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  3. Anyone actually like Linux more than Windows?

Anyone actually like Linux more than Windows?

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  • J Offline
    J Offline
    jpg 0
    wrote on last edited by
    #1

    I had been using Windows and Windows-only since Windows 3.0, until months ago I got myself a mac book pro, this is the first time I really get into the Linux world, but I hate it, however, this experience bring me to another level, Windows isn't the only thing out there, so I install Ubuntu on one of my system, Wow! I love it, as a Windows user, I found most thing hard to understand, the overall concept, the file system, everything, but after a couple weeks of trial and error, trying to undersand how permission works in the Linux world, how to execute a bin file, etc., at this point I feel a lot better with the Linux system. Up to this point I would say that I actually like Linux more than Windows, learning to 'not having permission' to do everything to your system at all time is actually a good thing.

    G M OriginalGriffO L M 23 Replies Last reply
    0
    • J jpg 0

      I had been using Windows and Windows-only since Windows 3.0, until months ago I got myself a mac book pro, this is the first time I really get into the Linux world, but I hate it, however, this experience bring me to another level, Windows isn't the only thing out there, so I install Ubuntu on one of my system, Wow! I love it, as a Windows user, I found most thing hard to understand, the overall concept, the file system, everything, but after a couple weeks of trial and error, trying to undersand how permission works in the Linux world, how to execute a bin file, etc., at this point I feel a lot better with the Linux system. Up to this point I would say that I actually like Linux more than Windows, learning to 'not having permission' to do everything to your system at all time is actually a good thing.

      G Offline
      G Offline
      GuyThiebaut
      wrote on last edited by
      #2

      .jpg wrote:

      I got myself a mac book pro, this is the first time I really get into the Linux world

      Why? :omg: :(( There we go I am now certified insane after having read your post - gibber, gibber...

      Continuous effort - not strength or intelligence - is the key to unlocking our potential.(Winston Churchill)
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      • J jpg 0

        I had been using Windows and Windows-only since Windows 3.0, until months ago I got myself a mac book pro, this is the first time I really get into the Linux world, but I hate it, however, this experience bring me to another level, Windows isn't the only thing out there, so I install Ubuntu on one of my system, Wow! I love it, as a Windows user, I found most thing hard to understand, the overall concept, the file system, everything, but after a couple weeks of trial and error, trying to undersand how permission works in the Linux world, how to execute a bin file, etc., at this point I feel a lot better with the Linux system. Up to this point I would say that I actually like Linux more than Windows, learning to 'not having permission' to do everything to your system at all time is actually a good thing.

        M Offline
        M Offline
        Mehdi Gholam
        wrote on last edited by
        #3

        For a OS that is over 40 years old (Unix) [much like dog years : ITS OLD!], it's still got the moves... You gotta respect that! :laugh:

        Its the man, not the machine - Chuck Yeager If at first you don't succeed... get a better publicist If the final destination is death, then we should enjoy every second of the journey.

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        • J jpg 0

          I had been using Windows and Windows-only since Windows 3.0, until months ago I got myself a mac book pro, this is the first time I really get into the Linux world, but I hate it, however, this experience bring me to another level, Windows isn't the only thing out there, so I install Ubuntu on one of my system, Wow! I love it, as a Windows user, I found most thing hard to understand, the overall concept, the file system, everything, but after a couple weeks of trial and error, trying to undersand how permission works in the Linux world, how to execute a bin file, etc., at this point I feel a lot better with the Linux system. Up to this point I would say that I actually like Linux more than Windows, learning to 'not having permission' to do everything to your system at all time is actually a good thing.

          OriginalGriffO Offline
          OriginalGriffO Offline
          OriginalGriff
          wrote on last edited by
          #4

          .jpg wrote:

          learning to 'not having permission' to do everything to your system at all time is actually a good thing.

          You must have loved Vista then...

          Real men don't use instructions. They are only the manufacturers opinion on how to put the thing together. Manfred R. Bihy: "Looks as if OP is learning resistant."

