Ric Whitney wrote: >I just can't figure out why I turned >to Linux like I have. Can anyone enlighten me? ;-) > > I run Linux because somebody has to. No, really. Linux needs a user base, so I'm volunteering to use it so that it gets a workout and, eventually, can become the "normal" platform for everyday users. I understand that the world needs to outgrow proprietary lock-in for the reasons that Joseph explained so well, and because I once got a Windows system so corrupted that I had to re-install to a fresh hard disk to get back on the Net. In general Windows has been adequate for me, and XP is better than the older ones, but there are some things that can never work well under the "ownership of ideas" fallacy. And the prices, egad, the prices! I think Microsoft one day will have to adapt to a FOSS world, and will still produce some good stuff. But I also run Linux because I'm cheap and the FOSS world offers some free tools that help me get where I'm going. I also run Linux because I can do any of the data processing that I may want to do, without being bogged down in the "favors" that Windows does for me. I happen to be very good at shell-level operations, and generally get the results I need from the command line, where this is a taffy pull when using Windows. I'm a Unix programmer and can figure out a lot of things on my own, and a lot more with Google, and still more with the PLUG list behind me. I am not yet happy with the KDE desktop, and GNOME does not work for me (any challenges in a separate chain, please!). I gave up on Samba, and am waiting to see if I can use a Linux app for an urgent music composition project that I have coming up (I've already been given some links to check into). I keep Windows XP Pro handy for the apps that only run there, but I feel, well, sort of oppressed when I need to work in that environment. I just got a brand new Windows XP machine for my wife, because she fits the profile of a non-technical professional Windows user. Windows is a niche application that is fine for those who have picked other battles. She even likes (echhh!) auto-play! When Microsoft caves in and publishes MS Money for Linux, when the Sims 2 game is portable, and when Open Document becomes the Coin of the Realm, maybe she'll be ready to switch over. Until then, there is no incentive. XP automates a lot of things that we still have to work for under Linux: I just discovered that I can right-click on a file and queue it for backup to a CD. That's nice. To capture the general public's interest, we still have some catching up to do on the Linux side. But me, I'm happy to have hacked my way totally free of the registry and its overlords, for all of my daily operations at home. Vic --------------------------------------------------- PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change you mail settings: http://lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss