allix wrote:Tsuroerusu wrote:
Take BackTrack (Security auditing distro), I assume you find it "unacceptable" because they don't include Adobe Acrobat, RealPlayer, Java or what the heck ever.
With the very nature of free software you can make any distro you wish, however we are talking about distros that appeal to the masses ala fedora, ubuntu, opensuse not some niche security distro. You want people to get into linux then the desktop distros should just work.
Do we speak the same language? Because I think it might be more useful if I started speaking Danish, might make a lot more sense. Because I don't see how you can take
"Fedora is a Linux-based operating system that showcases the latest in free and open source software." to mean "appeal to the masses", unless you're speaking a different language, I'm just saying.
allix wrote:If on the other hand you don;t care about popularity , ease of use but only freedom then continue using 25 terminal windows with fluxbox and emacs
Idiotic argument my friend, I could give two rats asses about popularity and still care about ease of use if I wanted to. And I happen to find 15 or however many, terminals quite easy to use, in case you wanted to know, so there!
allix wrote:Tsuroerusu wrote:
And why the heck can't people not do that with GNU/Linux? If there isn't a package for a particular application for a distribution a person might be using, just don't use that application and find something else! That's what people do in Windows and Mac, I think it's an absurd mentality to think that Linux must be absolutely perfect in every aspect, when the competition certainly are not.
There is a reason why the windows kernel is shit technically, because it has to be backwards compatible. Therefore only msdos software does not work well. With mac , there is a emulator or something for older software.
What the hell does packaging of applications have to freaking do with backwards compatibility? I'll tell you, ZERO!
allix wrote:Tsuroerusu wrote:
Oh please, have you ever tried installing Linux on a machine where it generally did not work? I have never seen that!
Debian Stable won;t install on my laptop as the kernel is too old, apart from that I have not had any problems but I am not by any means in front of the latest machines, nor are you to judge what works and what does not. some of your hardware might not work with xp actually, I remember a soundcard from 2000, that I had to hunt down the drivers online, fortunately I did not need to compile anything
Ummm, if I have installed or run GNU/Linux on brand new machines that I built for some other folks, or just tested for the heck of it, am I not in a position to judge?
allix wrote:Tsuroerusu wrote:
OK, then what do you suppose we do? Email folks a flyer?
Ideally the hardware comes with the linux drivers on the cd, a asus motherboard I use to have did in fact, its just many manufacturers do not do that.
LOL, NO!
Ideally the drivers would be included upstream at kernel.org, so that things just works and doesn't have to be installed or configured in any distribution, and maintained as the kernel changes, this is why you never see an IDE or SATA controller not work. The only reason you'd need to include a driver on a CD would be if the driver was proprietary, and that happens to be a GPL violation!
allix wrote:Tsuroerusu wrote:
OK, then explain this to me:
Cheapest iMac: 7.999,00 DKK
2.4 GHz Intel Core 2 Duo
1GB memory
ATI Radeon HD 2400 XT with 128MB memory
250GB hard drive
http://store.apple.com/dk/browse/home/s ... o=MjI4NDk4
Cheapest Dell XPS with a monitor included: 7.690 DKK
Intel® Processor Q6600 Quad Core™ (2.40GHz, 1066Mhz FSB, 8MB cache)
2048 MB Dual Channel DDR2 SDRAM på 800 MHz [2x1024]
256MB ATI® Radeon® HD 3650 Graphics card
500 GB Seriel ATA/100-harddisk (7.200 omdr./min.) med 16 MB DataBurst™-cache
http://www1.euro.dell.com/content/produ ... l=da&s=dhs
Not only is this Dell machine slightly cheaper than the iMac, but it's more powerful in every single regard. Got four cores instead of two, twice as much memory, a better graphics card and twice as big a hard drive. And please don't give me the "you're comparing apples to oranges" (No pun intended), I am comparing computers intended for freaking home use. The Mac Pro tower machines are obviously professional workstations!
Apple iMac 20" C2D 1GB 320GB DVDRW £818.97 inc vat
http://www.dabs.com/productview.aspx?Qu ... 0000,50336
Sony VAIO LA3 C2D T5600 2GB 320GB £843.99 inc vat
http://www.dabs.com/productview.aspx?Qu ... 0000,50417
Apple £818.97 inc vat , sony £843.99 inc vat
so the sony is more, it has more ram admittedly , but to say apples pcs are expensive, you should look at a good comparison.
Please re-read what is quoted above, and come back to me, I compared machines intended for home use, that's a fine comparison. Apple doesn't sell a tower-based machine for home use, so I think it's fully legitimate to compare an iMac to a Dell machine.
In the area of laptops, if a person is gonna buy a laptop for an actual home use (Desktop replacement, is the term for it), they tend to want something with a 15 inch screen (I know my mother certainly would), and if you take the Macbook Pro, that one starts at 13.799,00 DKK here in Denmark, and 1.299,00 GBP (12.240,00 DKK) in the UK, you can quite easily find something with a 15 inch screen, decent specs for a lot less money than what a Macbook Pro costs you. Have a look on this page:
http://www1.euro.dell.com/content/produ ... l=da&s=dhs
The one that costs 8.290 DKK, is flipping 5509 DKK cheaper, and yet it has 4 flipping GBs of RAM!!!
allix wrote:Dells pcs are cheap because they on the most part don't put a lot of effort into the designs, whereas as sony do and there expensive as apple.
So flipping what? Your average computer user doesn't buy a computer for it's design (I don't know anybody who would), and aren't we generally talking about average computer users?
allix wrote:You should see the price of some sony high end laptops....
Does average users buy high-end machines? NO!
allix wrote:Tsuroerusu wrote:
People like that I never bother to try to convert to Linux, for me, it's a giant waste of time. So the issue is moot, from my perspective. If Windows literally "works fine" (And I am REALLY being literal here), then why bother suggesting that people try something else? It's a waste of time in general I find, especially if you have to then spend time educating them on various issues.
what he means by "works fine" is that you can turn on the pc , browse the web and do whatever the person wants and turn it off.
He is not talking about something that's technically better
...
If you would actually read what I post, rather than just glance over it, you might notice that I understood his reply perfectly, and was referring to the same thing you're trying to tell me that I wasn't referring to.
Please, next time, read before you reply. In other words, RMFP!!!
allix wrote:The freedom argument is not imo going to work because the majority of the people in the world don't give a crap what's happening in Sri Lanka , Zimbabwe , China , North Korea to name a few , so their give less crap about whether software has the four freedoms.
I'd say it depends on who you talk to. A friend of mine who's a hardcore Marxist completely gets it, he got it the first time I explained software freedom to him. Even a politician from the Social Democratic party, whom I talked to during the election, also got the idea, because I told him that investing in the use of free software would keep the money here in Denmark, and not be sent to a greedy company called Microsoft in the USA.