS tech (mostly ASP.NET & SharePoint, though there were a bunch of thick desktop clients written in .NET as well). Furthermore, the company did explicitly advertise platform/framework used to create products (for both .NET and J2EE stuff), so it was quite prominent. And yet I did not hear about any difficulties that the partnership had created for the Java side of the company.

      Of course we'd get MS evangelists come by in person every now and then, and try to explain why our next big project should absolutely be done on MS platforms with MS tools, integrate with Office etc. But that could be heeded or ignored at our own peril, with no gun held to our head.

    10. Re:Typical Microsoft price lobbying by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They almost certainly don't want people to use it. I would bet it results in returns and supports costs that they don't get to the same degree with Windows machines.

    11. Re:Typical Microsoft price lobbying by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >Unless you are just plain stupid you will be able to work with it [Ubuntu]...

      The parent poster and the moderators should give yourselves a good hard slap in the face. You're implying that Ubuntu is harder to use than Windows (ie. if you're stupid, you will still be able to use Windows, but not Ubuntu). FFS - what sort of message are you sending to people???

      Let's take my mother as an example - a computer phobe.
      I put her onto Windows XP - and she HATES it. She gets popups all the time (from virus scanners, firewalls, etc) - and calls me EVERY time.
      If I had given her Ubuntu, the whole package would be -seamless- in the following ways,
      - 1 click install for applications that automatically set themselves up in the right folders (eg. games go in the games folder, business tools in the business folder, etc)
      - three menus only. One for programs, one for places (eg. hard drives) and one for settings

      How in the hell can you say that Ubuntu is hard to use?!?!?!?!?!?!?!?!!?

      I am a dual booter between Windows and Linux - and the ONLY feature I really want in Ubuntu is the Window preview from Windows 7. The rest you can keep :)
      AC
      PS I guess Dell forgot to mention the advantages of Ubuntu that I did. Maybe people love the cumbersome Windows menus - and clumsy installs that you have to find on the net...

    12. Re:Typical Microsoft price lobbying by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      No. They don't want to diss Windows because they can't afford to have Microsoft multiply their Windows license price by an order of magnitude.

      Anything Dell (or any big PC vendor) has to say about operating systems has to be considered in light of the fact that Microsoft has them by the family jewels.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    13. Re:Typical Microsoft price lobbying by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Reminds me of the netbooks that came preinstalled with Linux. It was so much better than the crapped down version of xp. To be honest, I think that version of xp is why people think netbooks are so slow.

      It would have been the worst thing in the world for MS for people to get a hold of Linux and see that for 90% of what they do it may as well be the same thing. Ease of use isn't really the problem with preinstall Linux

    14. Re:Typical Microsoft price lobbying by MogNuts · · Score: 1

      Maybe you just had some unscrupulous salespeople using fear to intimidate you to get the sale. Ever think they could have lied to your corporation(s) even though they had absolute 0 authority to revoke or raise the software bills?

      Instead of complaining on /. that MS screws you, instead you could have just fired a paragraph e-mail to their supervisors, they'd be screwed, and everything would be kosher, and you maybe even would have gotten some nice discount.

      Nah, blaming MS on /. is too easy.

    15. Re:Typical Microsoft price lobbying by guruevi · · Score: 1

      Well, since you obviously didn't use Google: http://www.ala.org/ala/aboutala/offices/oif/firstamendment/firstamendment.cfm

      It's about somebody's "bill of rights" rights being submitted to vote which according to the Supreme Court cannot be done (they're inalienable rights)

      --
      Custom electronics and digital signage for your business: www.evcircuits.com
    16. Re:Typical Microsoft price lobbying by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      You realize that the First Amendment to the Constitution can be made null and void by another constitutional amendment, right? And that such hypothetical amendment would, in effect, amount to "submitting to vote"? (you'd need a 3/4 supermajority, but it's still a vote - "three wolves and a lamb voting for dinner", so to speak).

    17. Re:Typical Microsoft price lobbying by Pharmboy · · Score: 1

      hey're also too lazy to support multiple Linux distros.

      Dell has supported multiple versions of Linux on their servers for about a decade now, and on their desktops for many years, so not sure if "lazy" is the right word. They offer and support support RedHat, Novell/Suse, Solaris AND even Citrix. And they offer some desktop/laptop models with FreeDOS and Ubuntu. It isn't perfect, but better than most bigger vendors.

      I personally run CentOS on several Dell servers, but I don't need their support contracts, which are technically through the Linux vendors anyway. But they do offer the different versions of Linux and have tested that their hardware will run fine with those different versions (ie: drivers). I would say they are supporting Linux better than most vendors, and considering that Linux only has a few percent of the desktop market (and a large chunk of the server market), they are doing an adequate job.

      --
      Tequila: It's not just for breakfast anymore!
    18. Re:Typical Microsoft price lobbying by WarlockD · · Score: 1

      The best marketing is the price. You don't see a huge price difference between buying a desktop (business or otherwise) with or without Windows.

      However, when your buying a server, that 700-1000 drop in price for cutting out windows server? Dell might have to tred lightly when it comes to desktops, but they don't screw around with their server market. IBM and HP are the same way. They know there are people out there that roll their own and price their systems accordingly and give you the bare minimum tools to do it.

      I just wish they do it on their desktops.

    19. Re:Typical Microsoft price lobbying by Andorin · · Score: 2, Informative

      I am a dual booter between Windows and Linux - and the ONLY feature I really want in Ubuntu is the Window preview from Windows 7. The rest you can keep :)

      If you install Compiz's settings manager from the repositories, you can turn on a plugin that does exactly that. It's aptly named Window Previews under Extras and its settings are configurable.

      --
      That Anonymous Coward guy is pretty annoying. Can we have the government censor him or something?
    20. Re:Typical Microsoft price lobbying by snadrus · · Score: 1

      Actually Dell is key here:
      > 50% (near 60%) of Windows sales are from Dell & they're comfortable selling Ubuntu. So:
      A. MS can kill Dell's Windows sales via licensing and have the most successful PC producer shipping Ubuntu by default
      B. MS can play nice.
      C. Dell can slowly increase Ubuntu sales to improve negotiation for Microsoft's licensing costs!

      --
      Science & open-source build trust from peer review. Learn systems you can trust.
  6. Looks more like by Haffner · · Score: 1
    if (os!=windows)

    os=ubuntu;

    --
    "Going to war without the French is like going deer hunting without your accordion." ~General Norman Schwarzkopf
    1. Re:Looks more like by Jailbrekr · · Score: 1

      #!/bin/sh
      os=`uname`
      if [ "$os" = "Linux ]; then
          echo "Use Linux"
      else
          echo "Use cygwin"
      fi

      --
      Feed the need: Digitaladdiction.net
    2. Re:Looks more like by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I run GNU/Hurd you insensitive clod!

    3. Re:Looks more like by zach_the_lizard · · Score: 1

      I use FreeBSD, you insensitive clod!

      --
      SSC
    4. Re:Looks more like by natehoy · · Score: 1

      Wrap the whole thing in an "if (vendor='Dell')" statement and you get the picture.

      Dell, as a rule, provides Windows or Ubuntu. They've chosen one Linux distro, built one basic image of it, and that's what you get if you choose "Linux".

      Doesn't really matter, though. Since there's no real discount for getting Ubuntu, you're better off buying it with Windows (if you're an experienced user) then nuking it from orbit or setting it up for multiboot.

      That way, you have a license to Windows if you should ever need it, for "free", and you choose your own operating system for daily use.

      --
      "This post contains words, known to the State of California to cause thought. Wash brain thoroughly after reading."
    5. Re:Looks more like by rsborg · · Score: 1

      if (os!=windows)
      os=ubuntu;

      More like:

      if (os!=windows)
      echo "Dear god, please don't buy a Mac... Ubuntu is really usable, but not as profitable^Wgood as windows";

      --
      Make sure everyone's vote counts: Verified Voting
    6. Re:Looks more like by Jailbrekr · · Score: 1

      I use 10 year old unfunny jokes too, you insensitive clod!

      --
      Feed the need: Digitaladdiction.net
    7. Re:Looks more like by iceaxe · · Score: 1

      Natalie?!?! Is that you?!?! Where's my hot grits?

      --
      WALSTIB!
  7. I heart Ubuntu by Mekkah · · Score: 1

    I heart Ubuntu, but I wouldn't have my parents use it.

    Ubuntu can be a challenge at times, there are pros and cons to everything, I'm glad they are at least partially bringing it to light.

    --
    ~Mekkah
    1. Re:I heart Ubuntu by danieltdp · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Windows can be a challenge at times, there are pros and cons to everything. And I really mean that! I firmly believe that both my sentence and your's are true

      --
      -- dnl
    2. Re:I heart Ubuntu by debatem1 · · Score: 1

      I put Ubuntu on the machine and told them I just changed the wallpaper.

    3. Re:I heart Ubuntu by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I too set my parents up with Ubuntu, and they love it. They no longer get viruses, as my Dad puts it "it's more simple", it makes good use of their old computer's limited hardware and everything they love to do, they can do:
        * Web browsing
        * Checking email (Mum uses gmail, Dad uses Evolution)
        * SIP (We use Ekiga for video chats)
        * Storing and downloading photos
        * My Mum plays all the games that come bundled with Ubuntu
        * [luckily] their Epson multifunction printer / scanner worked out of the box.
        * Word Processing

      I think Ubuntu is great for uber-geeks and it's great for complete noobs, but it's the people in between it doesn't fit so well - like my sister who needs Photoshop for her college course, and my brother who likes to buy the odd computer game, and expects it to work out of the box.

    4. Re:I heart Ubuntu by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      My parents have been using Ubuntu for the better pat of the last five years, and the only time I've had to come take a look at it is when they were having printer driver issues. For people who want basic functionality out of their PC, such as ability to surf, write documents, listen to music, check e-mail, and play some basic games, I maintain Ubuntu is the perfect OS. I think linux distributions in general have come a long way in the last few years. Last night I installed OpenSUSE on my laptop and it was painless. All hardware was auto detected, and the amount of input from me was less than that required to install Windows 7. I believe KDE 4.4 has more eye candy than Win7 as well and runs quite well. (Core 2 Duo, 1.6Ghz, integrated graphics) I could have stopped right there and had a fully functional PC out of the box. The fact that it comes with an array of hand picked software is a nice touch as well. It saves you the hassle of trying to find an office suite, media player, photoshop alternative, etc.

      I think a lot of /. crowd may be overestimating how the average user utilizes their PC today. It explains thy the iPad is even allowed to exist: give the people what they want.
      My 2cents. (Canadian)

    5. Re:I heart Ubuntu by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      I heart Ubuntu

      You could have saved one letter by using the correct word 'love'.

    6. Re:I heart Ubuntu by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I installed Ubuntu on my mom's laptop. It's been a success because:
      1) It was impossible for it to be worse than Vista. Seriously. One day Vista up and decided that she wasn't worthy of wireless connectivity or VPN access, and the only solution I could find online was "flatten, reinstall, pray it doesn't happen again".
      2) I have the same model laptop, and therefore already knew how to fix the little quirks in the system.
      3) All she uses on the laptop is VPN, Citrix, and Skype, plus a little e-mail. All of which were set up fairly easily (Citrix had some certificate-related annoyances), and work well.

      All in all, Ubuntu is vastly easier for her to work with (especially getting on VPN), and most of the problems I encountered setting things up wouldn't have been encountered if Ubuntu had come pre-installed. And it's certainly more secure than Windows and its remote-exploit-du-jour.

    7. Re:I heart Ubuntu by StayFrosty · · Score: 1

      My parents have been running Ubuntu for the past 4 years. Early on there were a couple of issues with flash and pulseaudio, but the last 3 years have been (software) trouble free.

      --
      "Frequently wrong, never in doubt."
    8. Re:I heart Ubuntu by phoenixjim · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I helped my 72 year old uncle get started with Ubuntu when his Windows became so badly infected that he couldn't clean it. I used Logmein to remotely control his pc to download the image. I had him put in a CD and then I burned it for him. I had the machine reboot, then talked him through the install. 3 calls later, he's cruising without viruses, doing his banking etc safely and comfortably, and easily handling his email and game needs/wants... Yes, Ubuntu and the rest can be a challenge at times. But when I can get someone who's a complete novice with computers to use it (from over 1000 miles away) and they actually LIKE it, that says something very positive.

    9. Re:I heart Ubuntu by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      so?

    10. Re:I heart Ubuntu by Lumpy · · Score: 1

      Every flash problem I found was related to crappy flash. I.E. Zenga games. Farmville is a horrible mess that they should be ashamed of. Latest Chrome + flash works far better because when farmville crashes it does not take down the browser.

      Honestly, the biggest flash issue you fine, go and test it on a Windows box. you doscover the same issue exists over there because of Crappy flash apps.

      --
      Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    11. Re:I heart Ubuntu by Capt.DrumkenBum · · Score: 1

      I put OpenOffice on my mothers computer and told her it was the new version of MS Office. :)

      --
      If I were God, wouldn't I protect my churches from acts of me?
  8. Configurability or Games? by philipborlin · · Score: 5, Funny

    I love the way the Windows screen shot shows the control panel as if Windows' strong point is configurability. Contrast that with the Ubuntu screen shot which shows installed games as if Ubuntu's strength is its games.

    1. Re:Configurability or Games? by blai · · Score: 1

      because configurability != number of options

      --
      In soviet Russia, God creates you!
    2. Re:Configurability or Games? by alexhs · · Score: 4, Informative

      Also note how it's Windows XP they're displaying.

      You are familiar with WINDOWS and do not want to learn new programs for email, word processing etc

      Does that mean that Dell is willing to sell them Windows XP so they don't have to learn Windows 7 ?

      BTW, people using OpenOffice, Firefox, Thunderbird etc don't have to learn new programs.

      --
      I have discovered a truly marvelous proof of killer sig, which this margin is too narrow to contain.
    3. Re:Configurability or Games? by cbhacking · · Score: 1

      To the average user, I'd say Windows' configurability is actually a *lot* better than Linux's. My touchpad has way more options exposed in the control panel GUI on Windows than any of the multiple Linux tools for mouse configuration - including manual editing of xorg.conf - that I've seen. Installing things like a TV tuner driver on Windows is a lot more straightforward than on Linux, if it's not in the repos. Linux is certainly more configurable to the serious power user, if for no other reason than because you can change the source and re-compile, but getting a Windows box set up completely is actually easier in my experience (YMMV). One reason I like openSuse is because Yast is almost as powerful as Control Panel + Management Console, and is all in one place.

      Nobody seriously suggests that Ubuntu's strength is games, but a lot of people don't even realize it has games. That said, they're not far wrong from the perspective of anything but the most casual gamers. I'm not sure I'd have gone for that as a screenshot, but if you're trying to lure the kind of person who would never play a game that actually casts money to buy, seeing that image might push some toward Linux.

      --
      There's no place I could be, since I've found Serenity...
    4. Re:Configurability or Games? by Dice · · Score: 1

      I have a gaming machine which runs Win7, it's the first non-Linux machine I've owned in the last 10 years. The new (to me) UI in MS applications is crazy. It literally took me two minutes to figure out how to save a screenshot I'd pasted into Paint.

      Here's a shot of the application. I actually never saw the save icon in the title bar until just now, I've been using the blue drop-down to the left of the "Home" tab to select "Save". Who the heck decided to put application icons in the title bar?

    5. Re:Configurability or Games? by buchner.johannes · · Score: 1

      And what the average users takes away from that comparison:

      "I don't have a widescreen, so I'll take windows."

      --
      NB: The message above might reflect my opinion right now, but not necessarily tomorrow or next year.
    6. Re:Configurability or Games? by bkpark · · Score: 1

      Contrast that with the Ubuntu screen shot which shows installed games as if Ubuntu's strength is its games.

      I don't know about you, but that's certainly true with me. My Debian system comes with Hedgewars, a thoroughly addictive game with nice graphics. My Windows computer in the office comes with ... what, does it have anything other than minesweeper and solitaire?

  9. You may not like it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...but it is true as far as Dell's customers are concerned.

  10. Linux is not for Everyone by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    I am a linux geek. I run linux because it suits my needs and is dependable.

    I would love for everyone to run linux, but the reality is that it is not for everyone. I have tried to convert others, but ultimately they end up back in Windows/OSX. There is nothing wrong with that.

    For many computers just need to get "Task X" done. If Windows is the easiest way to get that done, then so be it...

    1. Re:Linux is not for Everyone by unixguy43 · · Score: 1

      I operate prety much in the same vain. I've been a linux user since '95, and an exclusive linux user since '03. I've converted a few people, but anytime someone asks me which is better, I always start by asking them what they use their computer for. If it ends up that the have a lot of application dependencies that are better satisfied by using Windows, I'll gladly tell them to just stay with Windows. If they do a lot of work that is OS-independent, I'll extol the virtues (as I see them) of linux. But I also make sure they understand that there could be limitations if they try to augment their application base from what they originally tell me.

      I think the biggest problem with moving someone from Windows to Linux is that unless they're at a level of understanding whereby they know what each can and can't do, there will be a point where they either get something from a friend or download something that requires Windows to run. Someone who understands the inner workings of things may be able to get them working under linux, but general users aren't going to be able to figure that out, and to them, the system will just be broken and it will suck.

      If Dell really wants to promote linux as an option, then allow systems to ship with a dual-boot configuration, so that the end user can make a choice based their own usage patterns.

    2. Re:Linux is not for Everyone by Lumpy · · Score: 1

      I convert a lot to Ubuntu and they never go back to Windows.

      Why? because I wont support them if they do. Remove the free tech support for windows and suddenly the cost of windows smacks them in the face.

      I get a request once in a while from an aunt or uncle... they stop when I remind them... "that's great, remember best buy will charge you $100.00 for every time you call them to fix it."

      --
      Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    3. Re:Linux is not for Everyone by lehphyro · · Score: 1

      +1

    4. Re:Linux is not for Everyone by _Sprocket_ · · Score: 1

      Sure. Linux isn't for everyone. OSX isn't for everyone. Windows isn't for everyone. But you won't get that from the marketing departments.

    5. Re:Linux is not for Everyone by Nethead · · Score: 1

      Same thing I do. Replace with Ubuntu, add the codecs, no-script, ad-block, etc. about 30-40 minutes top. I never get a call back, it just works. I just won't do windows anymore.. and to be honest, if it's not W2K, I'm probably the last person you want tinkering in there. I just don't know that much about it anymore.

      --
      -- I have a private email server in my basement.
    6. Re:Linux is not for Everyone by aqk · · Score: 0

      ....I have tried to convert others, but ultimately they end up back in Windows/OSX. There is nothing wrong with that.

      For many computers just need to get "Task X" done. If Windows is the easiest way to get that done, then so be it...

      Exactly.
      I'd mod you up, but for some strange reason I am considered bad here.
      Probably just 'cause I like Win7 as much as Ubuntu.

  11. WINDOWS programs like Microsoft Office and ITunes by Internal+Modem · · Score: 1

    With quotes like "You are already using WINDOWS programs (e.g. Microsoft Office, ITunes etc)," it's clear who the target audience is.

  12. TFA should be tagged informative by danieltdp · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Really. It hurts Linux when people log in and ask for MS Word. It is important to be sure your customer is getting what he wants.

    The only part that is gonna get flamed is the last bit on Windows Section: "use windows if you are new to using computers". They should have left this bit out of both sides, IMO. Windows is good to newbies because they can get help more easily from friends, but it is not easier to use than Ubuntu. Just the idea of the software center like ubuntu's goes miles ahead for those who are new to computers

    --
    -- dnl
    1. Re:TFA should be tagged informative by HeckRuler · · Score: 1

      "It doesn't hurt Linux when people log in and ask for MS Word and get Open Office"
      Oblig. FTFY
      Really, it doesn't. The people that can tell the difference can figure it out.

    2. Re:TFA should be tagged informative by danieltdp · · Score: 1

      I am not sure if I agree with you. It is important that the users understand they are not using MS Word. I love OpenOffice and use it even on Windows, but it is not the same thing. IMO, the typical Dell user would freak out about it.

      --
      -- dnl
    3. Re:TFA should be tagged informative by ultranova · · Score: 2, Funny

      The only part that is gonna get flamed is the last bit on Windows Section: "use windows if you are new to using computers". They should have left this bit out of both sides, IMO.

      Yeah. If you're new to computers (who is, these days?), you should use a command line. Seriously, you should. There's no more intuitive way to use a computer than typing in commands as text and having it respond in kind, expect perhaps speech recognition. Compared to that a graphical user interface is far harder to use.

      When I used Linux, the one application I used the most was gnome-term running bash. Bash is also the only Linux app I really miss on Windows: I could automate pretty much anything, could do pretty much anything, and didn't need someone write a wizard to do basic stuff.

      Alternatively, GUIs need to move beyond their current state to actually allow complex operations. As is, they usually just get in the way.

      One last thing: Ubuntu, why did you name "download and install new software" to "Synaptic package manager"? I mean, seriously, WTF? Are you trying to make it difficult for newbies to figure out what it does? Or maybe you figured it would appeal to neurosurgeons?

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    4. Re:TFA should be tagged informative by Aboroth · · Score: 1

      Just the idea of the software center like ubuntu's goes miles ahead for those who are new to computers

      Ubuntu is streets ahead in general.

    5. Re:TFA should be tagged informative by LWATCDR · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Nope your wrong.
      I use Open Office but it really isn't all that much like the current version of Word.
      Calc has real issues compared to Excel.
      For the Price OO is really very good but it isn't Office.
      Also some people don't want to have to "figure it out" they just want to get the job done.
      So, no you are wrong.

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    6. Re:TFA should be tagged informative by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      The average user needs to know two things things about word processing with OpenOffice. 1. They may need to save in .doc format when exchanging files with others using Microsoft Office and two 2. They really should send .pdf and not .doc in the first place where those using it are not editing the file as it is the only format that can open on 99.8% of peoples computers

    7. Re:TFA should be tagged informative by whisper_jeff · · Score: 1

      Windows is good to newbies because they can get help more easily from friends, but it is not easier to use than Ubuntu.

      Um, that's exactly why it's easier to use. Don't think of you and your circle of friends - think of your parents. When your parents fire up their computer and have a problem and ask a friend or family member, their life is made easier if everyone involved in the conversation is using the same computer system and that is likely to be Windows.

      Understand, I'm a Mac user with Ubuntu on a partition on my Hackintosh MSI Wind. I don't use Windows unless I'm borrowing my GF's laptop. But, to ignore the ease of getting help from family or friends when discussing ease of use is a very big mistake. For new users, the ability to get help is pretty much the single most important thing for them.

    8. Re:TFA should be tagged informative by danieltdp · · Score: 1

      Yeah. If you're new to computers (who is, these days?), you should use a command line. Seriously, you should. There's no more intuitive way to use a computer than typing in commands as text and having it respond in kind, expect perhaps speech recognition. Compared to that a graphical user interface is far harder to use.

      To me it was the same thing, but, the fact that it is true for both of us doesn't make it true for the general audience. Most people I know get things easier on the GUI, because the scan the interface with their eyes and can the all the options.

      --
      -- dnl
    9. Re:TFA should be tagged informative by HeronBlademaster · · Score: 1

      Except my wife hates OpenOffice with a passion (regardless of how I attempt to convince her she'd get used to it rather quickly). It's the number one reason she refuses to switch to Linux, and she's not particularly tech-savvy. (The number two reason is Netflix.)

      I think she'd be very happy with Ubuntu, and I know I'd like it more so I could actually get decent backups of her files without having to use the stupid Windows Scheduler crap and samba... but alas, when the wife says NO, that's that.

    10. Re:TFA should be tagged informative by ljgshkg · · Score: 1
      I think you're missing one thing though.

      For a *normal* computer user (new or not, but especially new ones), they rely on their friends who "know computer" or "know how to use a computer" to teach them or help them.

      And for a normal user, what they need is most often browser, media players, input methods (for all language besides English), and probably a word processor.

      Now, the important point. I'm not normal user, but I see enough normal user that they're just not willing to "try" things that is a little more complex than the simplist sotwares.
      • Browser - fine
      • Media player - fine
      • Media (mp3) tag editor - NOT fine. When editing non English text like Chinese or Japanese which has quite a few diff encoding, there is so far no really good editor that can do the job well. I've tried most if not all the most famous tag editors, none works well. In fact, this is one of the most important thing that force me to get back to Windows.
      • Input method - depends if your language have good and intuitive input program on Linux.
      • Word processing - No, Openoffice is not fine for general users. Yes, it's not that complex, but no, it's slower, it doesn't look as good, and users does not know it as good as they know Microsoft Word (although most does not know MSWord very well neither)

      So basically, yes, the "OS" of Windows is not really easier than Ubuntu (or should I say, GNOME on Linux?). But application is a big problem still. If we really want to convince people to use Linux, ensure Linux has media tools (music player, media tag editor) that works as good as those best/most-common ones on Windows first.

      OpenOffice is actually lesser a problem compare to the above one.

    11. Re:TFA should be tagged informative by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nope your wrong.

      Actually, you're wrong!

