some quotes:
quote:
Alas, the only way to change the screen from low-resolution 640x480 to a more useful 1024x768 was to run a program called Xconfigurer from the command prompt. Or I could simply reinstall the OS, which seemed like the easier way out.
i hate reinstalling OSs. Also, "only way"? you expect a lot of ways? wouldn't that be more confusing?
quote:
The installation CD for Red Hat was barely out of the drive when I started getting reader e-mail telling me I'd made a big mistake. Mandrake seemed to be a popular choice. Lindows also generated several reader recommendations.
from masochists maybe...
quote:
After I talked about my problems on the radio program, a reader send me instructions to solve the problem--but only if I had SuSE. I realized pretty quickly that his Linux and my Linux worked differently. This must be a source of at least occasional confusion.
don't know about that... If someone as non-knowledgeable as you figured it out "pretty quickly" then so must most people i would think...
quote:
Not that it's bad, it's just really geeky. People who have a hard time with MS Windows would eventually find that making Linux do what they want is somewhere between extremely frustrating and impossible.
while subjective, this is an important point. I suspect that linux vendors should make an interface that's as patronising and dumb as Microsoft windows, and include instructions that the user should turn off the interface and uninstall it as soon as they get frustrated with it...
Overall though, the article is really good! i like how he is honest, not biased towards what he "knows" already, like so many are, and his comments i think could be taken on board by developers developers developers developers and distributers for consideration to make linux an easier OS to migrate to without losing any of its functionality. I think that should be the goal of GNU/Linux distributions right now.
byraway, here's how the poll stood when i went there:
quote:
Windows XP 3542 (31%)
MacOSX 4271 (37%)
Some flavor of Linux 3777 (33%)