> Man - have you really spent a lot of time in X-Windows?   
Suitability? for
> the common Joe?  Come on.  I'd be suprised if you could install 
Linux on a
> new box and have XFree86 running in less than 5 attempts.
Have you installed any recent releases of the major 
distributions? Mandrake typically installs complete with fully 
functional XF86 and a large collection of apps in about half the 
time of a typical win9x installation, and with only a single 
reboot at the end of the process. Granted, there can be time 
consuming snags if you have extremely new or very odd hardware, 
but the list of supported hardware is currently very large, and 
growing all the time. All of the recent (as in last 12 months or 
so) Mandrake installs I've done have been sucessful on the first 
try, and this is without having to call on any knowlege that any 
first-time Linux user wouldn't know. I'm much closer to the Linux 
newbie end of the newbie-expert spectrum myself.
This, in itself, doesn't make Linux superior. But it does shoot 
holes in the ease-of-installation claims of Windows superiority. 
Such claims never meant much anyway, even back when it was true. 
Casual users almost never install their own OS, and technical 
users aren't much bothered by a little extra installation 
complexity as long as there are other compelling reasons to use 
an OS.
If you started with a bare-bones GUI-less Linux installation, 
then tried to install XF86 on top of it, then your "5 tries" 
assessment might be realistic for non-expert users. But 
practically no one does it that way. Especially the "common Joe".
As for the open-source vs. closed source hoopla, use and support 
whatever fills your needs and wants. Even if you make your choice 
on purely philosophical grounds, more power to ya. That's what 
individual freedom is all about. I don't even give a damn about 
"letting the best development model win". There's room for more 
than one way to develop software, just like there's room for more 
than one way to think.
---
                                        Peace,
                                        William Kitchen
The future is ours to create.
This archive was generated by hypermail 2b29 : Thu Jul 27 2000 - 14:12:55 MDT