          "I have no idea what I did, but I'm taking full credit for it." - ThisOldTony
          "Common sense is so rare these days, it should be classified as a super power" - Random T-shirt

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          • J jpg 0

            I had been using Windows and Windows-only since Windows 3.0, until months ago I got myself a mac book pro, this is the first time I really get into the Linux world, but I hate it, however, this experience bring me to another level, Windows isn't the only thing out there, so I install Ubuntu on one of my system, Wow! I love it, as a Windows user, I found most thing hard to understand, the overall concept, the file system, everything, but after a couple weeks of trial and error, trying to undersand how permission works in the Linux world, how to execute a bin file, etc., at this point I feel a lot better with the Linux system. Up to this point I would say that I actually like Linux more than Windows, learning to 'not having permission' to do everything to your system at all time is actually a good thing.

            L Offline
            L Offline
            Lost User
            wrote on last edited by
            #5

            But I do like Linux And I do like Windows [edit] I also like Solaris and AIX but not HP-UX X| [/edit] Different folks for different strokes ...

            Unrequited desire is character building. OriginalGriff

            S 1 Reply Last reply
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            • J jpg 0

              I had been using Windows and Windows-only since Windows 3.0, until months ago I got myself a mac book pro, this is the first time I really get into the Linux world, but I hate it, however, this experience bring me to another level, Windows isn't the only thing out there, so I install Ubuntu on one of my system, Wow! I love it, as a Windows user, I found most thing hard to understand, the overall concept, the file system, everything, but after a couple weeks of trial and error, trying to undersand how permission works in the Linux world, how to execute a bin file, etc., at this point I feel a lot better with the Linux system. Up to this point I would say that I actually like Linux more than Windows, learning to 'not having permission' to do everything to your system at all time is actually a good thing.

              M Offline
              M Offline
              Maximilien
              wrote on last edited by
              #6

              .jpg wrote:

              learning to 'not having permission' to do everything to your system at all time is actually a good thing.

              obligatory xkcd cartoon : http://xkcd.com/149/[^] I never realy liked Linux, but I've only tried it in its early versions (early 90's). I don't mind unix style system, but apart from a few technical achievements, there's nothing worth installing for normal users.

              Watched code never compiles.

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              • J jpg 0

                I had been using Windows and Windows-only since Windows 3.0, until months ago I got myself a mac book pro, this is the first time I really get into the Linux world, but I hate it, however, this experience bring me to another level, Windows isn't the only thing out there, so I install Ubuntu on one of my system, Wow! I love it, as a Windows user, I found most thing hard to understand, the overall concept, the file system, everything, but after a couple weeks of trial and error, trying to undersand how permission works in the Linux world, how to execute a bin file, etc., at this point I feel a lot better with the Linux system. Up to this point I would say that I actually like Linux more than Windows, learning to 'not having permission' to do everything to your system at all time is actually a good thing.

                L Offline
                L Offline
                Lost User
                wrote on last edited by
                #7

                Wait til Windows 8 - a lot more people will like Linux...

                S 1 Reply Last reply
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                • L Lost User

                  But I do like Linux And I do like Windows [edit] I also like Solaris and AIX but not HP-UX X| [/edit] Different folks for different strokes ...

                  Unrequited desire is character building. OriginalGriff

                  S Offline
                  S Offline
                  Simon Bang Terkildsen
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #8

                  Solaris X| I actually thought it was dead and burned into oblivion. But after a quick look up in Wikipedia I realized to my horror that it's still very much alive :((

                  My number one dev tool? Google

                  L 1 Reply Last reply
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                  • L Lost User

                    Wait til Windows 8 - a lot more people will like Linux...

                    S Offline
                    S Offline
                    Simon Bang Terkildsen
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #9

                    I've liked Windows more and more with each version, I even liked Vista. But after having a look at the preview I gotta say I hate this metro thing, I find it confusing and weird. I wont install Windows 8 on my grandmothers machine that's for sure, she would call me day and night because she didn't get this metro thing, I'm sure. In short I agree with you. I'll for the first time skip a version of Windows.

                    My number one dev tool? Google

                    1 Reply Last reply
                    0
                    • S Simon Bang Terkildsen

                      Solaris X| I actually thought it was dead and burned into oblivion. But after a quick look up in Wikipedia I realized to my horror that it's still very much alive :((

                      My number one dev tool? Google

                      L Offline
                      L Offline
                      Lost User
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #10

                      The last few years of my working life (last few months with Sun) we used Solaris a lot and had a large customer base worldwide that used it. I would be quite surprised if all those customers had managed to move to a different platform in less than 5 years.

