This is for all those who defend Linux.
First: Remember, if there was no MS Windows and MS Office in the market, and if it wasn't so popular, Linux would either never have existed, or it would probably be of higher price than MS products.
Second: What is Linux? Correct me if I am mistaken please. Linux is an attempt to force a Unix-Like product into the very popular Personal Computer, so that we (the volks) can use it at home (or small office) and not only on big systems at big companies.
Now my big question is: Regardless of the price. Do we need Linux? Aren't we re-inventing the wheel?
The brilliant ideas behind MS Windows was to create a user-friendly, easy to understand and use inteface and to be able to run more than one program simultaneously.
Thanks to Microsoft, only few people are still afraid of computers and feel only specialized professionals can use them. Mainly people older than 40 or 50, mostly.
So what we really need, is not a re-invention of what exists already but to have what exists in more appropriate form. In other words to have MS products:
1) Fine tuned for a minimum of bugs rather than a multitude of unnecessary (paid anyway) features.
2) Fine tune the prices so less people have to use illegal copies mostly because they just cannot afford to buy them even if they would love to have them.
Eman_2005
Technical Communicator
First: Remember, if there was no MS Windows and MS Office in the market, and if it wasn't so popular, Linux would either never have existed, or it would probably be of higher price than MS products.
Second: What is Linux? Correct me if I am mistaken please. Linux is an attempt to force a Unix-Like product into the very popular Personal Computer, so that we (the volks) can use it at home (or small office) and not only on big systems at big companies.
Now my big question is: Regardless of the price. Do we need Linux? Aren't we re-inventing the wheel?
The brilliant ideas behind MS Windows was to create a user-friendly, easy to understand and use inteface and to be able to run more than one program simultaneously.
Thanks to Microsoft, only few people are still afraid of computers and feel only specialized professionals can use them. Mainly people older than 40 or 50, mostly.
So what we really need, is not a re-invention of what exists already but to have what exists in more appropriate form. In other words to have MS products:
1) Fine tuned for a minimum of bugs rather than a multitude of unnecessary (paid anyway) features.
2) Fine tune the prices so less people have to use illegal copies mostly because they just cannot afford to buy them even if they would love to have them.
Eman_2005
Technical Communicator