After all, running Windows without a decent anti-virus is like walking through a Red Light District after eating five metric tonnes of Viagra.
Well you could always run a live CD if your HDD fails ... and upload all your files to Gmail like I do, or some other online storage places. Or you could buy a new HDD or dumpster dive for one or get one from an old Xbox (like me)
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Quote from: deusexaetheraI installed Ubuntu a couple of times. It was infuriating having to "sudo" all of the commands that I needed to execute under the Root account. They shouldn't have blocked that account from being used directly.It also would have been nice if my Postscript printer driver had worked. Not worked properly, worked at all.But did you like the text editor/s (gedit)? Did you like the image manipulation program (the gimp)? Did you like the office suite (OpenOffice.org)? Did you like the web browser (firefox)? Did you like the IM program (gaim)? Did you like the many cool and useful GNOME panel applets? Did you like the document viewer (evince - for viewing PDFs, Postscript, DjVu and whatever DVI is documents)? Did you like the native support for NFS, SMB, FTP, SSH, and WebDav shares? Did you like the email client (Evolution)? Did you like the BitTorrent client? Did you like the support for so many more compressed archives? Did you like the friendly Take Screenshot program? The Dictionary? The actaully-not-bad games? The photo management program? The scanning software (XSane)? The backup system (Keep)? Being able to start new graphical logins from within a window (gdmflexiserver, of course it's accessible via the GUI)? That you don't have to resort to a Run box to configure which servers start at boot (msconfig, blow me)?Did you like the fact that it's all free software? That it's not developed by a convicted monopolist? That it doesn't have any copy-protection bullshit and doesn't spy on it's users (WGA, what a useful program!)? That it has a sometimes-invaluable command line interface, with programs such as sed, awk and grep? That it supports all types of useful filesystems? That it's polite enough to ask before overwriting the MBR (and not with a shitty boot loader either - only the best bootloader on the planet period)? That it doesn't ship with a theme that looks like it was designed by Fisher Price? That the installer isn't an unfriendly piece of shit (as well as the partitioner, would it be so hard to tell us the partition type like every other partitioner in the fcking world!?)? That the installer is on a very usable graphical livecd? That it runs on PPC-based machines (i.e. millions of those old macs)? That the Applications menu is actually organized (what genius usability expert did MS pay to decide not to organize it properly?)?All this, and: 1. It's free as in freedom. 2. It's free as in price. 3. It fits on one CD.Does Windows have ANYTHING other than industry support? Except Paint, that is.
I installed Ubuntu a couple of times. It was infuriating having to "sudo" all of the commands that I needed to execute under the Root account. They shouldn't have blocked that account from being used directly.It also would have been nice if my Postscript printer driver had worked. Not worked properly, worked at all.