    12. Re:TFA should be tagged informative by the_womble · · Score: 1

      The typical user would not notice the difference. Try it out on a few naive users.

    13. Re:TFA should be tagged informative by the_womble · · Score: 1

      OO Write is very like the previous version of Word, so easier for many users than the current version of Word itself.

      Calc has some shortcomings for very large spreadsheets. According to my very large spread sheet that is .01 percent of users. Another 0.9% do small spreadsheets, and the other 99% use it for tabulating data.

    14. Re:TFA should be tagged informative by RobDude · · Score: 1

      I really think most computer users (at least, novice level users) would totally disagree with you.

      The problem with command lines is that you need to know what commands you can enter. There is absolutely nothing intuitive about knowing names of commands or what the various /a /b /c flags are going to do. It's not easily discoverable, in it's own right.

      With a GUI, it's much easier to see what the designers/developers have expected you to do in the given context.

      Here's an example....someone gives you a CD with a bunch of pictures from their vacation. You insert it into the CD-ROM drive.

      In the GUI - you see a window pop-up with a bunch of suggestions for what you might want to do. One of those options says, 'View Pictures as Slideshow' and you think, 'Hey - that sounds good!' so you click it. A few seconds later, a window pops up with the first picture and some buttons down at the bottom. You recognize many of the buttons from your VCR and know that the 'next' button will take you to the next picture. There are some funky buttons you don't recognize, but if you mouse over them, it tells you what they do. 'Rotate image' - as an example. Now you know how to rotate the image.

      In the command line, you insert a CD-ROM and nothing happens.

      You know you have to 'tell the computer' what to do; but you don't know how to do that. You can use the 'help' tool or whatever, but then you are searching by keywords and without knowing what the important keywords are, you might not find it.

    15. Re:TFA should be tagged informative by Lumpy · · Score: 1

      we dont use office here at work. everyone is forced to use Open office.

      there was whining for 1 week. now there is zero problems. Open Office.org is 100% useable in a office environment and yes we deal with customers and vendors that use MS office. No problems at all.

      --
      Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    16. Re:TFA should be tagged informative by Yvanhoe · · Score: 1

      Well, it should hurt Windows when the consumer wants Word and realize it doesn't come with Windows. And it should really hurt windows when a grand-dad like mine wants to install something, must download it, retrieve it, install it by clicking on randome buttons guessing answers. With Ubuntu, you have to learn once how to install a software, and then it is all the same.

      --
      The Wise adapts himself to the world. The Fool adapts the world to himself. Therefore, all progress depends on the Fool.
    17. Re:TFA should be tagged informative by danieltdp · · Score: 1

      I did. Thats the problem... Things get complicated when they save on odt format, or when the look for thing they know exists in word on a specific place, etc.

      --
      -- dnl
    18. Re:TFA should be tagged informative by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, you are wrong. I never noticed any advantage of MS Excel over OOCalc. In fact, MS Word has some serious issues and owes me days of work lost in a blip.

    19. Re:TFA should be tagged informative by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

      I find calc painfully slow. so slow that I installed gnumeric to do some of the small stuff on my system.

      You are right about what I like to call the abuse of spreadsheets. Way to many spreadsheets are really databases or what is worse lists!

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    20. Re:TFA should be tagged informative by jgtg32a · · Score: 1

      I take it you missed his sig

    21. Re:TFA should be tagged informative by StuartHankins · · Score: 3, Informative
      Agreed. I have a license for MS Office XP and there are only a few things I use it for:
      • Some of the meeting requests from newer versions of Exchange don't send an ICS file (so they can't be accepted in Thunderbird / Lightning). I use Exchange webmail for these.
      • Sometimes I need to open a file which uses macros / crosstabs and links.
      • Calc has poor trendline capabilities for charting.

      That's about it. OO Write has been far superior to Word on long technical documentation (doesn't crash, isn't slow, TOC entries are simple, styles are sane). OO Calc is quicker and easier at inserting large amounts of data from text / delimited files. OO Calc and Write can open MS Office 2007 files but MS Office XP and 2003 can't. We have the MS Office "converter" installed on everyone's machine for those 2007 / 2010 documents, and it gives poor results and is the source of a lot of headaches for my department to support.

      And then there's the usability issue (at least for me) -- I've been using office apps since GEOS, so Quattro Pro, AmiPro, Lotus 1-2-3, etc menus are familiar to me. I dislike personalized menus and especially dislike the ribbon. I dislike the slow load times of Office in general and the frequent patches / crashes.

    22. Re:TFA should be tagged informative by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      Yeah. If you're new to computers (who is, these days?), you should use a command line. Seriously, you should. There's no more intuitive way to use a computer than typing in commands as text and having it respond in kind, expect perhaps speech recognition.

      $ for i in *.mp3
      do
      mv "$i" "`echo $i | sed 's/^\(.*\) - \(.*).mp3$/\1. Artist - \2.mp3/'`"
      done
      $

      Ah yes. That was very logical for the user. Or perhaps they could use a file renaming utility so they don't have to learn regular expressions. And note how if most command line programs work properly they don't return any output. Respond in like kind? The user has no visual indication of return status.
      I want to know where you get your drugs, but I don't think you have anything else to teach about computing...

      One last thing: Ubuntu, why did you name "download and install new software" to "Synaptic package manager"? I mean, seriously, WTF? Are you trying to make it difficult for newbies to figure out what it does? Or maybe you figured it would appeal to neurosurgeons?

      I think the average user will look at the Applications menu and see at the bottom "Add/Remove Applications" before they click on the Administration menu and find Synaptic Package Manager. That will get them through all their basic needs. By the time they are ready for Synaptic they will know how to find it. It is explained in the documentation, which any user who needs applications which you can't find from the add/remove option in the Applications menu can probably find.

      You are filled with FUD. Why explode and leak? Collapse into a singularity and spare us.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    23. Re:TFA should be tagged informative by danieltdp · · Score: 1

      Just to make sure I am not misinterpreted, I will repeat myself: I use OpenOffice both on Linux and Windows and like it a lot. Mas MS Office has a huge amount of resources that OpenOffice still lacks. I suffer drawind on slides, trying to do colaborative work on ooWriter, making crossreferences, using calc for math, etc, etc.

      In short: OpenOffice is very good, but unfortunately, MS Office is better. Many people don't need this extra, but a lot of them will the confused. At least IMO

      --
      -- dnl
    24. Re:TFA should be tagged informative by Dutch+Gun · · Score: 1

      clicking on randome buttons guessing answers

      I've had pretty good luck installing most Windows programs by clicking on the buttons that say "Next" in succession, followed by the button that says "Finish". I can see where clicking on random buttons might cause problems when installing software.

      --
      Irony: Agile development has too much intertia to be abandoned now.
    25. Re:TFA should be tagged informative by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      >Also some people don't want to have to "figure it out" they just want to get the job done.

      Couldn't agree with you more. Let's look at an example...
      * I want an interest rate calculator

      Windows
      1. Go to Google ->>> what's google?
      2. Search for "interest rate calculator" ->>>> how do I search? where?
      3. Search through all of the results until you find a free one ->>> what's a free one, how do I search it? If I get so many hits, which one can I trust?
      4. Download the one you found ->>> what's download? where do I download? what's this .rar thing? How do I run it?
      5. Install Winrar ->>> what's winrar? where do I get it? How do I install it? How do I run it?
      6. Extract the download ->>>> what???
      7. Run the installer ->>> what???
      8. Now navigate your windows menus. The program is most probably installed under, um.... Markosoft... yeah, that's it ---> What???
      9. If you want to update the program, go back to step 4

      Ok, let's look at Ubuntu
      1. Go to the Settings menu and select package manager ->>> what the hell is that?
      2. Type calculator into the search box
      3. Select interest rate calculator and install
      4. Look under Applications menu (business), it will be installed, setup and configured ready to go

      I see what you mean about easy to use....
      AC
      PS The above was based on many, many, many real-world examples.

    26. Re:TFA should be tagged informative by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I can tell you use MS Word: the grammar checker has prevented you from understanding that you should have said "you're" and not "your." Further, the UI changes from Office 2003 to Office 2007 have forced many more people to "figure it out" when attempting to accomplish something basic than OpenOffice's relatively similar UI (compared to Office 2007) has.

    27. Re:TFA should be tagged informative by EETech1 · · Score: 1

      Besides that, the "average" Dell user most likely had Microsoft WORKS installed on their system, and either has to cough up more $ to activate their MS Office trial version, or find another solution elsewhere (OO or TPB).

    28. Re:TFA should be tagged informative by CronoCloud · · Score: 1

      Funny thing is, as a "home computer user", on Windows I'd prefer Works to Office any day. It loads faster, it's easier to use, it doesn't have a bajillion features I'd never use and it doesn't crash. But I run Linux so I'm stuck with "designed for professional office users" OO, though Abiword is a good replacement for Works word processor.

    29. Re:TFA should be tagged informative by DarwinSurvivor · · Score: 1

      I'm 100% sure if you took as user that had only used MS Word up to the pre-2007 version and stuck them in front of a computer with MS 2007 (or higher) and OpenOffice, they would think that OpenOffice was the microsoft one.

      Believe it or not, but a lot of people are still using the older versions of MS Office.

    30. Re:TFA should be tagged informative by mjwx · · Score: 1

      I use Open Office but it really isn't all that much like the current version of Word.

      This is meaningless. I use Open Office but it really isn't all that much like a kick in the teeth. However what it does do is open and edit documents.

      Calc has real issues compared to Excel.

      Could you elaborate. Are we talking about functions that less the 1% of users will actually use. I use for Calc for budgeting a lot and have never encountered any issues, some things like multiplying hours I've found easier on Calc as MS Excel keeps changing it to the time format.

      For the Price OO is really very good but it isn't Office.

      Once again, this isn't really informative. Cold you elaborate.

      Also some people don't want to have to "figure it out" they just want to get the job done.

      If I had a dollar for every time I've been asked "how do I do this in Excel" I could retire in a few years, If I had another dollar for every time I've googled "Excel [version] how to [perform some function]" I could have retired by 25. You clearly don't realise how much "figuring out" is done with Excel but people just accept it because it's Excel. The only way this point is valid is for the few people who have completely memorised Excel and with those people they have to re-learn it every time MS changes the interface.

      --
      Calling someone a "hater" only means you can not rationally rebut their argument.
    31. Re:TFA should be tagged informative by zaivala · · Score: 1

      I would further state that UbuntuForums.org is much more helpful than any single site you can find about Windows. I agree that a new user would be as likely to enjoy Ubuntu as Windows, but it would be harder to explain to them why this or that download from the Internet doesn't work on their Ubuntu system... and I still submit that OpenOffice.org is NOT as good as MSWord, dammit. I wish it were (being a professional editor who has had several files totally dicked up by OOo).

    32. Re:TFA should be tagged informative by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Howdy,

      I use OOo Drawing quite often for my work, but I agree 100% with GP when on the fact that Calc is a big pile of shit. If you want a free usable spreadsheet then GNUmeric is the way to go, otherwise Excel is years light ahead of all the other alternatives.

    33. Re:TFA should be tagged informative by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Calc has real issues compared to Excel.

      Excel has real issues compared to Gnumerics and OOO Calc.

      The most important thing with an application made for making calculations is that it make correct calculations. Everything else, including user friendlyness, is of minor importance.

      I've earned big(*) bucks on the stock market because I'm good at spotting Excel miscalculations.

      Every time I spot a typical Excel error in a publication (be it a financial report, an investor analysis from a bank, an article in a newspaper, TV or any other media that reports to enough of the right kind of computer/mathematics/statistics incompetent suckers (i.e. most people)), my heart starts to flicker because half the time that means I get 4-20 times my money in a short time investment with an extremely smal risk.

      (*) I don't have that much money to invest to start with, so it isn't BIG bucks as in millions of dollars, just enough for me to afford some everyday luxuries.

    34. Re:TFA should be tagged informative by danieltdp · · Score: 1

      I agree 100% with you! MS departed from its original GUI and a lot of people went crazy trying to figure out even how to print their documents

      --
      -- dnl
    35. Re:TFA should be tagged informative by danieltdp · · Score: 1

      But cross references are a pain in the ass on OpenOffice. MS Word treats every title as a target for cross reference and OO forces you to click on that title, say it is a candidate for cf and the give it a freakin label.

      Besides, there is the fantastic revision control on Word. OO must implement it! If I could only contribute, I would gladly dive on the subject

      For the rest, OO is up to par.

      --
      -- dnl
    36. Re:TFA should be tagged informative by jez9999 · · Score: 1

      How is OpenOffice these days for opening/saving files in MS Office formats like .docx? That's the primary problem with not using Office for me, and yes, it's Microsoft's fault but unfortunately it's one we have to put up with.

    37. Re:TFA should be tagged informative by LinuxIsGarbage · · Score: 1

      So you're comparing the latest version of Open Office to a version of MS Office at least 7-8 years old. I've found Office 2007 rock stable, and the only slowdowns are usually caused by overbearing AV plugins. Open office on the other hand I've found takes at least twice as long to open, and uses 5x more RAM just sitting there with nothing open.

    38. Re:TFA should be tagged informative by LinuxIsGarbage · · Score: 1

      I assume you mean OO Write is like Word 2003, which isn't the previous version, but two versions ago (office 2010 is now out). The version released 7 years ago, and superseded three and a half years ago.

    39. Re:TFA should be tagged informative by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

      The biggest problem with Calc for me is that it is very slow. GNUmeric is much faster as is Excel.

      To be honest I am an OO.org user. And honestly I do agree that Write is good enough for about 90% of all the people that need a word processor.
      However I feel Abiword also fits that description and is faster and a much smaller download. It really should get more love.

      OO.org Calc is probably good enough for about 70% of the users but it has some real performance issues! OO.org really needs to work on CALC to get it past "you can use it" to "you will want to use it".
      The database part and have not used and I have not used Access in a long time so I have no real opinion.
      The presentation and drawing programs are also not anything I use.

      As I said for the price it really is great and I use it all the time but Calc is weak.

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    40. Re:TFA should be tagged informative by StuartHankins · · Score: 1

      At the time of my decision to move to OO, Office XP was the current version. Since that time I have not upgraded Office, that's true. The employees we've given Office 2007 to report issues and I see any emailed requests (I'm not front-line support so I don't take calls or answer help desk voicemails).

      Why would I spend company money to upgrade when the current solution works fine for my needs?

    41. Re:TFA should be tagged informative by Jake+Griffin · · Score: 1

      Well, then I would suggest writing your posts in MS Word and performing a Spelling and Grammar check before submitting them. kthanksbye.

      --
      SIG FAULT: Post index out of bounds.
    42. Re:TFA should be tagged informative by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Huh. Getting the job done. That's why I use OO instead of Office 2007.

    43. Re:TFA should be tagged informative by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I assume you mean OO Write is like Word 2003, which isn't the previous version, but two versions ago (office 2010 is now out). The version released 7 years ago, and superseded three and a half years ago.

      On my workstation I have the latest OpenOffice.org and Office 2000. They fulfill my needs for office-ish programs nicely.

      Are you one of those people who must always have the latest of everything, since anything older is by definition obsolete and worthless? Then I've got news for you: You're getting older, and you'll be considered obsolete very soon. In fact, I'd consider you obsolete already, just based on that apparent opinion of yours. It's very 90-ish.

      Or in just one word: *yawn*

    44. Re:TFA should be tagged informative by mjwx · · Score: 1

      The presentation and drawing programs are also not anything I use.

      I'll concede here, these are crap. But the world really could use less powerpoint.

      OO.o's failure to take any marketshare is primarily a failure of marketing. The software is good enough for 90% of users, specialised users like accountants and engineers who have massive equations with many dependencies may still need something else but they aren't the bulk of the MS Office market.

      --
      Calling someone a "hater" only means you can not rationally rebut their argument.
    45. Re:TFA should be tagged informative by danieltdp · · Score: 1

      Another option is just be reborn American or British. I would guess you are proficient on a couple of foreign languages, heh?

      BTW, the Internet don't run only on your country

      kisses from Brazil

      --
      -- dnl
  13. New to computers by gorzek · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I would argue with the "new to using computers" bullet. If you're new to computing, exactly why would it be easier to learn Windows than Ubuntu? Both have their arcane peculiarities and unique paradigms you'd have to get accustomed to.

    Hell, if you are totally new to computers and have no interest in learning much of anything about how they work, I'd suggest getting a Mac. Then you need never worry yourself about the internals, it "just works," as they say.

    I say this as someone who doesn't use a Mac. Apple built their reputation on being idiot-proof, and as far as I can tell, they live up.

    1. Re:New to computers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      I say this as someone who doesn't use a Mac. Apple built their reputation on being idiot-proof, and as far as I can tell, they live up.

      as someone who does own a mac, it's more like a mac is a sealed ziploc bag full of dog poo, and the alternatives are flaming paper bags of dog poo.

      neither one is idiot-proof.

    2. Re:New to computers by bsDaemon · · Score: 4, Insightful

      If you're new to using computers, chances are you don't have a lot of highly technical friends -- but they'll probably have some familiarity with Windows, so you can ask them for help. The new user is more likely to go to the store and buy Encarta on CD, and when they take it home and it doesn't work in Linux, then they're going to be confused and/or pissed off. There is more to "using a computer" than hitting keys and clicking mice, and that's something that often gets lost in these discussions. When your issue is wifi compatability, how are you going to debug your issue without familiarity with A) web search, and B) at least some idea of what question you need to be searching for to get relevant information. The barrier to entry is a lot lower for J Random User who just uses Windows like "everyone else" than the guy who wants to be different for some, probably misguided, reason.

    3. Re:New to computers by gorzek · · Score: 1

      I'll take your word for it! I've just known a lot of Mac users, and they aren't very technical people. They seem to have a much lower level of frustration than the non-technical Windows users I deal with. Whether that's up to the platform or the individual person, I don't know. The Mac users just seem to be hassled less, overall, by the quirks of their platform.

    4. Re:New to computers by papasui · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Point #1 The thing about using linux (even kidified linux), is that it's going to be harder to find the answer to how you do something that's not obvious to a novice user. It's pretty easy to find someone that can walk you through a couple basic things on Windows because they poses the lion's share of the market. You might get lucky and find someone familiar with linux but there's a lot fewer of them out there. Point #2 With a Windows system you can go to Wal-mart and buy a copy of most current software titles. Linux not so much, sure there's resipositories which applications that do about the same thing as some Windows counter-part but when someone says you need 'Microsoft Word' to a new person they may not associate 'Open Office' as being the same sort of program. I'm not saying a new user couldn't be sucessful with Linux but they certainly would have some challenges ahead of them.

    5. Re:New to computers by nine-times · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Hell, if you are totally new to computers and have no interest in learning much of anything about how they work, I'd suggest getting a Mac. Then you need never worry yourself about the internals, it "just works," as they say.

      Somehow I'm not surprised that Dell doesn't offer that advice.

    6. Re:New to computers by elrous0 · · Score: 1

      "New to computers" is probably their euphemism for "stupid." Stupid people would benefit from Linux's virus resistance, no doubt. But they're also going to be the kind of people who won't understand why their new computer won't run the software they just bought at Best Buy. So it could be argued either way.

      Personally, I wish stupid people would just stay away from computers and the internet altogether.

      --
      SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
    7. Re:New to computers by Late+Adopter · · Score: 1

      If you are new to computers, you don't know what you need, and there are good odds that you may need MS Office or Outlook. Yes, that's listed as a previous bullet point, but if you're new to computers you might literally be too ignorant to understand that does or will apply to you.

    8. Re:New to computers by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      Which is why I want them to go out and buy iPads. A noob that wants to stay a noob could inconvenience me with a Windows 7 box^Ht, but he or she is a lot less dangerous with an iPad.

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
    9. Re:New to computers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, but unfortunately even if all the stupid people left the internet, there'd still be a problem with pretentious cunts like you.

    10. Re:New to computers by besalope · · Score: 2, Informative

      Not the Mac user's I've had to do remote support with through GoToAssist.

    11. Re:New to computers by Kijori · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I would argue with the "new to using computers" bullet. If you're new to computing, exactly why would it be easier to learn Windows than Ubuntu? Both have their arcane peculiarities and unique paradigms you'd have to get accustomed to.

      There are three reasons that jump out at me as an Ubuntu user since 2006.

      Firstly, Ubuntu users are generally assumed to be computer-literate and to have deliberately chosen Ubuntu, which implies that they know the ins and outs of Linux distributions and technologies. This leads to help files that are unintelligible to anyone who doesn't know a thing about Linux - amarok is "a qt media player for KDE", for example, and if you want to install a new chess program you can choose between "X11" and "Gnome" versions. (what?) Similarly, help files and forums have people running shell commands and editing configuration files - that's just voodoo to a totally new computer user, and if nothing else ingraining a "just run whatever the forum tells you as administrator" mindset is not good. All of this is ok if the users are knowledgeable - but these ones aren't.

      Secondly, people who don't know a lot about computers are the ones that really need shrinkwrap software to work for them. They're the ones who, not realising that there's a significant difference (a computer's a computer, right?) will be disappointed when nothing happens when they put the disc in.

      Thirdly, if you've never used a computer before then you're going to have some problems. When you ring up tech support for the program you bought, or ask your friend or colleague for help, you don't want the answer to be "what's Ubuntu?". Everyone knows someone who is familiar with Windows, and most towns have an evening class to teach totally new users. Not many people who've never used a computer before know any Linux geeks.

    12. Re:New to computers by Cwix · · Score: 1
      --
      You are entitled to your own opinions, not your own facts.
    13. Re:New to computers by irid77 · · Score: 2, Funny

      Encarta? Sadly, it's no more. Here's a good place to read about it:

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Encarta

    14. Re:New to computers by elrous0 · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I'm a pretty tech savvy user and even I had trouble with Linux when I converted one of my machines over to Ubuntu a while back (I finally just gave up). The documentation is absolutely horrid. Without a good understanding of how Linux in general and Ubuntu in particular does things, it seems like a real chore to do even the simplest thing (I never could get it to recognize dual monitors or get the right screen resolution). And one of the worst things for me was dealing with all the distros and UI's out there and even trying to decide if a given piece of Linux software would work for me. I'm still not clear on some of it. Will KDE software run on gnome? Will gnome software run on KDE? Is the difference just cosmetic? Will a given piece of software run on all distros, or only some? Is the installation different for each distro?

      I get headaches even remembering it.

      --
      SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
    15. Re:New to computers by mcgrew · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Point #1 The thing about using linux (even kidified linux), is that it's going to be harder to find the answer to how you do something that's not obvious to a novice user.

      You've GOT to be kidding. Where do you get answers to Windows problems?? Every time I go to Windows help I get "help" from the marketing department. If a new user is running Linux, they've got somebody who knows the OS that installed it for them; no novice is going to install any OS.

    16. Re:New to computers by houghi · · Score: 1

      New to computers? That would mean either the older generation, or people living in places where nobody has a computer.
      If they decide to buy a computer, they will go into a store and buy one with the OS pre-installed. So they will get either a MAC, but more likely a Windows PC.

      The majority of people is not interested in computers abd even less in the CSS/OSS discussion. They want to browse the "Internet", email friends and family and video-phone their grandchildren, or any other social contact that exists.

      So even if Linux or even Nac is technically better, they will end up buying a Windows machine. Debugging is done by going back to the store. And the advice the neighbor kid gives them is "It is normal that computers get slower over time. Just re-install it."

      1 billion lemmings can't be wrong.

      In the end what Linux promoters try to do is make a technical solution (Easier to install both the OS and software, security) for a social (Marketing) problem. Also people do not like to be called dumb. "You run Windows? That is dumb, because ...". People will then start to justify it by any means. (OK, perhaps not dumb, but certainly wrong.)

      --
      Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.
    17. Re:New to computers by rduke15 · · Score: 1

      New to computers??? But who on earth would be new to computers in 2010? Old people who didn't start using computers 10 years ago are not going to change their mind now that they are 10 years older. So they are not about to be "new to computers". That leaves a few exceptions, and small children...

      The days of this "new to computers" concept are over, as are the days of Netscape and Internet Explorer 4.

      Apart from that, I indeed agree that Macs are usually a good choice for most people who don't know much about computers. At least, all these .exe files they will click on in attachments or from the Internet will do no harm. For now. I'm afraid this is about to change quickly.

    18. Re:New to computers by bsDaemon · · Score: 1

      I think a lot of it stems from the fact that GNU and the FSF are socio-political in nature, and happen to be involved with technology almost as an aside. Your UID is low enough you should remember that Gnome was started because KDE didn't meet the definition of "free software" due to Qt's licensing. Years later, the KDE/Qt issue has pretty much been resolved, yet there are such deep fissures the old days, that it's just ridiculous. But that's the same mentality of "Widows is bad, you should use Linux" or "Microsoft is evil, you should use Linux." Most people don't want or need to be using Linux and it's asinine to continue to push it on them. If you have valid technical reasons, then Linux or BSD are great. If you're just trying to "stick it to the man," then there are likely much better uses of your time and effort.

    19. Re:New to computers by steelfood · · Score: 1

      Do a search (on Google or your engine of choice) for "word on wine".

