Ubuntu. Just plain Godly.
If I piss anybody off, TOUGH!
OK. I stumbled across MyADSLwhile doing a search for DVD Writers. I wanna buy 1 today, so I decided to check prices on the net. I also wanted to check for one that Ubuntu supports. Seems I cant find one that Ubuntu doesnt! Now, Ive read this thread through, and Ive installed Ubuntu Dapper Drake, and Ive run Knoppix, RedHat, Mandriva, DSL, Aurora, Aurox, ATmission, Gentoo, Slackware, Morphix and a few others. The ones Ive listed are the ones I favor. Ive ALSO run 3.11, 98, 200, NT, ME, XP Home, XP Pro and now Vista.
Heres my honest opinion: Most people learn a language over a few years. As you grow, you learn to speak your NATIVE tongue. So too with computers. You learn to use what EVERYONE AROUND you is using: Windows. THATS why windows is so popular. Few have the strength of personality to DO IT ON THEIR OWN. Nobody wants to take the plunge and learn something new. Most of you here are too closed minded to bother trying something new. Yes, mr XP. Billy is feeding on your insecurities and making a quick buck off you fools. See, everytime he releases a new version, he stops supporting the last one. Win98: GONE! So you say: Who runs Win98 nowadays anyway? Well, Ill tell you: To upgrade from ME, you have to BUY XP, which isnt cheap (Upwards of 1500 bucks???). THEN you get home and find that it wont run on your machine cos you havent got enough RAM. So you go looking for more RAM, which costs about R1.50 per MB (SDRAM) and a little less for DDRAM. THEN you have to buy Microsoft Office 2003(cos youre used to it, and change is already difficult ) cos your version doesnt work too well with XP. And the list goes on. Then your processor isnt fast enough blah blah blah!
OR
Go to
www.ubuntu.com, order the latest version which Canonical will ship to you ... and they even pay shipping charges. Installation of Dapper is easy as ... nevermind. I found this article on the net for you guys to read:
The Issue at Hand
It's entirely possible that you may not have heard of Linux. Maybe you own a Mac or Windows computer and don't read the technology news. You may have a TiVo, but it doesn't have a huge sticker on the box that reads "Powered by Linux" (even though it is). You may use Google, but it doesn't have any announcement on its homepage that it's run on Linux servers (even though it is). Whether you've heard of Linux or not--it probably plays a role in your life somehow.
In all likelihood (yes, even if you're reading this), you probably don't have Linux running on your laptop computer at home or your desktop computer at work. The "desktop market" is dominated by Windows. Mac has a very small share of desktop computing (arguably even smaller than Linux's market share--it depends on whom you ask), but it is high profile--Apple stores abound in the US (there are also locations in the UK, Japan, and Canada), Mac computers feature prominently in Hollywood movies, iPods are the portable player of choice, iTunes dominates the digital download market, computer peripherals that are Mac-compatible have a logo on the side of the box indicating that they are, and major software is available for Mac OS X (Adobe Creative Suite and Microsoft Office, for example).
So why are you probably not running Linux on your computer? Why have you probably not even heard of Linux? What's stopping Linux from being more high profile, being more widely adopted?
The Linux Desktop Myth
Every year--or perhaps several times during the year--if you read technology news, you'll spot a Linux desktop article proclaiming (or quoting someone who proclaims) that "this year" is going to be the year of the Linux desktop. Clearly, they were wrong,
Linux desktops come in various flavors (or distributions). Unlike Windows and Mac, which each have only one current version (as of this writing, those would be Windows XP and Mac OS X Tiger, respectively), Linux has multiple simultaneous and different versions. They all share the same core (the Linux kernel), but they differ in terms of development cycle, business model, default applications, installation method, and hardware detection. There are literally hundreds of Linux distributions--many of which are aimed at desktop use (as opposed to server or embedded device use) and which are under rapid development. Ubuntu, the top-ranked distribution on DistroWatch, for example, releases new versions every six months. Windows, on the other hand, seems to release new versions every three to six years.
Because of these frequent releases that each come with new features, people who proclaim that "this year" is the year of the Linux desktop subscribe to and continue to perpetuate a myth about Linux--namely, that it's Linux's features that hold it back from widespread desktop adoption. In other words, according to the myth, there are hundreds of millions of Windows users out there (and some Mac users as well) desperately waiting for Linux to match their current operating systems feature for feature, and when that happens, they will all download a disk image, burn the Linux CD, install and configure the operating system themselves, and then ditch their current operating system for a Linux distribution. (If you don't know what a disk image or an operating system is, then I think you get my point--the majority of Windows and Mac users will not be installing Linux regardless of how many features it has.)
What is holding Linux back?
In online support forums for Linux, there are frequent debates about whether Linux is "ready for the desktop" and also why it's not more popular as a desktop operating system. These debates can go on for hundreds of posts, and there's usually never anything resembling a consensus reached.
Some of the frequent charges against Linux's "desktop readiness" are its lack of commercial games, its lack of general commercial applications, its lack of easily installable/obtainable hardware drivers, its different software installation models, its variety of flavors, its lack of point-and-click configurations for certain tasks, its lack of "user-friendliness," and its bad marketing. That's not a comprehensive list of the criticisms against Linux distributions, but those are some of the main proposed reasons for Linux being almost unheard of on the desktop.
To properly evaluate these criticisms, you have to know a little bit about what desktop Linux is like and what goes into using desktop Linux. Afterwards, we can start exploring the path that Linux can take to desktop prominence... or why it may never get there.
My Linux Switch Story
My family's first computer, when I was growing up, was an NEC. I don't know the model number, but it was an all-in-one computer with a monochromatic screen and two floppy disk drives for 12" floppy disks. It had no graphics to speak of, and my parents used it mainly for word processing. My brother and I used it mainly for playing a text-only game called "Millionaire," in which you buy and sell stocks in the hopes of finally earning a million dollars. There was no mouse for this computer because there were no graphics. It was all text.
Over the years, my father built PC computers that ran MS-DOS, Windows 3.1, 95, 98, 2000. My brother got a Mac for college in the early 90s, and I used that same Mac when I went to college in the late 90s. After I graduated college, I used Windows ME and XP at home and work, and I also used Mac OS 9 and OS X at work. Even though Linus Torvalds developed Linux in 1991, I don't think I'd even heard the word Linux until the turn of the millennium. I did see my father using Linux once--he was launching an application from a grey terminal screen--and my immediate thought in response was You have to type commands? How primitive.