M
Moshe. Goldfarb
Guest
http://www.applematters.com/article/about-linux-and-why-nobody-seems-to-care1/
" The general consensus seems to be that Mac users are the sort who want
the best in quality, no expenses spared; Windows users are those who're
looking for the best bang for their buck (generally in the short term); and
Linux users are the ones who want everything for free, particularly
software."
" Some Linux users are easily dazzled by superfluous and completely useless
effects (wobbly windows, blatant overuse of transparency, etc.) and assume
that it must be better than Mac OS X because it's so cosmetically made-up
and then there are others who only need the Terminal and can keep typing on
it whole day long."
" The problem with the Linux community is that, like any community, it has
members with widely varying interests and preferences and the open source
developers are developing hundreds of distributions to try and cater to
every single whim and fancy of these members. The result is a cornucopia of
free software, software that has been developed at the expense of the hard
work and time of some of the most skilled developers on the planet, and yet
does not have a single product that is complete in and of itself and is
generating any profit at all."
" There is no way whatsoever that thousands of developers sitting in front
of their computers in different corners of the world and spending only
their non-working hours trying to develop something that they know isn't
going to make them any money, are ever going to come up with anything good
enough to seriously challenge software from companies like Microsoft and
Apple. There is just no chance at all."
" Linux has been around for more than a decade now and it's nowhere near
challenging either Mac OS X or Windows. The vast majority of hardware and
software makers around the world are still shipping products that are
incompatible with Linux."
" There's no guarantee that the camera you bought today and is compatible
with your Ubuntu installation will work with Fedora Core too should you
change your mind in a few days, as is a common practice among the Linux
enthusiasts."
" All of this and more are reasons enough to ignore Linux. Linux users are
never quite sure which one is the best distribution around. They have
debates in their own community with twenty different users vouching for
twenty different variations. They constantly have to keep figuring out
workarounds to make all their software and hardware work together. They
can't just go out and buy a new accessory, assured in the knowledge that it
will work. They are afraid to upgrade, lest things go wrong."
And so forth......
Obviously this guy has had experience with LinSUX because his article is
right on the money....
--
Moshe Goldfarb
Collector of soaps from around the globe.
Please visit The Hall of Linux Idiots:
http://linuxidiots.blogspot.com/
" The general consensus seems to be that Mac users are the sort who want
the best in quality, no expenses spared; Windows users are those who're
looking for the best bang for their buck (generally in the short term); and
Linux users are the ones who want everything for free, particularly
software."
" Some Linux users are easily dazzled by superfluous and completely useless
effects (wobbly windows, blatant overuse of transparency, etc.) and assume
that it must be better than Mac OS X because it's so cosmetically made-up
and then there are others who only need the Terminal and can keep typing on
it whole day long."
" The problem with the Linux community is that, like any community, it has
members with widely varying interests and preferences and the open source
developers are developing hundreds of distributions to try and cater to
every single whim and fancy of these members. The result is a cornucopia of
free software, software that has been developed at the expense of the hard
work and time of some of the most skilled developers on the planet, and yet
does not have a single product that is complete in and of itself and is
generating any profit at all."
" There is no way whatsoever that thousands of developers sitting in front
of their computers in different corners of the world and spending only
their non-working hours trying to develop something that they know isn't
going to make them any money, are ever going to come up with anything good
enough to seriously challenge software from companies like Microsoft and
Apple. There is just no chance at all."
" Linux has been around for more than a decade now and it's nowhere near
challenging either Mac OS X or Windows. The vast majority of hardware and
software makers around the world are still shipping products that are
incompatible with Linux."
" There's no guarantee that the camera you bought today and is compatible
with your Ubuntu installation will work with Fedora Core too should you
change your mind in a few days, as is a common practice among the Linux
enthusiasts."
" All of this and more are reasons enough to ignore Linux. Linux users are
never quite sure which one is the best distribution around. They have
debates in their own community with twenty different users vouching for
twenty different variations. They constantly have to keep figuring out
workarounds to make all their software and hardware work together. They
can't just go out and buy a new accessory, assured in the knowledge that it
will work. They are afraid to upgrade, lest things go wrong."
And so forth......
Obviously this guy has had experience with LinSUX because his article is
right on the money....
--
Moshe Goldfarb
Collector of soaps from around the globe.
Please visit The Hall of Linux Idiots:
http://linuxidiots.blogspot.com/