      One of the top results is a thread on the Ubuntu forums asking whether MS Word works via Wine. The majority of the responses fall into: "Why use MS Office when you can use OpenOffice?" Only a few informative posts actually answer the question with experiences on using MS Word through Wine.

      If that's the kind of support people get from the community, then it's no wonder Linux can't gain desktop mindshare.

      I mean, nobody even thinks of saying, "Why use OpenOffice when you can use MS Office" when people ask how to install OpenOffice on Windows.

      Support is abysmal for Linux, not because of ease (or lack thereof) of use or marketshare, but because the advanced users whom novices will go to for help will try to to push an agenda on the novice. And nobody likes having somebody else's agenda pushed on them. Windows power users, however will advocate free open source, free closed source, or non-free closed source depending on the users' needs and what can satisfy those needs the best. There are still a few Microsoft fanboys left, but as Microsoft doesn't have all the solutions to every problem, they're not stuck in the "MS or bust" mindset that the FOSS users are.

      --
      "If a nation expects to be ignorant and free in a state of civilization, it expects what never was and never will be."
    20. Re:New to computers by drooling-dog · · Score: 1

      With a Windows system you can go to Wal-mart and buy a copy of most current software titles.

      Well, you've got me there. As a Linux user I haven't had to go to WalMart (or anywhere else) to buy a copy of a current software title in about 15 years now. Sure do miss those good old days...

    21. Re:New to computers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My dad is over 60, several years ago I got tired of fixing malware and virus problems on his computer. I am a Mac user and ideally I wanted him to use a Mac because I consider it more userfriendly and doesn't have virus and malware problems. He didn't want to spend the money however. So decided to give Ubuntu a try. A few hiccups the first days. But after that it worked wonderfully both for me and him. I don't really have any more support calls. I am a software architect but I also happen to be in charge of usability testing at work, and looking at Windows and Ubuntu from a usability point of view I can't see Windows having any edge anymore.

      >It's pretty easy to find someone that can walk you through a couple basic things on Windows because they poses the lion's share of the market. You might >get lucky and find someone familiar with linux but there's a lot fewer of them out there.

      True, but if the person they happen to use for tech help happens to be a linux user then your argument is reversed. Never mind that those people who often end up doing tech support for friends likely don't have the same OS preference distribution as the population as a whole. Among tech professionals Windows is not as dominating as it is in the population as a whole.

      > Point #2 With a Windows system you can go to Wal-mart and buy a copy of most current software titles. Linux not so much, sure there's resipositories >which applications that do about the same thing as some Windows counter-part but when someone says you need 'Microsoft Word' to a new person> they may not associate 'Open Office' as being the same sort of program. I'm not saying a new user couldn't be sucessful with Linux but they certainly would have some challenges ahead of them.

      Depends. Mom and pop kind of users don't really go and buy software. And besides purchasing of any kind of digital goods is increasingly happening online. I would wager it is a lot easier to to find and install software on Ubuntu than on Windows. Sure you need to tell them about alternatives to Word. But it is not a big obstacle.

      Windows is more suitable for e.g. teenagers who are a bit more competent and install a lot of hardware and software themselves and play games. If you are a bit more advance users and want to use things like photoshop then sure Windows is better. But if all you do is write email, browse, simple photo management, write documents etc then Ubuntu is no more difficult to use than Windows. I would say it is easier once the system is setup. The whole malware, spyware, virus kind of thing is really confusing to newbies. A lot more confusion is caused by that than by switching to Open Office.

    22. Re:New to computers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're not as saavy as you think if you couldnt figure out these questions. Google is readily available to answer any of these. Bow before the power of google.

    23. Re:New to computers by selven · · Score: 1

      There is even a school of thought that the command line is easier for new computer users. It's very hard to judge what life is like for a new computer user when you (and most other people around you) are already experienced with Windows.

    24. Re:New to computers by jmorris42 · · Score: 1

      > you should remember that Gnome was started because KDE didn't meet the definition of "free software" due to Qt's licensing.

      It wasn't an obscure technical thing, it just wasn't Free by any stretch of the word, period. But there probably won't be a merge to one desktop anytime soon because the two developed two different philosophies as to what a graphical desktop should be and how the internals should work. KDE wants to look like Windows while having OO/Qt based guts. GNOME wants to look like a Mac and import it's "Steve knows best and YOU are an idiot" design philosophy while having more Windows like plumbing, right down to making everything internal as complex and user hostile (Gconf2 anyone?) as possible. It is good we have both of those and the small fry all existing, furiously evolving and competing for hearts and minds. In the end we will get better tech.

      Over the last decade we have witnessed the Free Desktop come from behind and achieve rough parity with the best efforts of Win/Mac. Now we are ready to talk about world domination.

      > Most people don't want or need to be using Linux and it's asinine to continue to push it on them.

      So help me understand you disfunction. It is perfectly OK for Microsoft to, by illegal means even, expend great effort to push their inferior but more widely deployed product but it is somehow wrong for us to promote our 100% Free alternative. Why?

      Bring a new new user up on Linux and they really can't use Windows. It really is that simple, I have witnessed it. It is all about what you know and having problems with the 'different.'

      > Most people don't want or need to be using Linux and it's asinine to continue to push it on them.

      Most people don't want or need to be using Windows and it's asinine to continue to push it on them. Unless you enjoy helping your friends and relatives clean the malware off every few months as a way to have a reason to interact with people or something, then I guess it might be understandable. Windows is twenty years old now and it ain't likely to get better next time anymore than it got fixed any of the other times Microsoft promised "the next version won't be a roach motel." Really, people are spending BILLIONS on licensing Windows, Office, etc. then spending BILLIONS more on various malware scanning/cleaning programs then spending BILLIONS more to clean up the damage when those defenses fail. Explain why that isn't insane?

      --
      Democrat delenda est
    25. Re:New to computers by aztektum · · Score: 1

      Point #1: Calling it "kidified" Linux makes you look like a shit head.

      --
      :: aztek ::
      No sig for you!!
    26. Re:New to computers by WarlockD · · Score: 1

      No it isn't. I know your trolling, but just typing in "gnome vs KDE" in Google. You get everything from comparing UI interfaces to the programing standards. It goes back YEARS and there is no clear winner. Ubuntu works great when it does, but if you need some odd driver that someone put a .patch file out for, you better be good a goggle searches.

      Hardware companies are at Microsoft's beck and call but linux is lucky to get a guy to write a driver for the pos Realtek 8159. Mo matter how good Google is, unless you find that right discussion group or form you might never get that wifi card to work.

      PS - I still don't know the answer to the Gnome vs KDE. I gave up and just install cli and webadmin on my servers:P

    27. Re:New to computers by foxylad · · Score: 1
      When you get over your headache, the answers are...
      • Yes, you can run KDE apps on Gnome. The first time your package manager will have to install the KDE libraries, but this done under the covers.
      • Yes, you can run Gnome apps on KDE. Again, the Gnome libraries will be installed for you the first time.
      • The difference between Gnome and KDE is more than cosmetic. Think back to DOS, where you could run either Windows 3.1 or GEM graphical desktops on it. But in this case they are built to play nicely together, allowing you to run the other's apps for instance.
      • A particular piece of software will depend on various things, such as the directory layout, sound system, etc. If these dependencies are limited, it will probably work on most distributions; if not, you'll see problems if you try installing from source. BUT you rarely end up doing this - I'm a power user (Ubuntu), and I haven't installed a single thing from source this time round - that means no dropping to the shell to type cryptic commands. One of the great advantages of Ubuntu is that when you want some (say) mind-mapping software, you simply open the Ubuntu Software Center, search for "mind map", click on the one(s) you want (there are currently three to choose from), and it downloads and installs. These packages have been configured for Ubuntu, so they "just work".

      As for your problems with dual monitors, how long ago did you try this? I use dual monitors, and haven't had to hack config files for a couple of years now - in particular the latest Ubuntu is very polished, and automatically detects my monitors. Clicking System|Preferences|Monitors lets me arrange monitors where I want them, and to set the resolutions of course. I can say without fear of contradiction that Ubuntu is far easier to install than Windows now. Even those with very esoteric hardware will have more difficulty getting it working under Windows.

      --
      Do as you would be done to.
    28. Re:New to computers by Nemyst · · Score: 1

      Apple also took great care to make their computers be something "else". They never call them PCs. In Average Joe's mind, a Mac is not a PC. A PC with Linux and a PC with Windows, however, is still a PC. Thus, he'll expect his Windows stuff to work out of the box with Linux.

      There's also one point which is often glanced over, but which is a big barrier to entry: drivers. They're mostly caused by big corps not giving a damn about Linux, but they hurt the OS a lot. The number of times I've seen fairly knowledgeable people hack at it for WEEKS to get their wireless network adaptor working is astounding, and that's when they get it working at all. This doesn't affect Dell's computers since obviously they'll check whether their hardware works, but outside of those very rare circumstances where Linux is bundled, you will nearly always run into a compatibility problem at one point in time.

    29. Re:New to computers by Andorin · · Score: 1

      One of the top results is a thread on the Ubuntu forums asking whether MS Word works via Wine. The majority of the responses fall into: "Why use MS Office when you can use OpenOffice?"... If that's the kind of support people get from the community, then it's no wonder Linux can't gain desktop mindshare.

      Yeah, because it's ridiculous that Ubuntu users would suggest a free alternative that runs natively on the system and, for the average user, provides adequate functionality compared to the proprietary, non-native software that requires you to screw around with Wine to run.

      --
      That Anonymous Coward guy is pretty annoying. Can we have the government censor him or something?
    30. Re:New to computers by bsDaemon · · Score: 1

      I don't think it's a "disfunction" [sic] to not actually care what operating system other people are using. It's not my business. I think that's the difference -- I'm not 15 any more, and I don't look at the operating system or hardware choices that I or anyone else make as a political statement.

      I use Mac and Windows at work because the user interface for our product has Mac and Windows clients that I need to test. Our product is built on FreeBSD, but I also have a number of Linux and vanilla FreeBSD servers set up to do stuff. At home I have a MacBook Pro with Windows, FreeBSD and OpenBSD images in VMWare. I also have a PC running FreeBSD as a server in a network test lab.

      I'm sorry if I don't make "software freedom" a top priority. When I was a teenager, yes, my identity was largely tied to "the movement," but in retrospect, yes, I think the difference between "RMS free and free for non-commercial use" is basically a minor technical detail.

    31. Re:New to computers by cpankonien · · Score: 1

      and you really consider yourself "tech-savvy"? wow...have you heard of that thing called google?

    32. Re:New to computers by westlake · · Score: 1

      I'm a pretty tech savvy user and even I had trouble with Linux when I converted one of my machines over to Ubuntu a while back (I finally just gave up)

      True story:

      I decided to try the Ubuntu Windows installer

      "You, too, can download Ubuntu Desktop Edition and run it alongside your current Windows system."

      The installer appeared to hang on a hard drive error. Opening a dialog box that could not be closed or canceled.

      After killing the process in task manager, I searched the Ubuntu site for an answer. No help there.

      On to Google where I spend the better part of an hour tracking down a solution. It seems that the installer treats every card slot and USB device on your system as a hard drive ---scanning and rescanning each port for what seems all eternity.

      The work-around is to click "cancel" until you regain control.

      60 clicks later I first saw daylight.

      20 clicks later I could reboot into Ubuntu.

      But the whole business left me in a sour and unforgiving mood.

    33. Re:New to computers by Draek · · Score: 1

      Will KDE software run on gnome? Will gnome software run on KDE?

      Yes, though simply giving it a try would've answered your question in about two seconds.

      Is the difference just cosmetic?

      Depends on how anal you are about "integration" and "consistency", but if you come from Windows then yes, it's merely cosmetic.

      Will a given piece of software run on all distros, or only some?

      Depends on how anal you are about the meaning of "run". For instance, I can run Paint.NET seamlessly on Windows 7 but need to install the .NET runtime beforehand on XP, can I say I can "run" it in both of them? if so, then yes you can run everything on all distros, and if not then, well, you can't.

      Is the installation different for each distro?

      Obviously. There's absolutely no reason whatsoever to expect any different.

      --
      No problem is insoluble in all conceivable circumstances.
    34. Re:New to computers by tepples · · Score: 1

      They're the ones who, not realising that there's a significant difference (a computer's a computer, right?) will be disappointed when nothing happens when they put the disc in.

      Explain it this way: You can't run Xbox 360 games on a PLAYSTATION 3 console nor vice versa. At least Linux has Wine, so the computer will try to run a Windows app's installer.

    35. Re:New to computers by bkpark · · Score: 1

      I'm a pretty tech savvy user and even I had trouble with Linux when I converted one of my machines over to Ubuntu a while back (I finally just gave up).

      If you consider yourself tech savvy, I'd say you were trying the wrong distro. Try Linux From Scratch. They have wonderful documentation, and at the end of the day (um, may be two or three days), you'll understand much better how your system works. (You probably don't want to actually use that for your system too long; too much maintenance work.)

      If you don't want to take that trouble, yes, you should stick with Windows—Linux's real advantage is in that once you understand your system, you know every part and you can fix those parts when some things go wrong, rather than just having to re-install from scratch every few years or so.

    36. Re:New to computers by displague · · Score: 1

      I've been MS free for over a decade and my parents and brothers for about 3 years. Debian and then Ubuntu.

      Had this page included some illustrative video about what comes preinstalled with each system in a little walkthrough this A or B page may have been more fair. They could also include a primer to cloud services. I think grannies might consider Ubuntu if they saw how well it suits their needs.

      I think the "new user" point makes sense coming from Dell. They sell software and would like to offer consumers the gratification of buying something that will work on their new computer. I think this works both ways. The consumer wants to buy Office, an awesome CPU-munching anti-spyware app (who doesn't), and a handful of games.

      Dell customers who take Ubuntu home will be left holding their discs in their hands. I remember (and worked) at CompUSA when it was possible to buy CorelOffice and Loki games off the shelf. Those days have passed and with todays generation of console, Flash, mobile, and HTML based games ... and OpenOffice, who needs them. People would happily keep their $100-$500 Office dollars if they knew about Google Apps.

      I still have the worst luck picking mid-consumer grade printers off the shelf that work under Linux without hitting the net first. I thought all Brothers were safe and I bought my mom the one that wasn't - now it is a coaster.

      I think any programmer - not just "open source" programmers would benefit from the Ubuntu choice. Did they really have to spotlight the Games menu?

      --
      Marques Johansson
    37. Re:New to computers by jez9999 · · Score: 1

      I actually found Debian easier than Ubuntu... it's straightforward enough to install, but the real difference is that if one of Ubuntu's tacked-on UIs doesn't support something, you tend to get told to go use a Debian tool to do it instead (or editing a config file originating in Debian). Just starting out with Debian makes the whole process easier, and you can actually ask Debian support communities about the Debian OS.

    38. Re:New to computers by elrous0 · · Score: 1

      And it's answers like this that ensure that Linux will never be mainstream.

      --
      SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
    39. Re:New to computers by elrous0 · · Score: 1

      Thanks for the information. This was Ubuntu 7.something (I think probably 2 or 3 years ago). Things may well have changed since then on the monitor front.

      --
      SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
    40. Re:New to computers by elrous0 · · Score: 1

      Yes, but at a certain point I decided is wasn't worth any more effort. If the documentation is so poor that you have to tell people to search on google to understand even the basics, it's time to hire more technical writers.

      --
      SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
    41. Re:New to computers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Umm, hello? We're talking about people buying a computer from Dell with Linux pre-installed - you can't assume they know somebody that knows Linux, they may well just be seeing the difference in price tag.

    42. Re:New to computers by Draek · · Score: 1

      And it's people like you that ensure Windows will never be safer than a wet paper bag.

      --
      No problem is insoluble in all conceivable circumstances.
    43. Re:New to computers by FoolishOwl · · Score: 1

      Microsoft's online support database is pretty good. But if there's no answer there, there's no answer. With a little more digging, you can find Microsoft's official support forums, in which trained professional Microsoft technicians admit they don't understand your problems and can't fix them.

    44. Re:New to computers by katana_steel · · Score: 1

      Similarly, help files and forums have people running shell commands and editing configuration files - that's just voodoo to a totally new computer user, and if nothing else ingraining a "just run whatever the forum tells you as administrator" mindset is not good.

      Likewise, which to my knowledge is still the standard, any newly installed MS Windows system has the primary user setup as Administrator that is similarly a dangerous situation. So how would that be any different?

      At least in ubuntu you have to invoke the judo command, or similarly, to elevate the user. Okay to Windows' defence it now has a bunch of security warning boxes when the user is about to access or change the system.

    45. Re:New to computers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Exactly! Linux-support has never been an issue! Forums and IRC make support really easy. Bugs can be registered. I find the Linux crows far more responsive than the windows users.

    46. Re:New to computers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And it's answers like this that ensure that Linux will never be mainstream.

      Draek is a known and long time troll. You'll notice his 'freaks' list has entries but 'fans' is empty.

      Anyways, don't let trolls change your opinion on an OS. If one asked their technical support questions only on message boards where the trolls live, it wouldn't matter what OS the questions were on, you would get the same reaction.
      Just ignore him/it and move on ;)

      On topic, those are very good points. The whole knowing how the distro does it thing started heavily with Debian, and still continues on for distros that base off Debian such as Ubuntu.

      Once you learn Debians way of doing things, it all sort of fits together and usually makes a whole lot of sense.
      The problem is getting there :/

      Personally I came from a unix background long before moving to Linux, and since that background was BSD I naturally chose slackware as it was the only Linux distro in existance in 1995 that was based on BSD styling. Even with those 10 years under my belt, it took awhile to get used to Debian.
      Once I did, I of course never looked back and still feel it is a superior way of doing things.

      But recently when some friends made similar complaints as yours about the documentation, my first reaction was that it couldn't possibly be that bad, I've never had issues, etc.
      The Ubuntu documentation (at least since 7.x) was horrendous!

      Debian isn't much better, and even *I* had problems finding documentation on setting up an apt repository. I admit that is a rather 'very advanced' thing to do, but apt is the #1 (and #2-9) best thing about Debian based distros, and what makes it so easy to use compared to literally everything else (Be it other OS or even Linux without apt) and is the very thing that put it decades ahead.
      You'd think they would want to write down how to actually use the thing, ya know?

      These days its all about how to ask Google.

      The key search word is "howto" (as one word, no space. done that way specifically due to search engines)

      For google, you put in "howto" followed by the name of the distro, optionally followed by the version, before your search terms.
      90% of the time this finds exactly what is needed. Be sure to NOT include the word "linux". This is implied with "howto" as that is a linux documentation name/term. Not at all intuitive I know ;)

      "Howto ubuntu 10.04 dual monitors" would be an example of the syntax. Doing such a search shows the first page of results about how to do it with the nvidia driver. This info is useful in that you now know which video cards are the easiest to setup this way ;) and now its clear the video card type needs appended.

      Anyways, I know you said you gave up, so the above is probably not relevant anymore. But if you ever feel like giving it another go, hopefully that tidbit will be of much more assistance to you than Draek was, and more help than troll infested message boards in general.

      Good luck, and more importantly have fun!

      (Posting anon due to the new broken moderation system, as Daerik and friends will systematically mod all my recent posts troll otherwise)

  14. Re:Macs by nyctopterus · · Score: 1

    Now there's an original sentiment. Did you sit up all night coming up with that, or was it just spur-of-the-moment brilliance prompted by an unrelated story?

  15. I disagree by 2names · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I set my parents up with an Ubuntu machine. On the desktop are icons for: Solitaire, Google, and Yahoo! Mail. They have not had a problem since I moved them to this setup.

    --
    "I'm just here to regulate funkiness."
    1. Re:I disagree by CannonballHead · · Score: 1

      Last time I tried my parents on Linux (Ubuntu, openSuSE), I had problems with (1) Flash video, (2) Printing/Scanning with a Canon printer (took a long time of digging to find Linux drivers for it), and (3) Some minor sound glitches.

      It was also actually slower than Windows 7, which was strange and surprised me. Not sure if it was just hardware/driver related.

    2. Re:I disagree by kamukwam · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I set my parents up with an Ubuntu machine. On the desktop are icons for: Solitaire, Google, and Yahoo! Mail. They have not had a problem since I moved them to this setup.

      Ever since I started reading slashdot parents have been used to portray the computer user with no knowledge of computers at all. I wonder for how long this will stay like that. I mean, at some point even slashdot-readers will get children.

    3. Re:I disagree by TyFoN · · Score: 5, Interesting

      My 67 year old father built his own computer and installed hackintosh and kubuntu on it, and he has windows 7 running in a vm in paralells or something. My 92 year old grand mother is skyping with her 102 year old cousin across the pond. Things are changing :)

    4. Re:I disagree by Erikderzweite · · Score: 1

      Then you'll get posts about children who got a Linux PC and have no problems with that installation (in fact, I've seen such posts already).
      Me? I'm still reasonably young and can still use my parents as an example.

    5. Re:I disagree by Jozza+The+Wick · · Score: 1

      Where did you find the Canon drivers? Still no luck finding drivers for the MP 390 scanner...

    6. Re:I disagree by PagosaSam · · Score: 1

      Nope, never happen. Not unless they steal them...

      --
      :q! Oh crap, not again...
    7. Re:I disagree by BCristi · · Score: 0, Troll

      That is nothing! My 92 years old grandfather is watching porn on his Ubuntu laptop that he build himself, My 102 years old grandmother is hosting a site on her Slackware server teaching open-source programmers about the joys of sex and my 7 months old niece is a sysadmin for RedHat. Things are changing indeed!

      --
      2+2=5 for really big values of 2!
    8. Re:I disagree by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      Children aren't going to even be aware that they are running a distinct separate operating system until there is some pseudo-web game that asks them to install a Windows only binary.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    9. Re:I disagree by the_womble · · Score: 2, Insightful

      At which point we become too busy to post much.

    10. Re:I disagree by Mongoose+Disciple · · Score: 1

      Ever since I started reading slashdot parents have been used to portray the computer user with no knowledge of computers at all. I wonder for how long this will stay like that. I mean, at some point even slashdot-readers will get children.

      I think it's always going to be like that, for the most part.

      I mean, yeah, if down the road my kids are posting to slashdot, they can't use their father as an example of someone who's relatively clueless about computers, but they still have a mom. :)

      Some people have jobs that force them to learn about computers (and most of the people I know who are at a computer full-time for work are not in that group), and some people like to figure out computer stuff as a hobby. Most people will remain mostly ignorant, and you know? That's okay. We live in a world full of lots of complex systems and machinery, and no one has the time and interest to dig deeply into all of them, nor should they.

      Or to put it another way, I have family who know a ton about the inner workings of cars and not so much about the inner workings of computers, and I'm the opposite -- and there's nothing wrong with either.

    11. Re:I disagree by afabbro · · Score: 1

      That is nothing! My 92 years old grandfather is watching porn on his Ubuntu laptop that he build himself.

      My 92-year-old grandfather is starring in the porn that your grandfather is watching! He recorded it all on his Altair kit!

      --
      Advice: on VPS providers
    12. Re:I disagree by CannonballHead · · Score: 1

      Mine was an MP something as well. I eventually found out that Canon Australia (canon.com.au) had Linux drivers available and downloaded those.

    13. Re:I disagree by linhares · · Score: 1

      grandson?

    14. Re:I disagree by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      I mean, at some point even slashdot-readers will get children.

      >>insert joke about having to find a girlfriend first

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    15. Re:I disagree by aqk · · Score: 0

      Heh!
      I'm a parent. and almost 70. so far my kids aren't even interested in ubuntu, even though i have set them up to dual boot it.
      In my strange world it seems the parents are geeks, the kids are (non)studiously avoiding this peculiar life style.
      Mind you, they have pretty fast thumbs when it comes to cellphones!

    16. Re:I disagree by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nope, never happen. Not unless they steal them...

      Oh be serious! As long as the Slashdotter had a sufficient income to support two or more people and a lack of a significant criminal record, adoption would be an option as well.;)

  16. Re:Macs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I guess it makes sense you'd feel belligerent and confused - I would be too, if I had your mental capacity (from your "blog"):

    "Have been pretty depressed the last couple of days and not really sure why. It all culminated in me throwing my mouse at the monitor after losing an £800 pot to some fish."

  17. Re:Macs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wow! So there really is an option for me?

    I've never felt so welcomed! *sniff*

  18. They missed gaming by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Which is the best reason to go Windows as your native OS. Frankly, I think people who are interested in open-source programming should also go windows as your Linux instances can easily be hosted in a VM. I don't install anything but games and portable apps on my native windows host. I surf in a vm and support various dev environments of many OSes in vms. If you don't do gaming, you could go Linux native and do windows in a VM.

    1. Re:They missed gaming by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ... but I don't want to do my day-to-day activities in an environment that is so malware-prone. I can't even go out and buy a game for the PC without worrying about what kind of malware it comes packaged with these days. These clowns install everything from hidden device drivers, to unwanted background services, to god knows what else.

      Wine would be a great "jail for games". This way, the evil pigs can install whatever invasive crap they like, and I don't have to worry about it fscking with my system's stability. It can't break out of Wine. What a world we live in, where we can't even trust a game publisher/developer anymore.

