I fully agree with this artical apart from the Linux zealotism part.
Sorry that GNU/Linux is a damn good OS. Making thousands of people perfectly happy.
Yea, if it was shit, there'd be less "zealots" (apparantly also knows as people who prefer it over the rest of the OSes).
For the record, I've only had to reboot to get into a new kernel or install a different distro.
Not after everytime I install software.
It is a pain having to re-install all your software when you updrade the distro though.
I've never had such a problem on any OS because I always install non-shitware.
I didn't say it was shit I just don't like the style of the artical.
I could install non-system stuff somewhere in my home directory if that was bothering me. Hell I could install everything in my home directory and symlink to the system-stuff I want from /bin etc.
You don't install/update Direct X or anything like that, no?
You said you disagreed with him on the "Linux zealotism part". And hah, alot of it wasn't "Linux" zealotism, more like "decent OS w/o lots of malware (perhaps because it's non-mainstream? Doesn't matter.)" - it would apply to Mac OS X too, but not to Windows.
I don't know but when I install a package it just installs, I can't remember seeing any options like that.
No, I don't need to, I don't play games, and DirectX is part of the OS so yes updating it could fuck things up if it goes bad. That's kind of the problem with Windows DirectX should be just a library it shouldn't effect the rest of the OS.
Would it?It sounded like "the whole world should use Linux" me, all the time when I was reading that artical I was thinkiing what about Mac OS? What about BSD? What about BeOS?
Depends on the type of package. Autopackages, I believe, can be installed anywhere. Same with the binary package system I'm working on (which is alot like autopackage).
Too bad your OS is just one big kludge created and marketed by a monopoly with only money in mind.
He was talking about GNU/Linux, which is what the 100$ laptop will run. GNU/Linux doesn't have much malware floating about. It generally runs very stable, and has lots of different choices for window manager etc., so it'll be stable and fast on even old hardware, or newer 100$ hardware.
The Ubuntu, Redhat or Vector Linux installation programs never gave me an option
What FreeDOS, DR-DOS, BeOS?Oh Windows, well that isn't my OS, it's Bill Gates' and Steve Ballmer's.
But it isn't the only operating system that will run on old/cheap hardware
and it probably isn't the best for every purpose either.
Good thing they're not the only choices you have when it comes to installing programs on GNU/Linux.
Interesting. Since when did you own BeOS?
So what, it's what the 100$ laptop people decided it would run, at least by default.
The sky is falling.
Could you suggest something better then?
I don't, you're just being pedantic.
zealot.