10K sets of parts are ordered.
This has nothing to do with availability of usable systems.
See for yourself what Eben says on the web site: http://www.raspberrypi.org/archives/302
Thus I cannot understand what is posted on the web site cited here. And even if I could: Why should I believe it??
As far as I know Anonymous has certain patterns with which they identify their statements. Are there any on the cited web site?
Where is the nice jingle or Guy Fawkes?
And even worse: Many -maybe even most- programmers know nothing about command line tools. I see them every working day muddling around with their IDEs and Filezillas.
After initial release i was somewhat annoyed. But now everything is working fine.
I like the apps menu up in the top where it does not waste space.
I always had my toolbar left and popping up since my days with fvwm2. This leaves more place for content, too.
The design is quite nice and the whole thing is light weight. Particularly when compared to KDE.
And last not least: It is easy for people who are not hackers or cool power users to adapt their knowledge of their mobile phone to Ubuntu.
Why in hell do most of the self acclaimed power users and pros "hate" it, or "like xyz better"?
It does what it was designed to do and is nice and functional.
Perhaps many people here simply don't like new things...
10K sets of parts are ordered. This has nothing to do with availability of usable systems. See for yourself what Eben says on the web site: http://www.raspberrypi.org/archives/302
Thus I cannot understand what is posted on the web site cited here. And even if I could: Why should I believe it?? As far as I know Anonymous has certain patterns with which they identify their statements. Are there any on the cited web site? Where is the nice jingle or Guy Fawkes?
And even worse: Many -maybe even most- programmers know nothing about command line tools. I see them every working day muddling around with their IDEs and Filezillas.
After initial release i was somewhat annoyed. But now everything is working fine. I like the apps menu up in the top where it does not waste space. I always had my toolbar left and popping up since my days with fvwm2. This leaves more place for content, too. The design is quite nice and the whole thing is light weight. Particularly when compared to KDE. And last not least: It is easy for people who are not hackers or cool power users to adapt their knowledge of their mobile phone to Ubuntu. Why in hell do most of the self acclaimed power users and pros "hate" it, or "like xyz better"? It does what it was designed to do and is nice and functional. Perhaps many people here simply don't like new things...
Everybody stupid enough to buy Windows 8 should have no truck with UN*X or Linux at all! Thank you, Bill!