  19. Not entirely accurate. by Hamsterdan · · Score: 4, Interesting

    For most users *any* platform will do. Be it, Windows, Linux or OS X.

    Most users will use the computer for Facebook, Twitter, MSN messenger and such. Unless you are a gamer or absolutely need to run a Windows-Only application, ANY OS will be able to get the job done, Windows being the less secure of them for non-techies.

    --
    I've got better things to do tonight than die.
    1. Re:Not entirely accurate. by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

      But almost everybody has at least one "windows only" program they must run.
      That is what keeps Windows on most machines.
      It could be a game, Office, or even iTunes to work with your iphone.

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    2. Re:Not entirely accurate. by 2names · · Score: 1

      Since when is iTunes "Windows Only?"

      --
      "I'm just here to regulate funkiness."
    3. Re:Not entirely accurate. by takowl · · Score: 1

      Most users will use the computer for Facebook, Twitter, MSN messenger and such.

      ...most of the time. But for many users, there'll be that one piece of Windows-only software they need for work, or a cheap printer that doesn't 'just work' on Linux, or a 3G dongle without a Linux driver, or...you get the picture.

      And when they discover that it doesn't work, they're going to complain to Dell. If Dell were to point them in the direction of the FOSS community, they would be sure to receive polite responses and immediate fixes. Or not. At best, they'd get a set of instructions, probably involving the command line, and at worst, they'd get flamed. I use Linux, and I have once installed it for a non-technical friend, but trying to push it to a widespread audience won't help the users, won't help Dell, and certainly won't help Linux.

    4. Re:Not entirely accurate. by CannonballHead · · Score: 1

      Dell doesn't sell many Mac's. That makes iTunes, in this discussion, basically Windows Only.

    5. Re:Not entirely accurate. by 2names · · Score: 1

      Ah, yes, context is important. Sorry 'bout that.

      --
      "I'm just here to regulate funkiness."
    6. Re:Not entirely accurate. by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

      Good point. I was talking about none Mac PCs. So in that context it is.
      iTunes doesn't run under Linux.
      And you missed Office. Office runs on OSX as well but again I was thinking about programs that do not run under Linux.

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    7. Re:Not entirely accurate. by houghi · · Score: 1

      Security is unfortunately not something the average user understands. And if he understands it and asks before his purchase, the answer from the sales person will be "Buy AntiVirus XYZ" as they make money of it and not "Install Linux where I do not get any money and won't see you again to restore your PC."

      --
      Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.
    8. Re:Not entirely accurate. by Teun · · Score: 1

      But almost everybody has at least one "windows only" program they must run.

      Which is totally irrelevant to new computer users.

      And even for those that 'think' they have such a program there usually is a sufficiently similar alternative.

      --
      "The likes of Facebook and WhatsApp are free to those whose privacy is of zero value."
    9. Re:Not entirely accurate. by cbhacking · · Score: 1

      Ironically, your mention of MSN (Live) messenger is one of the reasons you're wrong. Beleive it or not, people do actually use those features of Live Messenger that Pidgin et. al simply don't support. I'm not one of those people, but I do occasionally get a message on Pidgin telling me that my client doesn't support *random thing the other person just tried to do* and that I should download the latest Live Messanger.

      --
      There's no place I could be, since I've found Serenity...
    10. Re:Not entirely accurate. by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

      Really?
      Exactly which one will sync my iPad and allow me to download from the iTunes?
      And where can I get Fallout 3?
      Or Sims 3?
      Quickbooks? And not I do not want to use the online version.
      Oh and sufficiently similar for the end user means EXACTLY the same.
      And how do I install Silverlight so I can get Netflix streaming?
      And what about Video editing? Last time none of the Linux Video editing tools could match what you get for free on Windows.
      Hey I am a Linux fan and user but your full of it.
      Yes if you only want to surf the web and do email Linux is good enough. But it is the little bit's and pieces that are missing that is a real pain.
      For the average user it is easier to get Windows and then install all the great FOSS programs and have access to all the Windows Apps.
      If we could get Intuit and Adobe to support Linux it would help a lot. Then we need game makers. Finally we need a project like Open Office but for Video Editing.

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    11. Re:Not entirely accurate. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think this underestimates most uses and I think thats a big problem.

      I think for absolutely n00b people like grand parents sure, Windows, Linux, Mac - they dont care or know.

      But I think the vast % of people actually buying computers are semi power users. They install iTunes, they install winamp or they install Spybot.

      Installing and uninstalling applications on Linux can be a massive choir. The power to google for anything and install it is powerful. Sure ubuntu has a free style AppStore download process, but turning Linux into an iPhone isnt the solution.

      I'm a power user, but only because once in a blue moon I do something new, and then intuively work it out. I tried for the first time to bridge a computer into mine.

      I went into control panel, store at the screen, highlighted both network cards and went right click. And saw the option Bridge. Id never done that before, didnt know it could be done.

      But if I was designing a computer thats where I would of wanted it to be. But in Linux if you want to do anything bare bones stupid its easy. But anything slightly techie... well pull out the man pages, start posting on forums and expect 50 times more time then you would need to.

  20. Ubuntu screenshot by danieltdp · · Score: 1

    BTW, which version of UNR is shown at Dell's site? It deosn't seem like 10.4. I mean, is it UNR right?

    --
    -- dnl
    1. Re:Ubuntu screenshot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's Dell's own UNR. It can easily be switched off. There are a few additional customizations and inclusions to the base Ubuntu 8.04 that comes installed. All in all it, very stable, but they make it a PITB to upgrade to 10.04.

  21. Clearly, this is Jobs' fault. by bennomatic · · Score: 1

    I don't know how to link it to Antennagate, but the connection's there, I'm sure.

    --
    The CB App. What's your 20?
    1. Re:Clearly, this is Jobs' fault. by CannonballHead · · Score: 1

      I don't know how to link it to Antennagate, but the connection's there, I'm sure.

      Not if you're using an iPhone, it isn't. ;)

    2. Re:Clearly, this is Jobs' fault. by mjwx · · Score: 1

      I don't know how to link it to Antennagate, but the connection's there, I'm sure.

      There is no connection.

      Steve was holding his Iphone4, so he couldn't establish one. If he had been using a Droid there would be no problem.

      --
      Calling someone a "hater" only means you can not rationally rebut their argument.
  22. Re:WINDOWS programs like Microsoft Office and ITun by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    it's clear who the target audience is.

    Brainwashed idiots?

  23. On the positive side by jones_supa · · Score: 3, Informative

    At least Ubuntu gets mentioned and it's not only the classic "Dell recommends Microsoft Windows operating system".

    1. Re:On the positive side by PinkyGigglebrain · · Score: 1

      Your right about that, Dell just has them plastered on all the "customize your computer" pages.

  24. I'm sorry if this comes off as flamebait but... by Cheerio+Boy · · Score: 1, Flamebait

    ...we require hundreds of hours of training (supposedly anyway) to operate a motor vehicle but we require nothing to operate a computer? (Yes I know a computer can't usually kill someone when misused but it still can ruin someone's life.)

    AFAIK there should be a training requirement for operating anything other than a kiosk-mode system. _Especially_ basic security.

    On some level though that's being handled by learning to use computers in the school system so a large amount of this stuff will fall off when the current generation of offspring come to power. (Though you can also argue that since many of them were trained on Windows the 'sins of the past' so to speak will still haunt us.)

    As far as the Dell website is concerned it doesn't even mention Macintosh and regardless of if you love or hate them it's still a glaring omission.

    For my money though things like Mint Linux (an Ubuntu flavor) are easy enough for my mother to use and would go a long way towards having to deal with service calls 5 hours away when she runs into a problem. I wouldn't just have her dump her Windows cold though - a dual boot would likely be first.

    --

    "Bah!" - Dogbert
    1. Re:I'm sorry if this comes off as flamebait but... by Zironic · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Why the heck would they have Macintosh there? They don't sell Macintosh. They do sell computers that run Windows and Ubuntu though.

    2. Re:I'm sorry if this comes off as flamebait but... by Cheerio+Boy · · Score: 1

      See my post above.

      --

      "Bah!" - Dogbert
    3. Re:I'm sorry if this comes off as flamebait but... by nomadic · · Score: 1

      AFAIK there should be a training requirement for operating anything other than a kiosk-mode system

      So you think the government should be able to step in and tell you that you aren't qualified to operate the computer you just bought?

    4. Re:I'm sorry if this comes off as flamebait but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why would Dell mention Macintosh? You can't legally run Mac on a Dell machine (or HP, Acer, etc). If you're on Dell's website looking to get a dell computer, OSX is already not an option.

    5. Re:I'm sorry if this comes off as flamebait but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...we require hundreds of hours of training (supposedly anyway) to operate a motor vehicle but we require nothing to operate a computer? (Yes I know a computer can't usually kill someone when misused but it still can ruin someone's life.)

      AFAIK there should be a training requirement for operating anything other than a kiosk-mode system. _Especially_ basic security.

      Hey, why don't we require hundreds of hours of training to use a pen and paper? That can ruin your life. So can crossing the street - I can't wait to sign up for my walking class!!!

      Or are you just upset because mean people like me say bad things about you on the internet and you want to call the internet police and take away their internet license?

      On some level though that's being handled by learning to use computers in the school system so a large amount of this stuff will fall off when the current generation of offspring come to power. (Though you can also argue that since many of them were trained on Windows the 'sins of the past' so to speak will still haunt us.)

      So why bother talking about it? Do you want to round up all the grandmothers and force them to take Typing Skills 1 and Basic Productivity Software 1 ?

      As far as the Dell website is concerned it doesn't even mention Macintosh and regardless of if you love or hate them it's still a glaring omission.

      Yup. While we're at it, they should recommend SPARC workstations. And because "Blatantly ignoring a competitor cheats the user of a choice from the user's point of view," why don't they make a list comparing all machines from Dell, Asus, Toshiba, HP, etc, arranged by price and specifications. Then, because a grandmother who doesn't know what a GHz is might get confused, they should make a series of informative videos to explain the basic components of a computer.

      For my money though things like Mint Linux (an Ubuntu flavor) are easy enough for my mother to use and would go a long way towards having to deal with service calls 5 hours away when she runs into a problem. I wouldn't just have her dump her Windows cold though - a dual boot would likely be first.

      So because Dell didn't use your pet distro (which is known as Linux Mint, by the way), you're going to preach about how much better it is on an internet forum? A distro that is nothing more than a custom wallpaper/theme plus a checkbox for installing proprietary decoders that are installed anyway whenever you try to play a media file that requires them?

      Yes. I mad.

    6. Re:I'm sorry if this comes off as flamebait but... by Cheerio+Boy · · Score: 1

      When I and hundreds of thousands of other tech/admin/etc. people spend literally months worth of accumulated time every year because people who were never trained in the basics constantly click "Punch the Monkey" or "Click to view the nice greeting card!" or click"Your account is locked please run this application to unlock you account again!" I am forced to admit that yes I'd like some agency to require a license to get on computer systems of any type other than a kiosk.

      More to the point of the other part of your post - without a license they could buy a locked system that has limited functionality until they get their license to allow them to unlock it and buy other unlocked systems.

      Buy an unlocked system for someone else? You lose your license and your systems become locked again.

      It's drastic but people who don't get training are causing a great deal of these problems because they don't know any better and expect the system to "just do what I want without me having to know anything"

      --

      "Bah!" - Dogbert
    7. Re:I'm sorry if this comes off as flamebait but... by CannonballHead · · Score: 1

      How about chainsaws? Hedge trimmers? Clippers? Scissors? Sharp pointy objects? Alcohol? All of those, misused, can cause permanent damage.

      If you start requiring "training" for computer usage, it seems to me that you are not far off to requiring training to use just about anything you pick up at a hardware store.

      Besides... what's the training going to include? Are you going to teach on Windows? Linux? Mac? All three? Okay... which version of Windows? Which version of Linux? KDE or Gnome? What about openSolaris, if is still around? What browser?

      I wouldn't just have her dump her Windows cold though - a dual boot would likely be first.

      I'm sorry, that is not legal. We have determined that dual-booting causes too many problems, and you will be required to remove that setup within 30 days of this notice.

      I sound a bit harsh, sorry. :) I think my point is this: if you value your freedom very much, you probably don't want to go down the path of requiring registration, training, licensing, or whatever simply to use your computer. Your mother would still have problems, even if she did a training thing. Automotive accidents didn't disappear once we started requiring a license to drive them... ;)

    8. Re:I'm sorry if this comes off as flamebait but... by Cheerio+Boy · · Score: 1

      Fine. Whatever. You guys are right and I'm wrong. Were I able to delete the post I would.

      I think I'm just going to lurk from now on and keep my opinions to myself.

      --

      "Bah!" - Dogbert
    9. Re:I'm sorry if this comes off as flamebait but... by houghi · · Score: 1

      Dual boot will most likely end up in the end with always running Windows.

      --
      Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.
    10. Re:I'm sorry if this comes off as flamebait but... by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      Yes I know a computer can't usually kill someone when misused but it still can ruin someone's life

      How are you going to accidentally ruin anyone's life but your own with a computer?

    11. Re:I'm sorry if this comes off as flamebait but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your post above is completely nonsensical to the issues of Macintosh for the Dell website. Regardless of what you may interpret, Dell does not have this website as a public service. It wants to sell you a PC, even if you don't want to use Windows for that PC.

    12. Re:I'm sorry if this comes off as flamebait but... by steelfood · · Score: 1

      Back when motor vehicles first became an industry, there were no laws, no licenses, no tests, no education. It wasn't until the Model T took off, resulting in a lot of cars on the road and a lot of people dying from accidents, that a driver's license became mandatory for drivers.

      Computers is very much still a wild west. Though most of us have been programming them for upwards of 20 years, usage itself didn't really take off until the past ten years.

      Give it some time.

      --
      "If a nation expects to be ignorant and free in a state of civilization, it expects what never was and never will be."
    13. Re:I'm sorry if this comes off as flamebait but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As far as the Dell website is concerned it doesn't even mention Macintosh and regardless of if you love or hate them it's still a glaring omission

      If Apple got rid of the ridiculous restriction that Mac OS is only licensed for use on Apple hardware, then Dell would probably start selling it. Dell don't sell Apple hardware, they sell Dell hardware!

    14. Re:I'm sorry if this comes off as flamebait but... by jmorris42 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      > AFAIK there should be a training requirement for operating anything other than a kiosk-mode system. _Especially_ basic security.

      Not really, this thinking is a result of internalizing the "Microsoft Lie" that all computers (by definition) must be as unreliable and insecure as Windows. Which is forgivable since they have spend Sagans of dollars in subtle campaigns to make this assumption almost universal. But it is indeed a lie. However it is the single most important key to their success. So long as a critical mass believe it they can thrive but should it ever come to be questioned they will fail faster than Enron or Worldcom, two other corporations which became predicated on a lie.

      I admin for a public library. We have had Linux deployed in our patron labs now for twelve years. Other than basic *NIX permissions and recently SELinux support in our current load we give the general public the full unlocked *NIX experience. Individual accounts with NFS homes, totally unrestricted desktops, etc. GCC is available, not that many (one or two have apparently done it) of our patrons use it, but just as a statement that this is FULL user level access. The only additional lockdown needed was adding a script to nuke processes like eggdrop bots remaining active after a user logs off. Care to guess how many security incidents we have had in a dozen years with thirty desktops that see heavy use, including teens who google up ways to get em to do all sorts of things? One, the aforementioned eggdrop bot.

      Care to bet how long a similarly unlocked Windows (or Mac) workstation would last before needing a wipe and reimage? The only responsible course would be to completely reimage between users to stop keyloggers. And that is the difference.

      --
      Democrat delenda est
  25. Ubuntu would be perfect for a new user by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you're new to using computers and don't have family or friends who can "help" then ANY friendly OS/distro is best. You're going to be learning new stuff anyway, so how is learning on Windbloze any different than Ubuntu or Mac.

    Every OS sucks in one way or another anyway. Use the one that sucks least for you. Being virus free for a newbie user sure would have it's benefits.

  26. Is it just me? by MBGMorden · · Score: 1

    Is it just me, or did anyone else get the impression that Dell did Ubuntu a disservice by showing it's screenshot as a smaller image.

    Seriously, check it out:
    http://www1.euro.dell.com/content/topics/segtopic.aspx/windows_or_ubuntu?c=uk&cs=ukdhs1&l=en&s=dhs

    Ubuntu's image is 288x162. Windows is 271x204. A bit narrower, but a lot taller.

    It makes Ubuntu look like the smaller "beginner" or "toy" choice, which is wholly inaccurate IMHO.

    Their reasons are valid: if you're tied to existing Windows apps then sure, go with Windows. Otherwise though, Without legacy baggage, Ubuntu competes quite nicely against Windows or MacOS. Heck the only thing I even remotely needed from Windows was iTunes. I've got an iPod Touch, and dang it, it's the only way to sync it (Linux apps can copy over files, but I've not found anything to truly keep a music collection/podcasts synced up like iTunes). Even that will be going away though once I upgrade my cell phone to an Android model in a few months, at which point iTunes is getting ditched for Banshee.

    --
    "People who think they know everything are very annoying to those of us who do."-Mark Twain
    1. Re:Is it just me? by maxwell+demon · · Score: 1

      Ubuntu's image is 16:9. Windows' image is 4:3. Now 16:9 is clearly the more modern alternative.

      --
      The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
    2. Re:Is it just me? by MBGMorden · · Score: 1

      Still not apples to apples though. I agree that 16:9 is more modern (my work screen is 4:3 with 16:10 at home and at work it drives me bonkers), but in that case both of them should have been shown in the same res, with the same size thumbnail. Even though it has the "better" aspect ratio the Ubuntu screenshot is still perceived as smaller.

      --
      "People who think they know everything are very annoying to those of us who do."-Mark Twain
  27. PIA by COMON$ · · Score: 2, Interesting
    Ubuntu 10 has been a PIA for me. As an experienced administrator I am largely OS agnostic. I learned to program on Solaris and VAXVMS, I owned a Clamshell through college, and in the business world have been working with MS. However like many I am heavy on the Windows side.

    Ubuntu 9 was fine, but it was missing a couple libraries that were dependencies for Fuse 2.8. Not to mention that SMB is broke in 10, the GUI is just awful because it doesn't allow for easy 'run as root'. Want to edit smb.conf, you are SOL unless you go through CLI or create a custom link to your favorite editor. I have no problem going CLI only either, except that in Ubuntu 10 everything has been moved into a slew of *.d directories. As a newbie to 10, where the hell is anything you are looking for? You use the find command and good ol ubuntu leaves out crucial syntax points in their man pages...Often my biggest issue in Ubuntu is not so much that I dont know what I want to do, but rather, I cant find what I want to do. I ahve pretty advanced knowledge of firewalls and routers but WTF do you do when you cannot find the conf file or force it to reload?

    For now I think I am going to be sticking with redhat derivatives...seems to be more support there.

    If ubuntu wants to win over more windows folk, they really really need to fix that dammed GUI, or at the least work on encouraging the community to be more active. I have 3 separate threads asking for help on either iSCSI, SMB, or NFS. Only got 2 hits and they only posted twice before going MIA. You would think that Ubuntu would be better at supporting communication between windows and Linux.

    --
    CS: It is all sink or swim...oh and did I mention there are sharks in that water?
    1. Re:PIA by zach_the_lizard · · Score: 1

      Windows 7, at least, supports NFS shares (though not out of the box), so using NFS for your home network (assuming that's what it's for) makes sense now. Use that, skip SMB. iSCSI is beyond my knowledge level.

      --
      SSC
    2. Re:PIA by COMON$ · · Score: 1

      Ya I can get NFS to work great with ubuntu 9. As for iSCSI, windows 7 supports that Natively as well, which is awesome, but unfortunately I cannot seem to get windows 7 and Ubuntu 10 to talk to each other.

      --
      CS: It is all sink or swim...oh and did I mention there are sharks in that water?
    3. Re:PIA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For someone with such a low UID, I would expect better then this copypasta.

    4. Re:PIA by tayhimself · · Score: 1

      Ubuntu 10 has been a PIA for me. .... Not to mention that SMB is broke in 10, the GUI is just awful because it doesn't allow for easy 'run as root'. Want to edit smb.conf, you are SOL unless you go through CLI or create a custom link to your favorite editor. I have no problem going CLI only either, except that in Ubuntu 10 everything has been moved into a slew of *.d directories. As a newbie to 10, where the hell is anything you are looking for?

      Its generally in the same spot as 8.04. I haven't had any problems finding stuff. I just checked smb.conf was in the usual place.

      You use the find command and good ol ubuntu leaves out crucial syntax points in their man pages...Often my biggest issue in Ubuntu is not so much that I dont know what I want to do, but rather, I cant find what I want to do. I ahve pretty advanced knowledge of firewalls and routers but WTF do you do when you cannot find the conf file or force it to reload?

      Give ufw a look, it is great. No more messing about with iptables.

      For now I think I am going to be sticking with redhat derivatives...seems to be more support there.

      I believe CentOS might have better community support on the server side.

      If ubuntu wants to win over more windows folk, they really really need to fix that dammed GUI, or at the least work on encouraging the community to be more active. I have 3 separate threads asking for help on either iSCSI, SMB, or NFS. Only got 2 hits and they only posted twice before going MIA. You would think that Ubuntu would be better at supporting communication between windows and Linux.

      On the client side, I doubt you can beat Ubuntu, and I'm sorry you're having SMB problems but you should be patient. I had SMB problems with OSX 10.6.0,1,2 that were finally fixed in 10.6.3. Ubuntu 10.4 works wonderfully as a client for me, connecting to corporate Windows and my Samba Linux shares.

    5. Re:PIA by COMON$ · · Score: 1

      For an OS in it's 10th revision I would expect the same...

      --
      CS: It is all sink or swim...oh and did I mention there are sharks in that water?
    6. Re:PIA by Facegarden · · Score: 2, Insightful

      ... the GUI is just awful because it doesn't allow for easy 'run as root'. Want to edit smb.conf, you are SOL unless you go through CLI or create a custom link to your favorite editor....>

      Well, I learned that you can use the CLI and type 'sudo nautilus' to browse directories as root, and then you can still click on things to edit them.

      That said, it was a PITA to learn that, and it would be *way* easier if the editor either had a "save as root" option, or the user-level file browser had a right click "open as root" option.

      If that were the case, the file browser should tell you about that when you try to save a read only copy of a file.

      Honestly though, they should just do it like windows. Let the user do what they want, but if they don't have the privileges, get permission on the fly.

      If I try to do something in windows 7, UAC comes up and says "Hey, are you sure you want to do this?".

      As much as people give UAC shit, its a lot better than simply *not being able to* do what you want.

      I encountered this yesterday - has to edit some .conf file, so I navigated to it, opened it, changed it, and then found out I couldn't save. Clearly I want to save, just ask me for the root password and I'll do it!

      But no, I have to open the CLI, type sudo nautilus, and re-navigate to and re-edit the file.

      That is sure to frustrate users like me, who aren't total noobs but haven't gotten fully used to it all. I've been dabbling for years, but every time I dabble i find a show-stopping problem and go back to windows.

      Honestly, if you can't edit a goddamn text file without opening a CLI, you're doing it wrong. Period. And if there is a way and its not *very* obvious, you're still doing it wrong.

      Anyone else agree?
      -Taylor

      --
      Worldwide Military budgets: $2100 billion. Worldwide Space Exploration budgets: $38 billion. Really, world? Really?
    7. Re:PIA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So...umm...Mr. brilliant techie who find Ubuntu to be a PIA...how do you explain the MILLLIONS upon MILLIONS of people/children in schools in India, Brazil, Spain, etc., et cetera, who seem to be moving right along in doing all of their computer tasks?

      I'd say the problem is more to be found by looking in the mirror...:-)

    8. Re:PIA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      hmmm I got a different take on Ubuntu 10 here, I love it, but of course my main window manager is fluxbox.

    9. Re:PIA by tukang · · Score: 1

      Want to edit smb.conf, you are SOL unless you go through CLI or create a custom link to your favorite editor.

      Try using gksudo i.e. "gksudo gedit". You still have to call it through CLI but it will allow you to run GUI editors as root.

    10. Re:PIA by lwsimon · · Score: 1

      Ubuntu is on its 12th release as of this writing. 10.04 refers to the release date, not a version number.

      --
      Learn about Photography Basics.
    11. Re:PIA by Nethead · · Score: 1

      Why not just open another terminal, sudo chmod on the file to allow you to save it and the chmod it back?

      --
      -- I have a private email server in my basement.
    12. Re:PIA by Facegarden · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Why not just open another terminal, sudo chmod on the file to allow you to save it and the chmod it back?

      Are you joking? I'm going to rant now because I didn't see an indication of sarcasm, so:

      Because that's a pain in the ass. I'm editing a goddamn text file. I don't want to use the terminal at all - I just said that you shouldn't have to use a terminal just to edit a text file, and I think thats pretty reasonable. I just want to open it, edit it, and save it. If I need elevated permissions, it should tell me and ask for a password.

      And because I haven't learned how to use chmod yet, so I'd have to go look that up. And because its not obvious - how would a new user figure out how to do that? By googling for "how to edit a text file in linux"? Yeah, if they have to google for that, you're doing it wrong. The obvious thing is to find the file, open it, and edit it. And your suggestion sucks because I hate having to find the path of a file and then type/paste it into a terminal - that's why god invented GUI file browsers!

      Honestly I hope you're joking. Its people that think like that who are holding back linux. No one will fix it because they don't see a problem, but you guys *HAVE* to understand - regular people don't want to "just open another terminal, sudo chmod on the file to allow you to save it and the chmod it back", they just want to edit the goddamn file. A little popup asking for permission might be annoying, but its easy to understand.

      As long as linux developers refuse to understand
      regular people, linux will never get anywhere.

      And don't feel bad, I'm just learning this myself. I spent about 5 minutes talking to some lady who asked me why I liked my android phone, and if I recommended it to her over an iPhone. I told her about how its open source, its not as draconian, etc. But it was a waste of time - she'd be happier with an iPhone, and I should have just recommended it to her. I want android to win, but telling old ladies to buy an android phone to forward my cause is selfish, not helpful.
      -Taylor

      --
      Worldwide Military budgets: $2100 billion. Worldwide Space Exploration budgets: $38 billion. Really, world? Really?
    13. Re:PIA by natehoy · · Score: 1

      In Mint, I prefer to start Nautilus, then click on the "Open This Folder As Root" menu option, which asks me for my password, and automatically sudos (is that a verb?) me up a new root-powered instance of Nautilus. With a shiny red background to tell me I am running as root and I better be extra careful.

      Not that I don't know the commands, but I've got a few Linux newbies under my wing and I've started to look for intuitive GUI ways to do things. Mint has delivered that pretty darned well in the last couple of versions.

      But I do like you suggestion of an "open this FILE as root" option, which could simply be a shortcut to "sudo [insert normal open command]". I'd think such a thing would be pretty easy to do.

      --
      "This post contains words, known to the State of California to cause thought. Wash brain thoroughly after reading."
    14. Re:PIA by COMON$ · · Score: 1
      Ya eventually I stumbled across ufw. But that is what started irritating me a bit about Ubuntu 10. I felt like it was a lot of stumbling around in the dark rather than an intuitive feel. I am sure there is reasoning to it all but it did not fit the bill for me.

      Generally the same spot as 8.04? I think not! You got me though, SMB.conf is in the same directory. But check /etc/ where are the services? init.d rc5.d rc4.d? find / -name SMB.conf tells me the conf file but what is the name of the service now? (btw took someone telling me about the -name flag in find before I could locate anything since it isnt in the man file.) So as a noob I spent a considerable amount of time with 10 just rebooting to restart services and refresh conf files. Really irritating, so I moved back to 9 where everything is in the init.d directory and the names are listed online in forums. But then I was in a bit of a dependency hell again.

      --
      CS: It is all sink or swim...oh and did I mention there are sharks in that water?
    15. Re:PIA by COMON$ · · Score: 1
      Oops hit Submit too soon.

      Be patient with SMB? I worked with it for over 2 weeks, pretty solid. I basically found out that SMB doesn't work with windows 7, or the fact that I only use NTLMv2 (which SMB supports).

      Perhaps that is my problem though, I am trying to use Ubuntu as a server, a simple file server. Perhaps Ubuntu isn't designed for that. I don't care how it shares the file though, I just need to be able to mount the directory on a windows box, which has proved to be an insurmountable task. With no help from the community to explain where things are or how ubuntu does things. I want to learn I just don't know how many times I can ram my head into this wall.

      --
      CS: It is all sink or swim...oh and did I mention there are sharks in that water?
    16. Re:PIA by COMON$ · · Score: 1
      I'm with ya bud. All the way. I am fine with CHMOD a file or directory but I shouldnt have to and it is a PIA to do things that way. WTF am I running in a GUI for if I have to do it all through CLI? Case and point, I gave up on nautilus and am running my current ubuntu server CLI only, what is that run level 3?

      Learning the linux talk is half the battle as well. I get a lot of "just grep for it" or "Use find". That is great if I know what I am looking for but when they change iptables to ufw, how the hell to you grep for something when you don't even know what the name of it is? That is my biggest gripe with 10, they renamed so much to make things easier that unless I spend the next 3 weeks reading the release material I don't know what I am doing...

      --
      CS: It is all sink or swim...oh and did I mention there are sharks in that water?
    17. Re:PIA by tayhimself · · Score: 1

      Ugh, looks like Windows 7 is stricter with the password encryption. This conversation is going to save my ass because I would've stumbled across this very soon. http://social.technet.microsoft.com/Forums/en-US/w7itpronetworking/thread/02476acb-aa5f-4fcf-8079-4a697a065610

    18. Re:PIA by COMON$ · · Score: 1

      ya that is what I do, but if I am already in the terminal I might as well sudo su and use nano. I use a gui so I DONT have to do that. As Ubuntu stands right now, all the GUI is for is so you can see multiple terminal windows at once and surf firefox...it is useless as a file browser, editor, or any kind of administration. Even creating shares is such a PIA that a guy like myself who only dabbles in linux finds it way more comfortable to be in the CLI running around blind. No wonder Linux fanboys make fun of us windows and OSX guys for our GUIs, the linux gui (GNOME or KDE I don't care which) suck big harry balls.

      --
      CS: It is all sink or swim...oh and did I mention there are sharks in that water?
    19. Re:PIA by COMON$ · · Score: 1

      Ya not to mention I enforce stricter encryption on my LAN so the XP boxes couldn't access the share either. Glad I could save you some time. It really isnt Samba's fault, if MS would open up the protocol for everyone instead of being ass-wipes about it the world would be a better place.

      --
      CS: It is all sink or swim...oh and did I mention there are sharks in that water?
    20. Re:PIA by Nethead · · Score: 1

      I really don't care if you (or the world) use Linux. I'm happy with FreeBSD running headless for most of my applications. I run Ubuntu 9.10 on my laptop because it was a quick install and everything just works.

      I was just telling you what I, as an old Unix admin, would do if I forgot to sudo or su before editing a config file. I'd be in the shell anyway since I don't use graphic editors. Come to think of it, I my just ^Z out of my editor, do the chmod and then fg back into my editor.

      You are comfortable with the Windows way, I'm use to the Unix way. Best you stay with Windows if you don't want to learn basic file operations. And trust me, chmod is a basic file command and you will need to learn it if you ever want to deal with a command line in Unix.

      But best just to stick with what you know. I doubt that you want to do the same things with your computers that I want to do with mine. So no fight from me. I don't care if "Linux is ready for the desktop" as I've been running various flavors for *nix on the desktop for decades. YMMV and all that.

      --
      -- I have a private email server in my basement.
    21. Re:PIA by boxwood · · Score: 2, Informative

      editing smb.conf yourself is far more technical than opening a terminal and running a single command. If you made editing system files easier you'd make it easier for people to seriously screw up their computer.

      Oh and right click on a file, select "Open with other Application" Click the arrow beside "Use custom command" and type in "gksudo gedit". it will open in gedit as root. And once you've done that once you can just right-click the file and select "open with gksudo" after that to open your "root editor". You can even go to properties and make that the default action so you only need to double click to open with root.

    22. Re:PIA by Facegarden · · Score: 1

      I really don't care if you (or the world) use Linux. I'm happy with FreeBSD running headless for most of my applications. I run Ubuntu 9.10 on my laptop because it was a quick install and everything just works.

      I was just telling you what I, as an old Unix admin, would do if I forgot to sudo or su before editing a config file. I'd be in the shell anyway since I don't use graphic editors. Come to think of it, I my just ^Z out of my editor, do the chmod and then fg back into my editor.

      You are comfortable with the Windows way, I'm use to the Unix way. Best you stay with Windows if you don't want to learn basic file operations. And trust me, chmod is a basic file command and you will need to learn it if you ever want to deal with a command line in Unix.

      But best just to stick with what you know. I doubt that you want to do the same things with your computers that I want to do with mine. So no fight from me. I don't care if "Linux is ready for the desktop" as I've been running various flavors for *nix on the desktop for decades. YMMV and all that.

      Well fine then. But the whole point of this slashdot article is people upset that Dell is still recommending windows over ubuntu. Linux people always get upset that people don't use linux more, but it's things like:

      "Come to think of it, I my just ^Z out of my editor, do the chmod and then fg back into my editor."

      Why the fuck should it be that complex? You haven't actually given any reason for it. Yes, you learned it, and once you learned it its not that hard, but is it a good design? I don't like bad designs, even if they are easy to use once you figure them out.

      And: "chmod is a basic file command and you will need to learn it if you ever want to deal with a command line in Unix"

      Well I *don't* want to ever use a command line in linux for basic things, and I don't give a *shit* about permissions beyond knowing that they keep me safe. Command lines are not as easy to use as a GUI! The whole *point* of Ubuntu is to be easy to use, and every time I have tried, it has failed on some part.

      If you don't care about linux being easy for regulars to use, that's fine, but the people making Ubuntu do, and they continually miss it for a variety of reasons.

      And its not just the "Windows way". Windows is the way it is because GUIs work well with people. Seriously, command lines will always be harder to use because you have to know in advance what to type. Its extremely difficult to figure out what to type into a command line without reading a LOT.

      Yes, I think linux should work more like windows in some ways, because as "evil" as microsoft may be, not everything about windows is bad. Its pretty easy to use, and you don't have to constantly google to find lots of things out, because so much is graphical.

      And FYI, I'm a mechanical engineer who also programs and designs PCBs. I'm also an Android fanatic and have a huge interest in efficient user interfaces. I've also messed around with setting up my own LAMP servers, and I am our IT guy at the (small) office. I set up a headless ubuntu server with scheduled backups, etc. So maybe I don't want to do exactly the same stuff as you, but I'm not a stupid user either, and I have a high tolerance for complex things.

      I just cannot stand the idea that i can't just navigate to a text file, open it, edit it, and save it.
      -Taylor

      --
      Worldwide Military budgets: $2100 billion. Worldwide Space Exploration budgets: $38 billion. Really, world? Really?
    23. Re:PIA by TheHedonismBot · · Score: 1

      the GUI is just awful because it doesn't allow for easy 'run as root'.

      aptitude install nautilus-gksu

      Want to edit smb.conf, you are SOL unless you go through CLI or create a custom link to your favorite editor. I have no problem going CLI only either, except that in Ubuntu 10 everything has been moved into a slew of *.d directories. As a newbie to 10, where the hell is anything you are looking for?

      I use this thing called the Internet when I want to find out about things I don't know about. This company called "Google" came up with this great way of helping you find all sorts of information. Check it out sometime, http://google.com

      Often my biggest issue in Ubuntu is not so much that I dont know what I want to do, but rather, I cant find what I want to do. I ahve pretty advanced knowledge of firewalls and routers but WTF do you do when you cannot find the conf file or force it to reload?

      See above.

      or at the least work on encouraging the community to be more active.

      Just what exactly does this mean? There is a gigantic community built around Ubuntu. From the thousands of people that translate Ubuntu into their local language for free, or the ones who run the LoCo teams, or the people who spend their time testing new releases and reporting bugs, or the people who submit patches to bugs that do get reported, or the people who spend their time in the IRC channels helping out people having problems or the people who spend hours adding and refining the vast amount of information contained in the wiki. Really.. if you can't find the community around Ubuntu you aren't looking very hard.

    24. Re:PIA by Nethead · · Score: 1

      How did you setup a headless Ubuntu server? Do you not ssh into it? Maybe you mean something different from headless than I do. To me headless means no X client installed and access via ssh or a console server only.

      --
      -- I have a private email server in my basement.
    25. Re:PIA by TheHedonismBot · · Score: 1

      But no, I have to open the CLI, type sudo nautilus, and re-navigate to and re-edit the file.

      If you have to open nautilus as root, then you're doing it wrong.

      aptitude install nautilus-gksu

      Installing that (log out, then back in) will add an "open as root" or something similar to the right click of menu of nautilus. Suse has this package installed by default. Ubuntu might think that's "too advanced" of a feature for the user base they are targeting.

    26. Re:PIA by Facegarden · · Score: 1

      How did you setup a headless Ubuntu server? Do you not ssh into it? Maybe you mean something different from headless than I do. To me headless means no X client installed and access via ssh or a console server only.

      Right, well like I said, I *can* use the command line. And obviously it makes sense for a headless system not to use it. It does not make sense to constantly have to use a command line on a desktop with a full GUI environment though.

      And for the server, I use WinSCP for most file manipulation. I really hate typing out directories and editing text in a command line interface. I looked at the command line text editors, and honestly they just suck compared to a GUI text editor. I'm sure that once ya learn them they aren't that bad, but I don't want to re-learn how to edit text just to use linux, that's just silly.
      -Taylor

      --
      Worldwide Military budgets: $2100 billion. Worldwide Space Exploration budgets: $38 billion. Really, world? Really?
    27. Re:PIA by Facegarden · · Score: 1

      But no, I have to open the CLI, type sudo nautilus, and re-navigate to and re-edit the file.

      If you have to open nautilus as root, then you're doing it wrong.

      aptitude install nautilus-gksu

      Installing that (log out, then back in) will add an "open as root" or something similar to the right click of menu of nautilus. Suse has this package installed by default. Ubuntu might think that's "too advanced" of a feature for the user base they are targeting.

      Thanks. I was pretty sure I was "doing it wrong", i just hate that the right way isn't obvious. It should be! I also enabled root for SSH so I can edit text files with WinSCP. I'm *certain* that that's "wrong", but I'm not sure how else I can edit text files remotely without a command line.

      And Ubuntu needs to consider which is more complicated: giving users another option in a context menu, or not giving them *any* graphical option for editing text files.

      Thanks for the tip tho.
      -Taylor

      --
      Worldwide Military budgets: $2100 billion. Worldwide Space Exploration budgets: $38 billion. Really, world? Really?
    28. Re:PIA by bit01 · · Score: 1

      No CLI needed. Right-click on desktop, select menu item "Create launcher". Enter a "Command:" of "gksu nautilus" and your preferred annotation and icon. Click "Ok". Done. You now have a desktop icon to browse the file system as root and any invoked program will be root also. Keep in mind that this is a security risk.

      Ubuntu should've had this icon in the administration menu or panel years ago but they seem to have this strange idea that making system operations obtuse, as distinct from making sure naive users don't do something stupid, is a good thing. Not making icons is a quick and dirty way to block naive user mistakes but they don't seem to appreciate that the ill-will created and wasted time far outweighs any advantage.

      ---

      Monopolies = Industrial feudalism

    29. Re:PIA by Facegarden · · Score: 1

      No CLI needed. Right-click on desktop, select menu item "Create launcher". Enter a "Command:" of "gksu nautilus" and your preferred annotation and icon. Click "Ok". Done. You now have a desktop icon to browse the file system as root and any invoked program will be root also. Keep in mind that this is a security risk.

      Ubuntu should've had this icon in the administration menu or panel years ago but they seem to have this strange idea that making system operations obtuse, as distinct from making sure naive users don't do something stupid, is a good thing. Not making icons is a quick and dirty way to block naive user mistakes but they don't seem to appreciate that the ill-will created and wasted time far outweighs any advantage.

      ---

      Monopolies = Industrial feudalism

      That would work for me, but its still risky. I'd much prefer if it behaved more like windows UAC, where it waited till the last possible action to ask for root - like when I hit save and it's read only. It could say "File is read only and cannot be saved. Would you like to try as superuser?".

      That way they can have their security and eat it too (well, you know what I mean!).

      Or do what you say and put a nag box that says "careful what you do! you could break it all!" with a checkbox that says "don't show me this again". I consider that lazy design too, but at least it will protect the stupid users a bit, and smart users only get nagged once. Seems like an acceptable bandaid to me, if the other stuff is too complicated.

      -Taylor

      --
      Worldwide Military budgets: $2100 billion. Worldwide Space Exploration budgets: $38 billion. Really, world? Really?
    30. Re:PIA by AssClown2520 · · Score: 1

      Very good point. I get tired of hearing how Linux needs to be more like Windows. If you want Windows, use Windows. Linux is not Windows and should not aspire to be Windows. Just like the grandparents point on the Android and iPhone. I don't own an Android because it is similar to the iPhone, I own it because it is different.

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

      whats wrong with using cli? using buttons on your keyboard too hard? just guessing here but i think you used them when you typed this complaint.

    32. Re:PIA by bit01 · · Score: 1

      A matter of personal preference I guess. UAC has it's own problems such as apparently not caching credentials, at least in vista. Gnome remembers privilege escalation. e.g. clicking the above icon twice will only ask for a password the first time.

      My ideal security model would be for user accounts to have an attribute that specifies how experienced a user is and adjusts the user interface and system privilege management accordingly. With a full capability system like SELinux. Such security models do conflict badly with the KISS principle though.

      ---

      Monopolies = Industrial feudalism

    33. Re:PIA by Facegarden · · Score: 1

      A matter of personal preference I guess. UAC has it's own problems such as apparently not caching credentials, at least in vista. Gnome remembers privilege escalation. e.g. clicking the above icon twice will only ask for a password the first time.

      My ideal security model would be for user accounts to have an attribute that specifies how experienced a user is and adjusts the user interface and system privilege management accordingly. With a full capability system like SELinux. Such security models do conflict badly with the KISS principle though.

      ---

      Monopolies = Industrial feudalism

      Yeah. I don't care what they do, as long as its not *nothing*, which seems to be what they're doing at the moment.

      And this whole discussion would be moot if you didn't have to do everything by editing text files, but don't even get me started on that...

      And UAC is much improved in 7.
      -Taylor

      --
      Worldwide Military budgets: $2100 billion. Worldwide Space Exploration budgets: $38 billion. Really, world? Really?
    34. Re:PIA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't give a *shit* about permissions beyond knowing that they keep me safe.

      I don't give a shit about car locks.

      I don't want to have to learn how to tell whether my car is locked or not. I don't want to know where the switches are. I got a car to get me from A to B, not to learn all of its arcane security minutia.

      I just know that the locks would keep my car safe.

      Unfortunately, I don't have a car anymore. The police are still looking for it.

    35. Re:PIA by PinkyGigglebrain · · Score: 1

      Funny how all the things you mention are NOT directly Ubuntu projects, but have their own separate websites and forums to help people with. Maybe the reason your posts went MIA was because they where on the wrong site.

    36. Re:PIA by exomondo · · Score: 1

      I spent about 5 minutes talking to some lady who asked me why I liked my android phone, and if I recommended it to her over an iPhone. I told her about how its open source, its not as draconian, etc. But it was a waste of time - she'd be happier with an iPhone, and I should have just recommended it to her. I want android to win, but telling old ladies to buy an android phone to forward my cause is selfish, not helpful.

      Different things for different people. My partner has an iphone and i have an n900, no way would i recommend the n900 to her, but i certainly wouldn't go back to an iphone myself. There is no single product that suits everyone, use whatever works for you.

    37. Re:PIA by mikechant · · Score: 1

      That said, it was a PITA to learn that, and it would be *way* easier if the editor either had a "save as root" option, or the user-level file browser had a right click "open as root" option.

      I had this same issue and it took me all of 2 minutes to find and install the 'open as admin' addon for Nautilus.

    38. Re:PIA by COMON$ · · Score: 1
      If you made editing system files easier you'd make it easier for people to seriously screw up their computer.

      I don't buy that. That is what permissions is for. This is a ease of use problem.

      --
      CS: It is all sink or swim...oh and did I mention there are sharks in that water?
    39. Re:PIA by COMON$ · · Score: 1
      I thought dicks like yourself got chased out of the community a while ago. The problem is, where would I find information on nautilus-gksu? Sure it is obvious to you but maybe, just maybe, I am better at this than you and not even I could find it...

      There is a gigantic DEV community around ubuntu. Try asking a question in an Ubuntu forum, Ubuntu is notoriously bad here. Ask the same things in a redhat forum and you get solid help.

      --
      CS: It is all sink or swim...oh and did I mention there are sharks in that water?
    40. Re:PIA by COMON$ · · Score: 1

      Thats odd, because forums supporting Redhat, OSX, and Windows all will help. No one says (sorry that is someone else's problem). Usually you get someone pretty nice who already set up the same thing who is willing to help you out.

      --
      CS: It is all sink or swim...oh and did I mention there are sharks in that water?
    41. Re:PIA by LinuxIsGarbage · · Score: 1

      This can be a problem if you want to say, edit the hosts file in Windows. There's no easy "Edit as administrator", so your best bet is opening notepad as admin (start-notepad-ctrl+shift+enter), then navigating to the file.

    42. Re:PIA by Facegarden · · Score: 1

      That said, it was a PITA to learn that, and it would be *way* easier if the editor either had a "save as root" option, or the user-level file browser had a right click "open as root" option.

      I had this same issue and it took me all of 2 minutes to find and install the 'open as admin' addon for Nautilus.

      Good for you. Are you happy to spend 2 minutes learning all these little things, when they could easily be designed to be intuitive? If the editor just said save failed, and offered to try as root, you wouldn't have to close, open, and re-edit the file, and you wouldn't have had to spend *any* time figuring it out.

      Seriously, you're a slashdot user, so you're already likely a nerd. Try giving that to a regular person and it might take them 10 minutes to figure out if they even keep trying. Or when they're following a bunch of instructions to do something they don't know how to do, and every part is non-intuitive and takes "just a few minutes to figure out", suddenly they've wasted an hour trying to get audio configure properly, because no one contributing to ubuntu knows how to make a goddamn set of default options. I spend a week last year trying to get multichannel and stereo movie files all to properly downmix and upmix with my surround system because i thought it would be cool to have a linux media center. Well, i finally gave up, installed an *early* copy of Windows 7, and it worked instantly, with no configuration.

      You tell me which is easier.

      And christ, i'm amazed at how you guys all don't get it. So many people complain that more people don't use linux, and then say "it's easy just edit .asoundrc", or "it only took me 2 minutes to find the open as admin addon..." Yeah, regular people will hit a wall somewhere and give up. Windows is f'ing easy to use, period.
      -Taylor

      --
      Worldwide Military budgets: $2100 billion. Worldwide Space Exploration budgets: $38 billion. Really, world? Really?
    43. Re:PIA by PinkyGigglebrain · · Score: 1

      I never said that the "gurus" on the Ubuntu forums weren't asses, all I did was point out that everything you criticized was unrelated to Ubuntu, and that that might be the reason any posts relating to NFS, etc., might have been removed.

      In criticizing something it is generally a good idea to be sure that the issues you point out are indeed part of what you are commenting on.

    44. Re:PIA by TheHedonismBot · · Score: 1

      nautilus-gksu was an honest hint. Not being a dick there. I know it's not obvious, and I only found it after searching through synaptic.

      Otherwise, I almost doubt you've ever really used Ubuntu or Linux at all. The vast majority of config files are in the standard location as on any other manistream distro. Samba? /etc/samba/smb.conf same place on Debian/Ubuntu as it is on RedHat. Just try googling for "samba config location". The first two results come from those "notoriously bad" ubuntu forums, and also provide a multitude of other guides and information about further configuring samba. Don't want to configure samba manually? Right click on a folder, select "Sharing Options" and then click on the checkbox that says "Share this folder".

    45. Re:PIA by juhaz · · Score: 1

      You're being really disingenious here. What you are doing is NOT just editing a text file, and you know it. It's editing a text file OWNED BY ANOTHER USER, AND modifying advanced system configuration without using the provided settings tools. Something you would do in windows with regedit.

      So, just how "easily" do these things work in Windows 7? Let's see:

      1) Editing a text file owned by another user. Open it in notepad, edit, try to save. What happens? It just silently shifts to "save as" dialog instead of saving, NO UAC dialog for privilege elevation, it won't even tell you it can't save the original file, much less why not. Gee, really intuitive, much better than in Ubuntu!

      2) Editing a registry key you don't have permissions to edit. Open regedit, navigate to the key, try to change: Oops. "Cannot edit XXX: Error writing the value's new contents.". NO UAC dialog, no telling WHY you cannot edit that. Yep, real simple.

    46. Re:PIA by COMON$ · · Score: 1
      sorry for the brash response, we all want those guys to go away :) sorry for mistaking you.

      No I haven't used Ubuntu at all for administrative tasks. This was my first exploration into it. Ubuntu 9 was pretty straightforward. However, while the conf is in the same directory, the services are not.

      What I meant by "maybe I am better at this than you" was regarding again the idea that you were a yahoo that thought that they were better than linux noobs. I am quite adept at grabbing new techs or different techs that fit the bill for what I want to do. I do something well, document it, then move on. My exploration of getting Ubuntu 10 to do something obvious was a dismal failure in the end due to shortcomings created by windows 7 kerberos not being compatable with SMB for some weird reason. Since I elevate auth on my network to NTLMv2 the XP boxes would not work either, I am assuming because of my 2008R2 domain. However, many of the issues I was having would have been greatly simplified had a community member assisted me in things as simple as restarting samba in ubuntu 10, or helping me find the right dependencies for Fuse 2.8 in Ubuntu 9.

      also the GUI sharing option is a bit broken, once you try to add permissions I wouldn't even let me change them for who knows what reason and yes I was in my usr folder.

