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Jon Glass wrote: > Taking your arguments together, I fail to see why these people are > using any computer but Macintoshes.... Great advertisements. ;-) So, you are saying no answer I offer would be accepted? :-D Mac never appealed to these people, never made it's way into their circle of experience. Yes, your experience is apparently different from mine, but I'm willing to bet mine is closer to the big answer to all this advocacy of Linux for the masses. For you to suggest Mac shows you aren't even on the same sheet of music. So let me tell you what my clients all say: Mac costs too much, always comes bereft of an office suite, and thus costs even more just to make it what they have when they buy a Windows PC from their vendor of choice. Most of my clients did not have to reinstall Windows annually, but may have run across it once in three years. When they did, they were able to keep all their settings, all their customizations, which *do* matter to them. I can't count how many times a single upgrade from one minor version to another of any Linux distro didn't give me trouble because my settings wouldn't migrate. And I have read the same for literally hundreds on forums all over the Net. It isn't the upgrading that's the problem, it's having a painless upgrade. It's an upgrade which apparently changes nothing, because they don't care about new features for the most part. These are people who probably could not tell the difference between OpenOffice 1.x and 3.x, except the latter is much slower and takes a lot longer to download. These are people who get along fine with MS Office 97 or Word Perfect 6 for Windows. That includes me, BTW. How come I can't run WP8 for Linux (which I bought) on any modern distro? They can all run their WP8 for Windows on XP. If Windows failed and had to be reinstalled once every year, that's still easier than most distro upgrades every six months. More features is not always a good thing. I'd be happy with the same desktop I had when I installed RedHat 7.2, with WP8, Applix 4.x, and only a few applications have gained any features I appreciate: Joe, Cream-Vim, and Nedit. Until recently, most of those would run, or could be compiled to run, on at least RH 7.2 (same as RHEL 2). RH 7.3 was *very* good, but it broke things moving from GNOME 1.x to 2.x. Without me telling them I felt that way, most of my clients told me they did. -- Ed Hurst ------------ Associate Editor, Open for Business: http://ofb.biz/ Applied Bible - http://soulkiln.org/ Kiln of the Soul - http://soulkiln.blogspot.com/
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