      In the end, Ubuntu has a lot of work ahead of them if they want admins to switch over, I am what some would call, very good at this kind of stuff and I found it exceedingly difficult to do what I wanted in Ubuntu, and I have a veteran Redhat user sitting 10 feet from me.

      --
      CS: It is all sink or swim...oh and did I mention there are sharks in that water?
    47. Re:PIA by COMON$ · · Score: 1
      My biggest complaint was regarding Natilus, which is decidedly a key component in the Ubuntu GUI. You can't administrate very well with it in its native state. Sharing NFS and adding permissions is hokey at best (I couldn't even set group perms through the GUI even though I owned the folder).

      Do you see mac people saying they wont support SMB? or AD? heck no, they work to help people with them. My criticisms are a real concern and directly are effected by the way in which Ubuntu was built. I can do all these things, except install Fuse 2.8 (which is just a lack of knowledge on my part) in Ubuntu 9. Once I went to 10, everythign was switched around to the point that all the docs on How to forge couldn't help me. Something as simple as restarting Samba or creating an NFS share was out of scope.

      --
      CS: It is all sink or swim...oh and did I mention there are sharks in that water?
    48. Re:PIA by TheHedonismBot · · Score: 1

      Ubuntu recently uses sysvinit to handle the manipulation of services. I believe 10.04 (and 9.10) have the "sysvinit" package by default. This allows you to manage services the same way you would on redhat:

      sudo service samba force-reload
      sudo service ntpd stop
      sudo service network restart

      Before sysvinit was included by default you would use:

      sudo /etc/init.d/samba restart

  28. trying to buy more of the N-series by rapiddescent · · Score: 1

    The tragedy is that if you try to "Shop for Ubuntu laptops" from the Dell Ubuntu page that the example from the TFA is linked to - every single option is Microsoft Windows!!! There are NO Ubuntu products for sale! You can't even deselect the operating system.

    I bought Dell Nseries laptops for my business in the UK 2 years ago when they were on sale at Dell, mostly XPS M1330N and 1525N - we have no upgrade option at all and cannot replace with Dell. Everytime I ring a Dell account manager, they just say "Windows 7" like some sort of demented zombie and they cannot make any guarantees about whether the chipset will work with Linux. They also send us all the "Dell recommends Windows 7" business marketing - we have never bought a Microsoft product from Dell.

    Despite that, we have been very happy with the N-series, especially the XPS M1330N laptops. They are still current and really the only replacements are for those dunked in coffee or left on trains etc.

    DELL - ARE YOU LISTENING? THIS IS A PISSTAKE.

    1. Re:trying to buy more of the N-series by the_womble · · Score: 1

      They also send us all the "Dell recommends Windows 7" business marketing - we have never bought a Microsoft product from Dell.

      They get paid to do that. Its just one of MS's advertising channels, and I can see every reason why MS would want to market to people who do not buy their produce.

  29. Windows vs. Ubuntu — Dell's Verdict by omar.sahal · · Score: 1

    A $200 - £100 computer (with linux or windows) is the future! Can windows maintain its profits at these margins, if not Linux wins the end.

  30. feedback by Eil · · Score: 1

    Just wanted to point out to everyone that there is a handy-dandy animatey feedback link on the page as well. :)

  31. Hmmm... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Office 2010 or Open Office?, I'd really have to sit down and spend some time considering which is better....

    1. Re:Hmmm... by Nadaka · · Score: 1

      As long as Open Office defaults to normal menu's instead of a retarded ribbon? I know which one I will keep using.

  32. Gross oversimplification, but . . . . by Joey+Vegetables · · Score: 1

    Install Ubuntu *and* Windows. Dual boot or use virtualization software. If you value freedom above most other things, as I do, then use Linux whenever possible, and 'Doze whenever you have to. Otherwise, use either, or both, whichever one best meets your needs at the time.

  33. Huh? by jfoobaz · · Score: 1

    As far as the Dell website is concerned it doesn't even mention Macintosh and regardless of if you love or hate them it's still a glaring omission.

    I'm not sure exactly how Dell's failure to mention a competitor's products on their website is a glaring omission. They can (and do) offer Ubuntu and Windows, so it makes sense to mention those options. OS X is only available from a competing hardware manufacturer; why should they do marketing for them?

    1. Re:Huh? by Cheerio+Boy · · Score: 1

      That is a very good point but honestly they're looking to present a "helpful" marketing image. Blatantly ignoring a competitor cheats the user of a choice from the user's point of view. And when the user finds out they've been cheated they'll go to another vendor.

      Better to nip that in the bud in the first place. Then from a marketing standpoint you _know_ that you've covered all the bases.

      At least saying "Or you could get a Mac...but who would want one of those." while not good competitor relations would at least touch on the subject and help defuse the customer's irritation when they find out that there was a third choice after all.

      --

      "Bah!" - Dogbert
    2. Re:Huh? by maxwell+demon · · Score: 1

      That is a very good point but honestly they're looking to present a "helpful" marketing image. Blatantly ignoring a competitor cheats the user of a choice from the user's point of view. And when the user finds out they've been cheated they'll go to another vendor.

      The question they try to answer is: "If I buy a Dell computer, should I order one with Windows or with Ubuntu." They are presenting a page which is intended to be helpful for (potential) Dell costomers. They are definitively not trying to make a general "which operating system is best for me" page. Note that they not only omitted OS X, but also OpenSUSE, Gentoo and FreeBSD, despite the fact that all three operating systems will run on Dell hardware.

      --
      The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
    3. Re:Huh? by natehoy · · Score: 1

      So when I go into my Ford dealer, I should see ads for Chevy and Toyota?

      If Dell mentioned Apple anywhere on their page, with or without disparaging remarks, one of two things would happen:

      1. Microsoft would ream them a new asshole and drop them from "Platinum Partner" to "Zinc-coated Shit Partner" in about .000000000001 picoseconds, and retroactively raise their Windows licensing fee from $25 to $400 per PC faster than you can say "Chapter 7".

      2. Apple would unleash the Cupertino Legal Mobsters (all wearing dapper bright-colored suits and carrying fast-draw holsters with the legal papers in them). Like a plague of locusts, they would descend upon Dell and Dell would be consumed in shiny, bright-colored, user-friendly flames of Hell.

      Actually, probably both.

      --
      "This post contains words, known to the State of California to cause thought. Wash brain thoroughly after reading."
  34. The computer in our guest room runs Ubuntu.. by the_rajah · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The extent of the instructions I give guests is, "This is not Windows, it's Linux, but it works pretty much the same. Here's the Firefox icon up here." Family and friends ranging in age from 10 to 70 have used it with no problems. Those who need to are able to work on business documents that they brought on a USB drive and can print to the inkjet and laser printers on our home office network just fine.

    I think I detect a little arm twisting on the part of MS here, but nobody is surprised at that.

    When Dell came out with their pre-installed Ubuntu machines a few years back, I bought an E520N the day they became available so as to vote with my wallet that this was a very good idea for Dell.

    --


    "Do the Right Thing. It will gratify some people and astound the rest." - Mark Twain
    1. Re:The computer in our guest room runs Ubuntu.. by shakezula · · Score: 1

      I did something nearly identical at work. I support research scientists and their staff and you'd be amazed how many virii come up on the machines due to too much social networking (as if there was a lot of time in science for that!). After the 3rd time reloading a PC in our front office because the office manager's kid had infected it with a few trojans, I installed Ubuntu. I put the Firefox icon on the desktop along with Office 2007 running on the LameDuck Free version of Crossover 7.x from a couple years back. I set the office's Laserjet up as the default printer and gave the office manager and staff nearly the exact same instructions, "This is Ubuntu, its like Windows, but not quite--see, there's Firefox, and there's Word/Excel/Etc. It prints with CTRL+P, just like Windows, enjoy."

      Been running for over a year now, no issues and it gets MySpaced and Facebooked nearly every day.

      --
      I know what you're thinking. Did I forward 65,535 packets or 65,536 packets?
    2. Re:The computer in our guest room runs Ubuntu.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Virii is incorrect, homo.

  35. Wine? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The two main bullet points for windows:

    * You are already using WINDOWS programs (e.g. Microsoft Office, ITunes etc) and want to continue using them
    * You are familiar with WINDOWS and do not want to learn new programs for email, word processing etc

    Wine, anyone? Warning: Wine may not run bloatware crap like iTunes.
    If you really can't let go of your bloatware, I recommend VirtualBox.

    1. Re:Wine? by natehoy · · Score: 1

      I use both.

      Wine runs Windows software that Windows itself cannot run. I have a generous handful of old favorite Windows 95/98 games that simply will not run in any way, shape, or form in Windows XP or later. Wine handles them without the slightest issues and with very little work (you just need to tell it what operating system to pretend to be for those programs, all covered in the GUI).

      On the other hand, my work requires that I have a Windows XP box to remote in. My wife has a Nokia phone. I have an iPod. None of these do well in Linux even with Wine. VirtualBox, 15 minutes, and my old XP CD later, and I've got a work, Nokia, and iTunes-compatible virtual machine available that has remained untouched and unchanged along with all of my data over my last two complete OS upgrades (9.04->9.10 and 9.10->10.04).

      But the real beauty is that all the stuff I really need on Windows is sandboxed off to a virtual machine. The remote access software really messes with the Internet connection of the machine it runs on (loads this silly "secure desktop" and locks Internet access away on the "insecure desktop"), except that it's all now a Windows VM and cannot affect my Internet connection in Linux.

      iTunes has no access to anything on my actual computer, only to what's on the VM I provide it.

      Patch Tuesday is just a day I start up my XP instance, click on the "Express Install" button, and leave it alone for a half hour or so while I'm doing stuff. "Reboot" means that XP goes away for a few minutes. Chances are I'm not doing anything in it at the time anyway, I just keep watching my TV show or whatever while Windows does its reboot happy dance.

      So, while I still need Windows, I don't need it to be my primary operating system. In fact, I've found things a whole lot more convenient when I don't. I can run a much greater variety of software (Wine handles the bulk of it, and a VirtualBoxed XP instance handles the rest), it was all incredibly easy to set up, and didn't cost me a dime.

      --
      "This post contains words, known to the State of California to cause thought. Wash brain thoroughly after reading."
  36. How about this... by MpVpRb · · Score: 1

    If you NEED Windows-only programs like Photoshop, MS Office, AutoCad etc...you MUST use Windows.

    If you can use open source programs instead, like Gimp, Open Office, etc...you can use Ubuntu.

  37. More of the same... by xulfer · · Score: 1

    This is just more of the predictable Microsoft / OEM bait and switch. This is far from the first time that Microsoft has bought out, threatened, or trampled on OEM's that tried looking towards other products; and it certainly won't be the last.

  38. compromise by WillgasM · · Score: 1

    where's the option for pre-installed dual-boot?

    1. Re:compromise by natehoy · · Score: 1

      Actually, I think that's how my friend's Mini 9 came configured. But that may have changed.

      Regardless, the Ubuntu or Mint install discs make it really, REALLY easy to add a multiboot option to a preinstalled Windows machine. Boot to CD, select "install", select the "run side by side" option, and you're done. You can choose what to start every time you start the computer.

      --
      "This post contains words, known to the State of California to cause thought. Wash brain thoroughly after reading."
  39. Thank you by Iamthecheese · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I tried linux distros various times in the past, each time I gave up after a day to a week when drivers and programs wouldn't install, package managers wouldn't work, and I ended up spending more time trying to fix my computer than getting things done.

    Yesterday I installed Ubuntu. I can't install the language patch (click on it in Opera, garbage on my screen. right click and save as, now I have it saved but how to install it??) I can't use bittorrent, (can't install wine because I don't know how to install a package handler because of the above problem)

    That said, I find Ubintu easier to understand, more intuitive, and friendlier overall than Windows XP. I've used Windows since version 3.11 and never could positively compare Linux to Windows until today. I will now recommend Ubuntu to anyone who asks and I want to thank the linux community for making this OS possible.

    tldr: Thank you.

    --
    If video games influenced behavior the Pac Man generation would be eating pills and running away from their problems.
    1. Re:Thank you by 0123456 · · Score: 1

      I can't install the language patch (click on it in Opera, garbage on my screen. right click and save as, now I have it saved but how to install it??)

      What language patch?

      I can't use bittorrent, (can't install wine because I don't know how to install a package handler because of the above problem)

      Why would you install Windows software when you can install equivalent Linux software instead?

    2. Re:Thank you by Iamthecheese · · Score: 1

      I used the interface to install the Japanese language pack but it doesn't seem to have a way to type in Japanese, only change Windows (I mean the Gnome GUI) to display in Japanese. I don't need that. I googled it (thank you for working with an XP offered DHCP through a wireless router on a different subnet on the first try) and read that pressing both alt keys should work, except it didn't.

      I want utorrent because I like it and am familiar with it. I did install a Linux based bittorrent handler but I' m sure utorrent isn't the only Windows program I' ll want to use.

      --
      If video games influenced behavior the Pac Man generation would be eating pills and running away from their problems.
    3. Re:Thank you by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I can't use bittorrent, (can't install wine because I don't know how to install a package handler because of the above problem)

      Ubuntu installs a bittorrent client by default (click Applications > Internet > BitTorrent Download Client), not sure how much easier they can make it.

    4. Re:Thank you by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 4, Informative

      I can't install the language patch (click on it in Opera, garbage on my screen. right click and save as, now I have it saved but how to install it??)

      Um, double-click it? I assume it's a .deb file that you've downloaded, anyway, because if it's something else, then it is not what you need.

      Though why not install it through the package manager in the first place? Applications -> Ubuntu Software Center, then use the built-in search to find what you want.

      Here is a more detailed treatment of Ubuntu software installation options, though most likely the Software Center will cover all your practical needs.

      I can't use bittorrent

      If you're using the most recent Ubuntu, you should have a BitTorrent client installed out of the box. It's called "Transmission", look it up in Applications -> Networking.

      an't install wine because I don't know how to install a package handler because of the above problem

      Again, you do it through the package manager.

    5. Re:Thank you by natehoy · · Score: 1

      Mint (and I believe Ubuntu) preinstalls a torrent handler called "Transmission". It's no uTorrent, I'll freely admit, but it is extremely capable, fast, and lightweight. It's a solid performer.

      Can't help you on the Japanese input stuff, sorry. :(

      --
      "This post contains words, known to the State of California to cause thought. Wash brain thoroughly after reading."
    6. Re:Thank you by SnarfQuest · · Score: 1

      I can't install the language patch (click on it in Opera, garbage on my screen. right click and save as, now I have it saved but how to install it??)

      What language patch?

      I can't use bittorrent, (can't install wine because I don't know how to install a package handler because of the above problem)

      Why would you install Windows software when you can install equivalent Linux software instead?

      Some people can write Fortran code in any language. Apparently this person expects to be able to run Windows software in any OS. Probably also complains that he can't get Word-98 to install on his Nintendo 64. You'll never be able to explain the problems to them, because they'll just insist "but it works in Windows!"

      --
      Who would win this election: Andrew Weiner vs Andrew Weiner's weiner.
    7. Re:Thank you by Iamthecheese · · Score: 1

      !sudo apt-get install scim-bridge-client-gtk

      --
      If video games influenced behavior the Pac Man generation would be eating pills and running away from their problems.
    8. Re:Thank you by boxwood · · Score: 1

      If you want to run windows programs you should run windows. Your programs have been developed and tested for windows, so it shouldn't be a surprise that it doesn't work so well under an OS it was never meant to run under.

      You're far better off finding native linux apps that equivalent functionality to your windows apps. They're developed and tested for linux, so everything will run much smoother.

      Wine is sort of a last resort. If there is no app for linux that does what you need, then try fiddling with wine to get your windows app to work. This is of course excepting the few apps like picasa which are developed and tested to work under wine.

    9. Re:Thank you by zombie_striptease · · Score: 1

      From what I've seen, Japanese input through IBus seems to work more smoothly on the last couple versions of Ubuntu than SCIM does.

      Here are instructions from the Ubuntu forums that worked for me:

      you need to go to system->administration->language support

      then install the Japanese.

      Next go to system -> preferences -> ibus

      and configure your preferences.

      then under preferences add "ibus-daemon --xim" to your startup programs.

      It should work like a charm then.

    10. Re:Thank you by BeShaMo · · Score: 1

      qTorrent which is, I believe in the repositories, looks very much like uTorrent, if you like that interface. I have previously recommended to people who migrated from Windows to Linux with success.

    11. Re:Thank you by dejanc · · Score: 1

      Yesterday I installed Ubuntu. I can't install the language patch (click on it in Opera, garbage on my screen. right click and save as, now I have it saved but how to install it??) I can't use bittorrent, (can't install wine because I don't know how to install a package handler because of the above problem)

      Most people who come from Windows expect Linux to behave just like their old environment.

      On Linux, things are NOT installed by downloading executables from the web and running them. We have package management for that (and most of them work without a glitch).

      On Linux, drivers are a foreign concept. We have modules which are, in most modern distros, included pre-installed and loaded on demand by hardware detection.

      Both those things are perhaps better or worse on Linux than on Windows, but the bottomline: they are different.

      I've been using Linux for over a decade now and haven't touched Windows much. Imagine my frustration when I decided to install Windows once on a friend's computer:

      • I had to go through his CD collection and then web to find drivers. NOTHING worked out of the box.
      • NONE of my applications of choice were installed by default, so I had to go through a scavenger hunt online to find basic apps, like a secure browser and a photo organizer.
      • I spent hours online reading about different firewalls, antivirus programs, malware, adware, *ware protection and removal... Not easy at all!
      • Finally, I tried to connect his two windows machines so he could share files. Easy? Perhaps for somebody with a clue, but I was out there just like those newbs who come to Linux and try to figure out Samba.

      My point is: there is a learning curve with anything. From what I read in your post, you agree that the learning curve is easier on Linux. Just because people learn how to use Windows doesn't mean Linux should be adapted to their knowledge...

  40. How many people are new to computer? by 140Mandak262Jamuna · · Score: 1
    At least in USA, the schools have been exposing children to computers from fourth grade. Have been doing so for years. So how many people who have not used computers before are starting to use computers now? The digital divide is flipped in the mobile computing platforms. People in the lower educational and economic strata are actually using more mobile phones and more cutting edge phones.

    So why get hung up on the fig leaf DELL is using to justify its deep discounts from MS?

    --
    sed -e 's/Chuck Norris/Rajnikant/g' joke > fact
    1. Re:How many people are new to computer? by cj_nologic · · Score: 1

      At least in USA, the schools have been exposing children to computers from fourth grade. Have been doing so for years. So how many people who have not used computers before are starting to use computers now?

      Those very children are starting to use computers. We are still making more of them (children), and as far as I am aware netbooks running Windows 7 are not (yet) being handed out in-utero so there is still a chance to educate them in the alternatives before they become indoctrinated. Modern children are arguably the most important group to wean off a software monoculture - many of us oldies are past it.

  41. Amazing what a large bribe will do by WillAffleckUW · · Score: 1

    Oh, pardon me, not a bribe, but a "promotion campaign" from Microsoft.

    That said, Ubuntu is not as easy as a Mac.

    --
    -- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --
    1. Re:Amazing what a large bribe will do by IANAAC · · Score: 1

      That said, Ubuntu is not as easy as a Mac.

      Depends where you're coming from.

      I never had much exposure to Mac OSX until around Tiger. Before that, I'd used Windows for years (3.x through XP), and Linux full time for about a decade (Ubuntu since 2005, Suse and Redhat since 2000).

      I suffered a power outage once with OSX and when I got the OS back, sound and network drivers were corrupted due to disk errors. I had absolutely no idea where to look. Since I was unfamiliar with the OS, there wasn't much I could do except reload the OS.

      Maybe that's an extreme example, but probably not an uncommon one when faced with something unfamiliar.

    2. Re:Amazing what a large bribe will do by WillAffleckUW · · Score: 1

      Technically, I was a certified Windows professional, and worked on some of their tookits and beta programs.

      Everyone is unique - the exact needs, temperament, and resources easily available to them differ.

      Those who need to play games - or want to - may find a Windows solution more optimal. Those who fear virii and other such things may find a Mac more optimal. Those who have some skill and value the end product more may choose Linux (e.g. Ubuntu).

      Remember, Dell already sold Windows machines - selling Ubuntu machines as well expands the universe of available choices.

      Many Windows machines can also run Mac OS, if you select options well.

      --
      -- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --
    3. Re:Amazing what a large bribe will do by boxwood · · Score: 1

      I've used Linux for years and then tried to "switch" to MacOS. I used MacOS exclusively for three months. Then I got tired of it and switched back. It was much more difficult than Ubuntu.

      Yes MacOS is more intuitive than Ubuntu, but ubuntu is a lot more user-friendly.

      Ok you want your browser, there's a big icon on the dock for the browser. If I want to open a new browser window? clicking that icon doesn't do that. I either have to right-click on the icon (or command click, since there's only one button) or click around in the menu at the top of the screen. Now I want to go back to the first browser window... ummm how do I do that again? The apple menu in the corner? Right-clicking on the icon in the dock? (damn only have one mouse button!) Oh, press F9 and watch some fancy animation and then randomly choose one of two windows that look nearly identical when zoomed out. Oops that wasn't it. F9... last time I picked the one on the right and that wasn't it, I'll take the left one this time. Still not it? Oh I guess expose puts windows in random places. F9, watch animation, click, right-click, select option, more animation... Why am I putting myself through this again? Because MacOS is easier?

      Go back to Ubuntu. Click the icon for my browser thats at the top of the screen. I want a new browser window, so I click the same icon again. I want to switch back to the first window, I glance down at the bottom of the screen and click the item on the taskbar. Wow, I sure do miss using MacOS when things were so much easier!

  42. Re:Macs by Cwix · · Score: 1

    You lost 800 GBP worth of pot to some fish? Thats a new way to fish.. get the fish stoned so they get the munchies huh? Brilliant!

    --
    You are entitled to your own opinions, not your own facts.
  43. PORN! I'm surprised no one has mentioned it... by BenEnglishAtHome · · Score: 5, Interesting

    On his blog, Ken Rockwell decried the lack of serious photographic hobbyists who actually take pictures. Most of them just buy equipment and geek out over it. He referred to photography as just something that, to paraphrase, "guys do on their computers in between porn sessions."

    True that.

    How many guys go looking for porn from time to time? A *very* high percentage. And does the search for porn lead to the dangerous back alleys of the 'net? Yep. The relatively lower number of viruses and other malware targeted at all flavors of Linux is a *major* selling point.

    If I were setting up a computer for someone who even occasionally looks for porn online, I'd choose Ubuntu over Windows in a heartbeat.

    Now, seriously, what percentage of the population do you think falls into that "occasionally looks for porn" demographic? Linux should have at least that big a market share.

  44. Think more like "cover your ass" than "learning" by Moraelin · · Score: 1

    I think the point about being new to computers actually makes sense if you again think of it from the perspective of "It is important to be sure your customer is getting what he wants" and in a "cover your ass" kind of way, rather than simple ease of use or learning.

    Someone new to computers basically has no idea yet what he actually wants to do with that computer, much less what they'll want to run in a year. Even if you pulled a Monty Python-eqsque Spanish Inquisition gig on them and made them tell you in great detail what pact they made with the Devi... err... what they plan to do with that computer, you'd get a very incomplete picture. Even skipping past the fact that non-analysts can be prone to leaving out all details (think of that 200 page spec you extracted from a client, only to learn afterwards that they forgot to tell you everything that spells a completely different program), they don't even know what they _can_ do with a computer or what will look good after they try it once.

    E.g., most people will tell you that they only want to browse the web and send email to their kids. If you push hard, they may also mention that they want to store pictures from their digital camera. That's it. You could get a sworn affidavit that that's all they'll _ever_ _possibly_ do with a computer, so help them God, cross their hearts and hope to die... and it would still be false every single time.

    You really don't know if they forgot to tell you that they also wanted to try this iTunes thing their kid's been talking about, or if a month from now they suddenly get curious about it. You don't really know if those digital photos will also go onto some site that absolutely needs IE and ActiveX to use, or if they'll try some cutesy online game that absolutely needs IE and ActiveX. (And some would not even think of it as gaming, really, if you asked them explicitly if they're gaming too on that computer.) You don't know if, heck, in a couple of months they decide to play WoW on it. There _is_ an increasing segment of retired seniors in MMOs, because it's relatively cheap and offers some social contact and it all around beats sitting alone and getting bored and depressed.

    Yes, you could trick some of those with Wine, but it's not something I'd recommend to someone who is self-confessedly new to computers.

    In the end even for them the OS is just a tool to run the programs they want. For someone who doesn't really know what they'll want, Windows _is_ the safest bet. Not because of the learning curve or ease of use of the OS itself, but because just about every task you might have in mind, is available and mostly just works. You may have to pay for it, or some GPL fans would probably say you have to sell your soul to the devil, but nevertheless there is a program out there that does whatever you want done and is more usable by the average newbie than the likes of GIMP.

    --
    A polar bear is a cartesian bear after a coordinate transform.
  45. It's all about application support by copponex · · Score: 2, Informative

    A vast majority of the software programs you pick up in Staples, Best Buy, etc are going to be made for Windows. Once hardware gets a bit faster and makes virtualization relatively transparent, this will cease to matter. You'll just optionally buy Windows software support for another $150.

    I'm hoping for some badass sandboxing. Imagine automatically launching an entire OS for untrusted operations, like web browsing, or having a few virtual machines running concurrently to provide different levels of access to certain data or hardware. I know some of the features of modern OSs make that a bit redundant, but it's a cool idea nonetheless.

  46. From an Ubuntu user's point of view: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Consumers should choose Windows if they want a sound system that actually works right. Repeat after me: There is no excuse for latent sound in 2010. When I shoot another player in an online game, I would like to hear the sound in sync with the action, and not 100 ms later. When somebody else is shooting at me, I would prefer to know it before I'm dead. Given the fact I got low latency out of a Pentium 100 machine back in the day, this is not an unreasonable request.

    It really is too bad Windows has gone to shit over the past 10 years. I would much rather run Win2k than Vista or Ubuntu. Win2k is secure, has EAX (good sound), and doesn't have secret killswitches for the content industry like Vista does. http://www.afterdawn.com/news/article.cfm/2008/05/18/nbc_triggered_vista_broadcast_flag

    Now I have to choose between an OS that I do not trust, and an OS with terrible audio support.

    1. Re:From an Ubuntu user's point of view: by 0123456 · · Score: 1

      Consumers should choose Windows if they want a sound system that actually works right. Repeat after me: There is no excuse for latent sound in 2010. When I shoot another player in an online game, I would like to hear the sound in sync with the action, and not 100 ms later.

      Weird; I've only played a few games on Ubuntu (e.g. UT99 and Guild Wars) but I haven't noticed anything like that.

      The bigger problem with Ubuntu sound is when it doesn't work at all; for example trying to play any kind of sound while there's a Flash plugin running in Firefox. Or xbmc with Ion's HDMI audio, which used to work in 9.10 and kind of works a bit after a lot of reconfiguration in 10.04.

    2. Re:From an Ubuntu user's point of view: by _Sprocket_ · · Score: 1

      Sound has been an ongoing issue for Linux environments in general. Things have gotten better. And, in fact, with my current Debian desktop and Linux laptop, sound has been pretty much working as I would expect (this weekend I was playing WoW, listening to music, flipping over to another screen to fire up YouTube videos - all without device blocks, audio distortion, or other ugliness from the past). Which is great. Except for the fact that it's 2010 and working sound shouldn't be something I notice. :P

      This is a big YMMV. Your hardware is probably the biggest cause of frustration (although I've done an Ubuntu upgrade and had to tweak settings to get my sound working as expected with my docking station, etc.). In the past, I've purchased a good sound card and moved it as I upgraded hardware just so I didn't have to guess at whether in-board sound was going to be supported when I upgraded a MB. I wish that wasn't the situation. But unfortunately, not all hardware manufacturers have proper support for Linux.

      I'd take this as a caveat. It's one of the little (and getting smaller) pitfalls that put people off Linux. But it won't be something everyone experiences. Maybe sometime in the real near future, it'll get down to the same level of tech-support white noise that Windows users experience when it comes to these issues (very few people having issues even if it sucks when you end up being one of those people).

    3. Re:From an Ubuntu user's point of view: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      OP here. It doesn't affect me anymore, because I ripped pulseaudio out of my installation. In order to do this, I had to use a custom PPA (called dtl131) which provides re-compiled volume controls to just use ALSA.

      So, yes sound can be made to work very well. The problem is, that isn't the approach the devs are taking. Many people do not want to have to fittle with this stuff It is just easier for them to get the Windows machine, which will cost the same and sound support will work perfectly. Ubuntu should drop Pulseaudio, because most people have no need for it.

    4. Re:From an Ubuntu user's point of view: by _Sprocket_ · · Score: 1

      Interesting. The majority of teeth-gnashing about audio in Ubuntu seems to surround pulseaudio. I have it running on my laptop w/out issue (although I don't game on it). But I don't have it running in my Debian desktop environment.

      It looks to me that pulseaudio is an attempt to get to a "just works" situation with Linux (and other environments). It's just a bit rougher than one would like. Hopefully the rough edges will smooth out quickly.

  47. Re:WINDOWS programs like Microsoft Office and ITun by Crudely_Indecent · · Score: 1

    I run Ubuntu with Crossover and MS Office, two versions of IE and various other MS software. Whatever won't run in Crossover will run in VMWare Server.

    The Dell article (website) is clearly for those who don't know anything anyway.

    Dude, I'm not gettin' a Dell.....ever.

    --


    "Lame" - Galaxar
  48. Great opportunity for Linux... by mcrbids · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If you look at it functionally, the iTunes app store is little more than a repo, and Linux has repos to beat all. I'm so horribly spoiled by tools like yum that I'm personally very remiss to EVER leave what's available at a click...

    Most of good salesmanship in business is in positioning - how you compare your products to others out there can leave a very strong impression as it lets potential users immediately grasp many of the capabilities (and limitations) of your product immediately without them actually having to learn what those capabilities are.

    Now that Apple has everybody understanding what a repo is, we should just rename repos to "App Stores" (or whatever Apple hasn't trademarked) so that people immediately get just how easy and capable it is to use. More so, because Linux' "app stores" are open-ended - anybody can add whatever App Repos they want!

    The only thing I'd (STRONGLY!) suggest is some way to filter out all the libraries and stuff that only developers care about so that end users can avoid getting confused by 7,000 libraries that they wouldn't understand anyway. My thoughts are that packages need to describe themselves as two-stage categories: EG: Libraries, ProgrammingTools, Applications and divide each of these categories further, EG: Libraries/Graphics, Applications/Office, Applications/Games, etc. with a default of "Applications" showing.

    Lastly, building in a SIMPLE payment tool so that applications can be purchased (and licenses tracked) with yum/apt...

    Put all this together, and suddenly Linux has an EXCELLENT commercial alternative to the Apple "App Store".

    --
    I have no problem with your religion until you decide it's reason to deprive others of the truth.
    1. Re:Great opportunity for Linux... by Seth+Kriticos · · Score: 1

      The only thing I'd (STRONGLY!) suggest is some way to filter out all the libraries and stuff that only developers care about so that end users can avoid getting confused by 7,000 libraries that they wouldn't understand anyway. My thoughts are that packages need to describe themselves as two-stage categories: EG: Libraries, ProgrammingTools, Applications and divide each of these categories further, EG: Libraries/Graphics, Applications/Office, Applications/Games, etc. with a default of "Applications" showing.

      Have you checked out a recent Ubuntu (>= 10.04)? That's pretty much what the new software center is doing (splitting for instance graphics->3D, etc., and putting libraries in a category called system, which inexperienced users avoid like it'd hurt). They are putting a lot of effort into it, and I guess this must be quite convenient for non-computer-versed folks.

      I personally use the console tools, which are nice to have too.

    2. Re:Great opportunity for Linux... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Like what Mandriva did about 2 years ago and Canonical did about 1 year ago?

      Urpmi shows by default only application programs, and them only with the GUI. So CLI programs are out. No software libraries etc.

      It is just too bad that Media does not care other distributions what are ahead of others, like what Mandriva is. They only care about mediasexy Ubuntu what has nothing special in it what would not be found in other distributions or done better.

    3. Re:Great opportunity for Linux... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The only thing I'd (STRONGLY!) suggest is some way to filter out all the libraries and stuff that only developers care about so that end users can avoid getting confused by 7,000 libraries that they wouldn't understand anyway.

      Have you seen the Software Centre in Ubuntu?

    4. Re:Great opportunity for Linux... by MidoriKid · · Score: 1

      The only thing I'd (STRONGLY!) suggest is some way to filter out all the libraries and stuff that only developers care about so that end users can avoid getting confused by 7,000 libraries that they wouldn't understand anyway. My thoughts are that packages need to describe themselves as two-stage categories: EG: Libraries, ProgrammingTools, Applications and divide each of these categories further, EG: Libraries/Graphics, Applications/Office, Applications/Games, etc. with a default of "Applications" showing.

      It's already like this in "Ubuntu Software Center" application.

    5. Re:Great opportunity for Linux... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The only thing I'd (STRONGLY!) suggest is some way to filter out all the libraries and stuff that only developers care about so that end users can avoid getting confused by 7,000 libraries that they wouldn't understand anyway.

      MintInstall does this.

  49. Exclusive-or by tanderson92 · · Score: 1

    Wow, so one of only two reasons to choose Ubuntu is if you don't plan on using Windows? It's either-or, their users hopefully aren't stupid enough to realize that. This puts Ubuntu at a disadvantage since it is portrayed not as an equal choice but as something you use if you don't want to use Y, rather than a product useful on its own merits. Lame

  50. Re:PORN! I'm surprised no one has mentioned it... by binarylarry · · Score: 2, Funny

    So what you're saying is that we need Boobuntu.

    I haven't googled yet but I wouldn't be surprised if it exists.

    --
    Mod me down, my New Earth Global Warmingist friends!
  51. Re:Macs by jedidiah · · Score: 1

    If you aren't a GEEK and think you will want to install 3rd party commercial software like GAMES, then a Mac probably is more appropriate.

    A Mac has a lot of the Unix-y advantages of a box with Ubuntu on it but with more commercial software support. You might even find that the over-hyped game that your relatives are going on about has a Mac version.

    The problem with Dell's comparison is it doesn't acknowledge the likely possibility that Dell is not for you.

    Personally, I don't like MacOS. However, it sucks less than Windows.

    --
    A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
  52. Huh. by tthomas48 · · Score: 1

    I'm surprised they didn't say to choose Ubuntu if you wanted to be compatible with Windows pre-7 and Macs. Windows 7 is pretty much only compatible with Windows 7. Open Office has better compatibility with Office than the latest Office. Wine has better compatibility with old Windows programs in many cases than Windows 7. And Ubuntu has better hardware compatibility than Windows 7.

    But Windows 7 is the most compatible with Windows 7. So they've got that right.

    1. Re:Huh. by natehoy · · Score: 1

      Heck, as I mentioned earlier in another thread, Wine has better compatibility with older Windows software than Windows XP does.

      Not that I blame Microsoft, they need to drop the cruft of old-software support from time to time, but they could learn a lesson in sandboxed compatibility modes with older versions of their own software from the Wine folks.

      I suppose, with a little work, you might be able to get Wine working in Windows. Though I think that would cause a serious rift in the Space/Irony Continuum.

      --
      "This post contains words, known to the State of California to cause thought. Wash brain thoroughly after reading."
  53. Hard to find linux laptops by PineHall · · Score: 1

    Ever typed in "linux laptop" or "ubuntu laptop" in the Dell search box. What comes up for me (on the USA Dell Site) are Windows laptop results. There are no Linux laptops in the results and not even an option for the Linux OS if you take a look at the laptops. You need to use Google to find the Linux laptops on the Dell site.

    1. Re:Hard to find linux laptops by natehoy · · Score: 1

      Well, since Dell really doesn't offer a refund of the Windows licensing cost when you order the Linux one, it's really easier just to buy the Windows version then "nuke it from orbit", either leaving Windows on there as a dual-boot in case you ever need it, or wiping it off.

      There are lots of sites devoted to Linux compatibility of various desktop, laptop, and netbook configurations, which is really all you need.

      All the Vendor is going to do is add their crapware to a perfectly good Operating System. ;)

      --
      "This post contains words, known to the State of California to cause thought. Wash brain thoroughly after reading."
  54. cam 2644 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I have dual boot Windows 7 - which I paid for - and Ubuntu - which I downloaded free.
    I find myself using Ubuntu nearly all the time because its safer, more flexible and faster.

  55. What's your perspective on Splashtop, other envs? by daboochmeister · · Score: 1

    Note that I'm not affirming your position that Windows7 is easier than a standard Ubuntu install ... but just curious.

    Do you believe that Win7 is easier than, e.g., the HP QuickWeb fast-boot environment, that's based on Splashtop (which is itself based on Linux)? Than the Ubuntu Netbook Remix interface?

    I've been very surprised, since buying a laptop for my daughter recently, to see her using QuickWeb almost exclusively. She only boots into Windows7 when she needs a full word processor.

    I think these comparisons often ignore that while there's mostly just one Windows "apple"*, there are many Linux "oranges" to compare it to ... Splashtops, netbook-oriented user interfaces like the Ubuntu Netbook Remix and others, soon even Android and MeeGo based environments.

    * Probably a bad metaphor for MS Windows, but you know what I mean ...

    --
    "Ahh! I see you're in that indeterminate Schrodinger state where - oh, uh ... never mind." Dave Bucci
  56. Second this with GNomad by NotSoHeavyD3 · · Score: 1

    I used the repository to install GNomad on my Ubuntu partition. Of course it didn't work so I had to google around to find out I had to edit a file to start it up with sudo so I'd have permission to actually seen my Nomad Zen. (Actually there's another way but I figured if I installed from the respository it'd do the setup correctly.) Kind of annoying and I'm not sure how quick newbies are to googling for it. (But I'm new to Ubuntu as well.)

    --
    Did you know 80 to 90% of the moderators on slashdot wouldn't recognize a troll even if one dragged them under a bridge.
  57. ALLCAPS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So WINDOWS is now apparently an acronym, then? "We Inflict Negligent Dos-Oriented Windowing Systems", perhaps.

  58. Put yourself in the user's head by XB-70 · · Score: 4, Interesting
    As a former sysadmin for 12 yrs, I have to divide what I understand about what's best from the realities of the real world.

    You and I both know that Ubuntu is a far superior operating system on so many levels. It's more secure, it's way faster, it runs on more platforms, you can modify it entirely to your liking, it comes with 'real' software, it's free and it's evolving 2x per year.

    For the average user, however, the reality is that many are petrified of their computers. All they know is that it's really bad to screw up and that they will never figure out how to make them run right if they do. They never open manuals or read help files. That is the reality out there - lets' get used to it.

    With that said, Lucid Lynx is, arguably, the most user-friendly operating system I have ever used. Coupled with incredible speed, lighting installation and simple interface, it truly stands out for its polish. There's more: getting apps, for the 'newbie' is just a click, a search and a one-click install. Try doing that with a licenced Microsoft Product. You'll be futzing with licence keys and compatibility issues for hours.

    Obviously, Linux Mint and others are very polished too, while also taking a run at combining proprietary software with non-proprietary software.

    In short, Dell's right: if you're new to computing, install Ubuntu. If you have legacy MS apps, bend over!!

    --
    *** Don't be dull.***
    1. Re:Put yourself in the user's head by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      MS is all about office. I may be wrong about this, but the Office port to Macs seems like it did them some good. Anytime I've had the Ubuntu Windows conversation it has always revolved around office.

      I completely agree with you about lucid. The Ubuntu folks have done a great job and for anyone not using Office...

    2. Re:Put yourself in the user's head by Renevith · · Score: 1

      In short, Dell's right: if you're new to computing, install Ubuntu.

      Actually, they recommended the opposite! They gave three reasons to choose Windows, one of which was "if you are new to using computers." I agree with you that this point should have been on the Ubuntu side, or at the very least left off the comparison.

    3. Re:Put yourself in the user's head by theaceoffire · · Score: 1

      "In short, Dell's right: if you're new to computing, install Ubuntu. If you have legacy MS apps, bend over!!"

      But that is not what Dell is saying.
      Dell is saying "If you program open source, install Ubuntu. If you are ANYONE ELSE, then lube up and bend it like beckham!!"
      If they *were* saying what you were saying, then I would agree with you/them.

      --
      I steal signatures. This one used to be yours.
    4. Re:Put yourself in the user's head by katana_steel · · Score: 1

      all that you said I agreed with, except your last line

      In short, Dell's right: if you're new to computing, install Ubuntu. If you have legacy MS apps, bend over!!

      Dell's site explicitly says "if you are new to computing, install/get MS Windows".

      I however think that if you are new to computing, aka never ever has used a PC before, it actually doesn't matter which system you get as long as you have one to show you the robes. That said my opinion is that they should be introduced to Linux (be it Ubuntu or any other user friendly distro) first though.

  59. Re:Typical facile neckbeard by RightSaidFred99 · · Score: 1

    Right, because Joe Average and Jane Mom won't have issues doing what they want to do. How do I get my iTunes? Why doesn't this obscure flash game work? How come I can't install this software I just bought at Fry's? Who do I go to for help, none of my usual friends know much about Linux? Ouch, I just bought an MP3 player and the software won't install on this Linux thingy (yes, you and I know you usually don't need the software - they don't). Hey, why can't I watch these videos, it's complaining about some Silverlight thingy?

    The list goes on and on. If you set your non-computer person friend/relative up with Linux you're just asking for even more headaches than you'd get if they used Windows. At least then most of you have the excuse that you don't know shit about Windows and can't help.

    The push to move Linux to the Average User's desktop is sheer idiocy. Silly neckbeards, Linux is for nerds (spoken as someone who supports it professionally and has a Linux Asterisk box running at home).

  60. WINDOWS programs?? by CallsignBaron · · Score: 2, Interesting

    From Dell's site: "You are already using WINDOWS programs (e.g. Microsoft Office, ITunes etc) and want to continue using them" Since when is iTunes a WINDOWS program? Damn, Dell will have the boys in Cupertino on their ass next.

    --
    "I reject your reality and substitue my own." ~ Adam Savage, Mythbuster extraordinaire.
    1. Re:WINDOWS programs?? by boxwood · · Score: 1

      well there is no iTunes for Ubuntu.

      That being said, Rhythmbox is far superior to iTunes anyway, so whatever.

  61. Gee... by bit9 · · Score: 0, Troll

    Thanks, Captain Obvious! You saved the day!

  62. People should choose... by Dracos · · Score: 1

    Windows, if they want an OS that claims to function, but requires constant attention. Linux, if they want an OS that will function after maybe a little bit of effort.

    Windows, if they just want to browse FaceBook or play games. Linux, if they plan to actually accomplish anything.

    By the way, Dell... where do we get to make this choice when ordering new hardware from you?

    1. Re:People should choose... by Xtifr · · Score: 1

      Windows, if they just want to browse FaceBook or play games.

      Actually, since the latest Ubuntu has Facebook/Desktop integration, I'd say that if they just want to browse Facebook, then Ubuntu would be the better choice.

      Games is another story, although the existence of Wine makes this not quite as cut-and-dried as some hardcore gamers would like to believe. (Many people, including me, will be happy with a reasonably wide selection of games, and don't need the ability to run everything that ever comes out.)

      Of course, the idea that you have to choose one or the other is a false premise to start with . Dual-boot and virtualization are also options.

  63. Re:WINDOWS programs like Microsoft Office and ITun by mcgrew · · Score: 1

    Indeed; if you're using MS Office, then Open Office isn't going to be a problem. There are few people for whom Open Office wouldn't be sufficient for home use. iTunes? As if that's the only way to get music on your computer?

    In short: Dell is MS's bitch. One more reason not to get a Dell.

  64. iTunes by skingsland · · Score: 1

    For me it comes down to iTunes - there isn't a good way to make it work on Linux "out of the box" without futzing with a bunch of stuff beneath the covers. If you've got an iPod, iPhone or iPad (which covers most of the people I know), and you want it to "just work" with your computer the way it's supposed to, then stay away from Linux.

  65. If you're so experienced by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Then why don't you provide the answers to those questions yourself, and share your experience with the rest of us?

  66. Re:PORN! I'm surprised no one has mentioned it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This comment is more than insightful. More times than not when a friend asks me to fix their computer it is caused by some malware that they picked up surfing for porn. Even more likely is that whatever exploit is screwing up their computer is specifically targeted at the windows users. I personally recommend anyone who doesn't want to eat up their computers resources running constant virus scans and spyware programs to use ubuntu. Even better is how hard it is for a program to get root access to do things like autostarting and the such, and ubuntu provides a tested safe place to get pretty much any software you need with its repositories.

  67. If you have to ask... by schwaang · · Score: 1

    If you have to ask (or take the time to read a Windows vs. Ubuntu sheet) then you probably should be running Windows.

    I'm still happy that Dell offers Ubuntu on a few configurations that I know will be tested and supported.

  68. World of Warcraft and Eve Online run just fine... by voss · · Score: 1

    In Ubuntu or Linux Mint using WINE.

  69. speaking of being truthful by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    American Third Position [american3p.org]
    Finally, a real choice!

    Um.... white supremacy isn't a exactly a startling new platform that's "finally" become available.

  70. Re:Macs by nyctopterus · · Score: 1

    Their 'mistake' of not including information on whether you should choose a Dell with an operating system they don't provide? That mistake?

    Honestly dude, if you're going to go around cracking-wise about how all mac users are pretentiousdickfaggots, at least try to make it vaguely funny or original.

  71. STALKER experience in wine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    On the subject of playing STALKER, my experience with wine:

    Install game with Steam. Run winecfg, check window setting "Emulate a virtual desktop" and set "Desktop size" to my monitor's resolution. Close winecfg and restart Steam. Now STALKER runs in a fake fullscreen that doesn't have strange refresh rate problems. I never even knew there were problems, in fact; I always run games in the fake desktop because it avoids resolution swapping and lets me play games windowed even when there's not an option in the game itself.

    While Windows users were fighting with drivers and hardware problems, the game "just worked" for me in Debian. Isn't it supposed to be the opposite?

    Not every game works, but when one does work it usually works very well and tends to work a lot longer than in Windows. If you want t play an old game like Thief or System Shock 2 in Windows, you have problems installing and you have to dig up DLL hacks (google 'Thief DDfix') to make the game not crash when playing. In wine, you set the windows version to Win98 and the installer and game work. If you have multi-core crash problems you can modify the shortcut to run taskset without having to change cpu affinity every time you start the program.

  72. Don't forget Crysis by justinlee37 · · Score: 1

    It just ain't a comp-u-tor if you can't play you some Crysis on it. Do you really think I built a $1,000 machine just so I could use AutoCad?

  73. OOo questions by zooblethorpe · · Score: 1

    Except my wife hates OpenOffice with a passion

    I'm quite curious, why?

    I presume she's had some sort of experience with the app that's soured her on it; I doubt she just woke up one day with the word "OpenOffice" in her head and decided she would hate it. :)

    FWIW, I am quite put off by OOo too, largely because of moribund development, boneheaded design, and an opaque codebase, among other issues. Various bugs have been on the books for over 8 years, and linger still. When I first learned about OOo back in 2002 or so, I was very excited about it -- hey, who wouldn't like a feature-complete, essentially drop-in replacement for MS Office? But the more I used it, the more it became painfully apparent that OpenOffice is *not* feature-complete, and *not* a drop-in replacement for MS Office. Some missing features are even stupidly simple, like broken word/character counts for Asian text in Writer, or absolutely baffling date display and editing formats in Calc. Both are clearly bugs. Both would seem trivial to fix. Both have been on the books for more than half a decade. Both are targeted vaguely at "OOo Later" (i.e., the devs have no clear target for when a fix might be released)...

    I've personally given up on ever being able to use OOo professionally (I'm a Japanese translator, so bogus Asian counts are bad, and I deal with dates in spreadsheets a lot, so bogus display/edit formats are bad). Reading your comment here, I'm curious what reasons your wife might have for disliking the software.

    Cheers,

    --
    "What in the name of Fats Waller is that?"
    "A four-foot prune."
    1. Re:OOo questions by HeronBlademaster · · Score: 1

      She says she hates the interface and doesn't know where anything is. It seems to be a look-and-feel thing more than a functional thing.

      I use OpenOffice, myself, but my needs are few; I just need a simple spreadsheet and a simple word processor. I do most things in a text editor anyway.

      From a technical standpoint, OpenOffice is more than capable of doing what she wants; it's about having to learn the new UI. She hates learning new things, especially on the computer.

    2. Re:OOo questions by zooblethorpe · · Score: 1

      Thanks for the reply.

      She hates learning new things, especially on the computer.

      More's the pity, then, what with software companies / projects changing things around from release to release. Good luck with the spousal tech support! ;)

      Cheers,

      --
      "What in the name of Fats Waller is that?"
      "A four-foot prune."
    3. Re:OOo questions by HeronBlademaster · · Score: 1

      Interestingly, she greatly enjoys the UI changes made between WinXP and Win7.

      As far as spousal tech support... I'm just glad she doesn't click "install" on every random window that pops up. She asks me what to do, or clicks "cancel" if I'm not around.

    4. Re:OOo questions by zooblethorpe · · Score: 1

      Heh, that's more than half the battle right there. I'm happy I don't live closer to my cousins for this exact reason (they lack your wife's self-control)... and my wife decided she likes Macs better, so I'm off the hook there too. Whew!

      Cheers,

      --
      "What in the name of Fats Waller is that?"
      "A four-foot prune."
  74. Re: Linux Hater blog... by IANAAC · · Score: 1

    When I first visited Linux Hater, I thought I was dealing with extreme ignorance. But it quickly became apparent that he/she is actually an expert authority on software in general and Linux in particular

    OK. If he could convey a thought without it coming across as a rant, I might take him more seriously. But it's nothing but rants.

    *shrug*

  75. ORLY by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://it.slashdot.org/story/10/06/30/1618216/Regular-Domains-Have-More-Malware-Than-Porn-Sites

  76. Puffing smoke by westlake · · Score: 2, Insightful

    If you don't change your mind we'll stop providing you with cheap licenses and Gold Partner status and cut off your MSDN subscription

    Talk like this wastes time.

    Walmart carried the flag for OEM Linux in big box retail for the better part of a decade.

    It could not solve the problem of marketing Linux to the masses. It could not consistently undercut OEM Windows on price - and in the end it could not justify maintaining a dual inventory and support structure for a product line whose sales barely showed a pulse.

  77. Feedback link by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    FYI: The page has a "Feedback" link. You know what to do.

  78. Windows vs Ubuntu by helix2301 · · Score: 1

    I think its great that a major hardware vender is caring a major desktop distro this has defiantly helped the Linux community grow and is great for the ubuntu lovers (me being one of them I run ubuntu servers they run like champs) but we all know your average home user is still going buy Windows 7.

  79. End User vs. Developer by AthleteMusicianNerd · · Score: 1

    If you were a naive end user, I can't even imagine why you would consider Ubuntu. It has come a long way since Red Hat, but it's not even close to Windows. It doesn't have the software that Windows has, or ease of use. As long as you're giving software away for free, it's going to be limited in functionality. Most people aren't willing to work for free and this stuff doesn't develop itself. Although we should get there soon, open source will never get us there.

    As a developer, the only reason to use Ubuntu is not having to deal with Microsoft's licensing agreements. From a business perspective, I believe it's well worth the licensing fees to get up and running way quicker. All of the development tools in Ubuntu are atrocious. Codeblocks, JCreator, GDB are atrocious. These software tools are primitive for 10 years ago.

    A Linux lover friend of mine was bragging that he built his own machine and installed Ubuntu. He paid $800, and I paid $600 for a pre built machine with Windows 7 already installed and MINE HAD BETTER SPECS. Take into account his time, and what sane person would think he got a better deal??? The final verdict. Don't ever use Ubuntu.

    1. Re:End User vs. Developer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What does your friend being stupid picking out hardware have to do with Windows vs Ubuntu? I'll give you a hint, absolutely nothing.
      Ease of use has to do with what YOU are already familiar with, really, it does. Do these things really need to be pointed out to you?

  80. "new to computers" by Sloppy · · Score: 1

    they thought that all their programs and games would work

    What programs and games? They're even recommending Windows to people who are "new to computers," and there's just no way that makes sense at all.

    --
    As copyright owner of this comment, I authorize everyone to defeat any technological measure which limits access to it.
  81. it's worded as if Ubuntu is the default choice by DaveGod · · Score: 1

    A lot of posts are looking at this with huge preconceptions.

    Dell literally just said choose Ubuntu unless you plan on using Windows. It positions Ubuntu as the default choice just with a major caveat.

    Or a not-so-major caveat. I trialled W7 on a machine I built with spare parts and offered my two flatmates they could use it instead of the incredibly slow XP machine they were sharing. Then the trial ran out but they really didn't want to go back to the old machine. So the conversation went like this:

    me: "well... We could try Ubuntu"

    them: "what's that?"

    me: "free software that will make the computer work, but it's not Windows"

    them: "we don't need a Windows, I don't think we ever use it"

    me: "Windows is the program that runs from the start, that makes everything work"

    them: "doesn't everything work with Ubuntu then?"

    me: "well, yes, apart from iTunes and maybe if you plug in your phones or whatever, they'll just work like a USB memory stick, but Facebook and everything will be exactly the same"

    them: "well why don't we use that then?"

    That's as close to word-for-word as my memory allows. And they find Ubuntu works perfectly for them except for iTunes and when they rotate a photo it doesn't stay rotated (Windows automatically saves it when you do). The Dell page is actually spot-on. Use Ubuntu unless you need to use Windows, or programs that require Windows. It's a major plug.

    The only thing that's missing is they put Windows on the left. People tend to assume things on the top and left are more important. Try shopping the page to swap the Windows and Ubuntu positions around and see if the page doesn't suddenly seem like one big plug for Ubuntu. But, you know, one of them has to go on the left and we'd only be moaning about how Dell didn't say using Windows makes you a bad parent, baby Jesus cry, or whatever.

  82. No issues here with ubuntu by doatesy · · Score: 1

    I am a sys admin, and I am running ubuntu. i have set up the laptop to duel boot into windows 7, but I very very rarley find myself booting there (once a month)... Mainly to update the iphone software. I have had very few problems with ubuntu, much less than windows 7 (really struggles with drivers for the graphics card and turns the screen into garbage occasionally), and have never had any problems with SMB... Its just worked for me. \ I installed it on my sisters laptop (who has no interest at all in open source programming, she's a nurse), as we didnt have a windows licence for it, and I let her know that if she wanted to go to windows, we could do that, but we'd have to buy a licence, over a year on, she absolutly loves ubuntu, and now does not like windows GUI at all.... But then there are people who can not cope with the change from windows to linux, and if they were forced to change over ... it would not end well.... So from my experience... dell, you got it wrong.. I understand that the majority of people use windows... but you still got it wrong

  83. What's harder is by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What's harder is opening an odt document created by any application (there are several) in Word 2007. Where's the "import: ODT" option?

    What's even harder is making sure that your document under Word2007 looks the same as the document on the other machine which has a different printer installed...

  84. Correction by AlgorithMan · · Score: 1

    If you are an idiot who likes file-chaos and who likes his PC to be slow, dysfunctional, expensive, a botnet-zombie that spreads childporn and you are to afraid to try something else because you are to lazy to get used to something that is different from what you believe to "know" (although the poor state of your PCs proves the opposite) even if using the different things would save more time than getting used to them would take (so actually your laziness makes you work to much *lol*)

    Then by all means: USE WINDOWS!

    --
    The MAFIAA is a bunch of mindless jerks who will be the first up against the wall when the revolution comes
    1. Re:Correction by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      *facepalm*
      It is fully possible to use Windows and not have any of those happen. User stupidity should not be blamed on the operating system.

  85. My 02 cents. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I am running Nagios on some old hardware on a DSL line that monitors my companies external services and their availability from the internet (about 75 services and machines)

    Up until today, Nagios was running on Gutsy, the uptime was 480 some days. Out of sight and out of mind. I'm not worried about security on it because there is no services reachable from the outside and on the inside, it is running on our lab network. Either way...

    I noticed the time shifting recently so I wanted to be lazy install ntpd. apt-get failed because Gutsy hit EOL early last year. I ran a few commands, waited about an hour for the new packages to download and be updated, rebooted and DONE. Now I am running Hardy, I am up to date and using a system that has an expected EOL of some time in 2013. One google search, four commands, one reboot, updated the OS and all of the software. The downtime was 3 minutes for the system to reboot.

    Ubuntu server FTW.

  86. Re:Telling people to use windos when you use Linux by Johnny+Loves+Linux · · Score: 1

    h4rm0ny, You're not the first post I've seen like this, where the posters says something like "I'm a Linux user, I use it at work, I use it at home. I have #N number of Linux boxes, I've used #M linux distros, but I really recommend to people who have never used a computer to use Microsoft (tm) products." I don't get it. Is it like cognitive dissonance? How can someone say "I'm an expert in technology A *which* I really like and I'm good at, but I advise friends and family to use technology B, which I'm not an expert on *and* I believe is an *inferior* technology?" I mean you voluntary use Linux and you *sound* like you really like it, so why would advise them to use *any* Microsoft product. If I was paranoid I might say you're a shill, but I'm willing to believe that I'm missing something here and I would like someone to help me out. Why would someone new to the wonderful world of computers be better of using a proprietary product with onerous EULAS, viruses, trojans, malware, etc. rathen than a Freedom platform with none of that nonsense? Is it a matter of distros? Why not tell then to run Ubuntu, or openSuSe, Fedora, etc.? What am I missing?

  87. Just one problem. by Psaakyrn · · Score: 1

    What if I'm already using Windows/am familiar with Windows, but also interested in open-source programming?.

  88. lol by smash · · Score: 1

    Given that Dell insist that my SOE is broken (despite working on 100s of machines of the same model) or that I'm using their hardware inappropriately ("its not meant for workstation use!") when i report faults, I'd take any of their opinions on software with a few tonnes of salt.

    --
    I run: Windows, OS X, Linux, FreeBSD. Just because you have a hammer, doesn't mean everything is a nail.
  89. Unfair Comparison by darkpixel2k · · Score: 1

    After I purchased a Dell Mini netbook for my wife a few weeks ago, I can see why 98% of netbooks (or whatever the stat was) now ship with Windows.

    While I utterly despise Windows, why the f*ck was Dell shipping the piece of crap that is Ubuntu Netbook Remix or whatever the hell it's called.

    It is a piece of utter crap. The first thin I did with her netbook was wipe it out and install a real copy of Ubuntu.

    My wife has been using Linux for ~5 years now, and she couldn't stand the crap that Dell pre-installed. Is it any wonder why customers are picking Windows when their other choice is UNR?

    UNR turned what could have been a decent netbook experience into something that gave me visions of playing with my first pocket organizer. The interface was utter garbage and counter-intuitive.

    It also doesn't help the way Dell made their touchpad. The right and left mouse buttons are built into the touchpad surface--so if you use one finger to move the mouse and another to 'tap', the mouse suddenly zooms across the screen because it thinks you moved your finger.

    I purchased a Dell back in ~1997. Crap. I purchased a netbook in 2010. Crap. I'm done with Dell. So much for trying to support a company because they are supporting open source.

    Next time I'll buy an HP/Compaq laptop, pay the Microsoft tax, and then put Ubuntu on it.

    --
    There's no place like ::1 (I've completed my transition to IPv6)
    1. Re:Unfair Comparison by mikechant · · Score: 1

      While I utterly despise Windows, why the f*ck was Dell shipping the piece of crap that is Ubuntu Netbook Remix or whatever the hell it's called.

      It is a piece of utter crap. The first thin I did with her netbook was wipe it out and install a real copy of Ubuntu.

      Personally I quite like UNR on a small screen, but anyhow you should understand that UNR is, in fact, also 'real Ubuntu' and you can just switch to the normal interface without reinstalling.

  90. heh - if... by novar21 · · Score: 1

    if my wife and daughters can handle ubuntu, wife 46, daughters 19 and 16; I am sure its ready for the general population. Yes, I am a tech, but handing them each a ubuntu, laptop or net book never made them flinch. Or degrade the manufacturer, in fact they recommended it to their friends and neighbors. The only one who cant run ubuntu in my house is the DOG. Which is good cause she has lots of time to hack to get lots of DOG toys and treats. No hacking for her, passwords are complex here.

  91. While you guys debate Linux vs Windows... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I will be out on a date.

    You can pry my OSX from my cold dead hands.

  92. Re:PORN! I'm surprised no one has mentioned it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    YouPorn and RedTube don't work so great under Linux.

    XKCD confirms it:

    http://xkcd.com/619/

  93. Momentum isn't a conspiracy... by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 1

    ...just a fact of life. There are entirely too many people who have one or two proprietary applications which require Windows.

    why, during the worst global economic times any of us will probably ever see, free software has not made great strides.

    It's a lose-lose situation. Let me break it down...

    Bad economic times make people ridiculously conservative. Upgrading to a new version of Windows is at least perceived to be easier and safer than upgrading to Linux. Better yet, don't upgrade -- just keep doing what you're doing, put off spending any money or time at all, or risking spending money or time -- if you install Linux, and it doesn't work out, you then have to switch back to Windows. If you did Linux on your own, and you screw it up and want to go back, you may end up having to pay a Windows tech...

    It doesn't matter whether the above is true. It's that it's possibly true, and it's what people think is true. Unfortunately, education here is tricky, because if I want to be honest, I have to admit that yes, all of the above is a real possibility, even though it's easier than ever to set up a dual-boot Linux installation without interfering with Windows.

    Now, some people are technologically adventurous, risk-takers in general. These people want the latest and greatest, even if they might have to spend a weekend fixing their computer. But then, if you're a risk-taker, piracy is a great option right now, so the price of Linux doesn't enter into it. And if they're willing to pirate, chances are, they have all sorts of pirated proprietary software, like Photoshop, for which there is no Linux equivalent. The situation essentially reverts to the way it is when people have money.

    And that's just the view without the "conspiracy theories," many of which are anything but. Look at that website -- it's not just that page. At the top of every page is the statement: "Windows(R). Life without Walls(TM). Dell recommends Windows 7." Is it entirely unreasonable to assume that Dell isn't placing that blatant advertisement there out of a genuine concern for what's best for the consumer? Most consumers don't install OSes, they buy a new computer with a new OS -- and it's not easy to buy a computer with Linux pre-installed, and even harder to find one where anything close to the actual price of Windows has been deducted from the Linux version. Indeed, Dell not only doesn't offer Ubuntu on all of their models -- hardly any of them, in fact -- and the ones they do are sold from an entirely different section of their website, making comparison much more difficult than it could be to see how much you save, if you save anything at all. (Compare that with simply putting "Ubuntu" as an option next to the various flavors of Windows, with an actual dollar amount difference.)

    That isn't to say that free software has made no progress. Firefox is eating into IE's marketshare, which has resulted in a better Web for everyone, helping the move to web-based everything, which makes it easier for people to use Linux or, well, anything -- and Firefox didn't even exist in 2003. The Mobile world is a battle between Symbian, Blackberry, Android, Maemo, and iPhone, and of those, only Blackberry and iPhone are closed. "Open" is a bona-fide buzzword -- Microsoft, Apple, Oracle, and of course, Google, all make a big deal about their contributions to open source and open standards.

    It also isn't to say that Linux has made no progress. People know about Ubuntu, and more people are using it all the time. We have companies like Asus taking chances -- sometimes reverting, but every now and then, we see something interesting. Dell is selling Ubuntu, even if they're being dicks about it. And of course, there's always embedded Linux -- Android, Moblin, and others.

    Like most of the real world, there isn't one simple, neat answer for why things are the way they are. I'm not even sure there's a simple, neat answer for whether Linux, or Fr

    --
    Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
  94. Re:PORN! I'm surprised no one has mentioned it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Neat idea. Except that there's less malware on porn sites than on non-porn sites: (link)

  95. Windows for new users? Oh please, no. by Killer+Eye · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Recommending that people "new to computers" use Windows is the worst advice imaginable. We've given Microsoft over 20 horrible years, and they have managed to make computing almost boring in that time. It is well past time to hand the torch somewhere else...ANYWHERE else. The last thing we need is another generation who thinks Windows is what it means to "use a computer".

    Even in 1990, the power and potential of machines was staggering. And I'm sorry, but Microsoft has done NOTHING with that potential. Software is still overly-expensive, locked-in, ugly, and crashing, and impressively it seems that basic tasks are even slower today than on machines of the 80s. It really wouldn't have taken much effort to bring the world way forward, to make PCs absolutely marvelous devices. Instead of realizing the potential, these incredibly sophisticated machines still have pretty basic uses, and I find that sad.

    We need another generation, the people "new to computers", to use something new. Let them tinker without the chains of some stupid monopoly, and build a better machine.

    --
    "Microsoft killed my company, I hold a personal grudge. I don't use Microsoft products and neither should you."-JWZ
  96. Word 2007 on Wine by tepples · · Score: 1

    Opening a document someone sent you from work in Word 2007 and editing it in Word 2007. Where's the ribbon?

    Microsoft Office file viewers have worked in Wine since Wine 1.0. Office applications themselves are built from the same code base as the file viewers. What problems did you have installing Word 2007 on Wine, other than somehow obtaining a copy of Word 2007 in the first place?

  97. Allow me to rephrase re: games by tepples · · Score: 1

    Of course, in Ubuntu this just isn't a problem because there's no games at all, but that's another issue entirely.

    Really? This system runs Tux Racer and Frozen Bubble and a bunch of other games just fine.

    Then please allow me to rephrase: Of course, in Ubuntu this just isn't a problem because there's no games at all produced for Ubuntu that are of comparable production values to major-label PC or console games.

    1. Re:Allow me to rephrase re: games by halltk1983 · · Score: 1

      Doom 3 and Quake 4.

      --
      Watch for Penguins, they eat Apples and throw rocks at Windows.
  98. I think I found your almost by tepples · · Score: 1

    There are free alternatives to almost all Windows programs.

    What is the Free alternative to each of the following Windows apps?

    • Stone Edge Order Manager
    • Netflix Watch Instantly
    • Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2
    1. Re:I think I found your almost by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      Key word here is "almost". I'm sure there are Linux programs without Windows equivalents as well.

    2. Re:I think I found your almost by tepples · · Score: 1

      I think I found your almost

      Key word here is "almost".

      And each user will have a different "almost": one app on which the user relies that has no close substitute on the other platform. My "almost" is different from my cousin's, which is probably different from your mom's. For many, the "almost" is the driver for a particular piece of hardware, such as an iPod or a particular flatbed scanner model. Proponents of a Free desktop would have to make a lot more of these "almosts" disappear in order to drive adoption by end users.

  99. Commercial proprietary software by tepples · · Score: 1

    Though why not install it through the package manager in the first place?

    Because not every piece of software ever created is available at no charge from a public repository. For example, some publishers of proprietary software "sell copies", that is, distribute copies for a fee and restrict access to enforce payment. This is a common practice for high-production-value video games.

    1. Re:Commercial proprietary software by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Note that GP was talking of specific cases - and for all of them, repositories is the correct way to deal with it. I don't want to debate the merits of repositories in general, or specifically for commercial software. The matter of fact, though, is that a Linux user is not particularly likely to come by any that he would actually need (unlike on Windows). A sane gamer would go with Linux in the first place.

  100. It's official. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    System76 has their heads on straight; Dell does not.

    If you need Creative Suite, get a Mac. Best OS that it runs on.

    If you need DirectX 10+ games, at least keep windows around.

    If you want your computer to actually work, use Ubuntu.

  101. what free anti-virus program? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    which one?

    1. Re:what free anti-virus program? by PagosaSam · · Score: 1
      I used to use AVG, but they turned into nagware. It still works well but it wants you to upgrade all the time,

      I've been using Avira lately. Seems to work well with less nagging.

      Cheers!

      --
      :q! Oh crap, not again...
  102. Re:Telling people to use windos when you use Linux by shmlco · · Score: 1

    Because while most non-techno-nerds (e.g. your average users) usually only want to check mail and browse the web, they also have an annoying habit of needing to run Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and Photoshop. And their kids want iTunes for their iPods, not to mention their wanting to play StarCraft, Gears, Halo, and a slew of other Windows-only games.

    Tell them their brand-spanking-new Linux-based computer can't do so, and they tend to get just a little upset....

    --
    Any sect, cult, or religion will legislate its creed into law if it acquires the political power to do so.
  103. I wanted to choose Ubuntu by pinkstuff · · Score: 1

    I recently bought a Dell laptop, they are far better value for money for the Intel i-series chips. I really, really, wanted to support Ubuntu and have Ubuntu installed on the laptop - Dell wouldn't have a bar of it. They seem to only ship Ubuntu on lower spec laptops, which, IMHO, is utterly rubbish.

    Actually, come to think about it, they wouldn't even UNINSTALL the anti virus software even if I paid the same price.

  104. Re:PORN! I'm surprised no one has mentioned it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    PORN! I'm surprised no one has mentioned it..

    Wait. You're genuinely surprised that Dell doesn't suggest Ubuntu to people who want to browse porn a lot.

    Uhhuh.....

  105. Dell does not sell Ubuntu systems by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This story amuses me greatly as, despite all the waffle from the PR and marketing drones, it is not possible to buy an Ubuntu based system from Dell.
    If you run a search, you might find a few systems that show Ubuntu; but click on them and it is Windows 7 all the way. Ubuntu is not shown as an option at the customise stage.
    The EU should step in and force OEMs to sell no-OS systems (with the requisite price reduction). Only then would we begin to see fair competition in the PC market.

  106. A shame... by rfelsburg · · Score: 1

    It really is a shame that dell had to direct new users towards the windows side, when in actuality labeling Ubuntu as perfect for 'new users' is more accurate. Since they are exactly the people that should be trying Ubuntu. They aren't used to windows already, and likely haven't developed any prejudices towards one piece of software or another, so OpenOffice and CrossoverOffice are just as good as Microsoft Office.

  107. Re:iTunes (aka iOS devices) by DaveyJJ · · Score: 1

    Yup. I've been using computers since the days of Wang systems that required punchcards and were 15-20 feet long. This is the *ONE* thing holding me back from Ubuntu or any other Linux distro ... the fact that there is no one simple app that I can make my iPad, iPod touches work with and sync to. I don't want to struggle with something that should be plug and play. Until then, I choose to stick with OSX.

    --
    DaveyJJ
  108. Let's see... by Grismar · · Score: 1

    People new to using computers should use Windows.

    People used to Windows should continue to use Windows on new computers.

    So Dell is effectively saying everyone should use Windows, except if you somehow think of a strong reason not to, or are interested in "open source programming", as if this were impossible on Windows systems? (which invalidates that point, so we're back to "everyone should use Windows, except if they really don't want to")

    This is so mind-numbingly dumb, it's offensive!

  109. paid off by M$ by hesaigo999ca · · Score: 1

    I wonder how much money is going to exchange hands behind closed doors because of this review, seeing as dell is doing so poorly they need cash infusion, | could see this as being a pay off to help the M$ image....but of course those things are never public....

    If you mod me down for saying M$ you will be struck down by a big lightning bearing penguin in the sky!

  110. Re: Linux Hater blog... by LinuxIsGarbage · · Score: 1

    He kind of ran out of good rants a while ago. Now he just posts something monthly to keep the flame war up in the comments.

  111. Re:Windows for new users? Oh please, no. by DaveV1.0 · · Score: 1

    If those 20 years were so horrible, why hasn't some other company or operating system overtaken Microsoft and Windows? There is Apple. There is Redhat. There is Canonical and Ubuntu.

    Why hasn't someone unseated Microsoft if things have been horrible for 20 years?

    --
    There is no "-1 offended" or "-1 you don't agree with me" mod options for a reason.
  112. You're kidding, right? by FoolishOwl · · Score: 1

    It's much, much easier to find fixes to problems on Ubuntu. FLOSS makes it possible for skilled users to discover how things work; the relative popularity of Ubuntu means that problems and fixes can be found readily online.

    The last straw that led me to switch to Linux primarily was trying to fix a problem with a security suite, Kaspersky, that kept disabling my LAN connectivity. I checked the official forums -- there were lots of discussions of the problem. No one knew how to fix it. There were various guesses about fixing it by renaming DLL files to disable some feature, and some guesses about what the configuration options might do, but no one was sure. I never fixed the problem.

    My typical experience with technical problems in Microsoft software is that they're usually very easy to fix. When they're not easy to fix, they can't be fixed at all.

    With open source software, there's a continous chain, from the original developers of an application, to users with comparable knowledge who can read the source code, to those with enough technical knowledge to go over the documentation and edit the configuration files and write up how-to guides, to the people who know enough to Google the problem, to the raw beginners. With closed-source software, there is a large gap in that chain -- and moreover, software isn't designed with the assumption that the user should be able to modify it, meaning that much that could be clarified is obscured.

  113. Feedback by Fede+Pires · · Score: 1

    I just left a very nice message on the feedback link in Dell's site on the name of the Linux community :). I think we should all do the same and let them know what we think.

  114. themaeh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think dell should sell more PCs with Ubuntu. But the most problem is, that there's no enterprise support with the Ubuntu stuff coming from dell or not?
    That's the problem, why we're on my company dont buying dell computers.

    kind Regards
    Michael
    http://www.address-base.de

  115. Linux Sucks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Linux fucking sucks. Get over it.

    Fresh install of Ubuntu on my new Sony Laptop:

    *Sound not working (No fix at the moment)
    *ACPI sleep not working (fixed)
    *NetworkManager fucks up after ACPI sleep
    *Random kernel panics (complete lockup, has to do with wireless networking, no fix)
    *After four or five cold boots, hangs at bootup screen and will not boot until reformat

    The list goes on and on...

  116. Re:PORN! I'm surprised no one has mentioned it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Good point !

  117. Linux Sucks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Linux fucking sucks, get over it.
    Fresh install on my new Sony (Ubuntu 10.04):

    *No sound (no fix available)
    *Kernel panic when switching wireless networks
    *X crashes randomly
    *Won't boot after 3 or 4 cold boots (have to reinstall)
    *The list goes on...

    Linux hasn't changed much in the 15 years I've used it. Desktop Linux is just as shitty as it was in the late 90s.

  118. Don't single out seniors. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Grandma just can't say no to an install request."

    I've cleaned more than my share of infected computers, Senior citizens aren't the only ones with this problem. Kids have their infected games, teens visit dodgy websites (that do drive by attacks) looking songs, Joe Sixpack has his infected porn, etc.

    To be perfectly correct, the problem is Joe (or Jane) Average user and all their favorite type of infected programs.

  119. Bullshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    iTunes is natively Mac. Ported to Windows. WINED on Linux.

    Dell. Check your facts.