                      Unrequited desire is character building. OriginalGriff

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                      • J jpg 0

                        I had been using Windows and Windows-only since Windows 3.0, until months ago I got myself a mac book pro, this is the first time I really get into the Linux world, but I hate it, however, this experience bring me to another level, Windows isn't the only thing out there, so I install Ubuntu on one of my system, Wow! I love it, as a Windows user, I found most thing hard to understand, the overall concept, the file system, everything, but after a couple weeks of trial and error, trying to undersand how permission works in the Linux world, how to execute a bin file, etc., at this point I feel a lot better with the Linux system. Up to this point I would say that I actually like Linux more than Windows, learning to 'not having permission' to do everything to your system at all time is actually a good thing.

                        K Offline
                        K Offline
                        Keith Barrow
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #11

                        .jpg wrote:

                        sudo 'not having permission'

                        FFTY. I marginally prefer Linux, more so when the price tag is factored in. I'm just getting back into it after a too-many-years break, I've just set myself up a dirt-cheap laptop, anything post Windows XP wouldn't run on it due to the low RAM but Ubuntu is zippy-quick.

                        Sort of a cross between Lawrence of Arabia and Dilbert.[^]
                        -Or-
                        A Dead ringer for Kate Winslett[^]

                        A 1 Reply Last reply
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                        • J jpg 0

                          I had been using Windows and Windows-only since Windows 3.0, until months ago I got myself a mac book pro, this is the first time I really get into the Linux world, but I hate it, however, this experience bring me to another level, Windows isn't the only thing out there, so I install Ubuntu on one of my system, Wow! I love it, as a Windows user, I found most thing hard to understand, the overall concept, the file system, everything, but after a couple weeks of trial and error, trying to undersand how permission works in the Linux world, how to execute a bin file, etc., at this point I feel a lot better with the Linux system. Up to this point I would say that I actually like Linux more than Windows, learning to 'not having permission' to do everything to your system at all time is actually a good thing.

                          M Offline
                          M Offline
                          Marc Clifton
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #12

                          No, I haven't had the patience to learn how things are done, and as for "not having permission", I honestly can't see the point of that. I don't like that in my women, and I don't like that in my programming environment. ;) Marc

                          My Blog

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                          • J jpg 0

                            I had been using Windows and Windows-only since Windows 3.0, until months ago I got myself a mac book pro, this is the first time I really get into the Linux world, but I hate it, however, this experience bring me to another level, Windows isn't the only thing out there, so I install Ubuntu on one of my system, Wow! I love it, as a Windows user, I found most thing hard to understand, the overall concept, the file system, everything, but after a couple weeks of trial and error, trying to undersand how permission works in the Linux world, how to execute a bin file, etc., at this point I feel a lot better with the Linux system. Up to this point I would say that I actually like Linux more than Windows, learning to 'not having permission' to do everything to your system at all time is actually a good thing.

                            A Offline
                            A Offline
                            Adam Tibi
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #13

                            Ubuntu is progressing rapidly. I used to install it every year on a virtual machine to stay in the loop. Maybe the reason you liked Ubuntu more is that you are bored and want to try something new? Probably you know everything on Windows such as the command prompt, control panel, file permissions, etc... But you are enjoying the new learning experience of Linux now.

                            Make it simple, as simple as possible, but not simpler.

                            1 Reply Last reply
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                            • J jpg 0

                              I had been using Windows and Windows-only since Windows 3.0, until months ago I got myself a mac book pro, this is the first time I really get into the Linux world, but I hate it, however, this experience bring me to another level, Windows isn't the only thing out there, so I install Ubuntu on one of my system, Wow! I love it, as a Windows user, I found most thing hard to understand, the overall concept, the file system, everything, but after a couple weeks of trial and error, trying to undersand how permission works in the Linux world, how to execute a bin file, etc., at this point I feel a lot better with the Linux system. Up to this point I would say that I actually like Linux more than Windows, learning to 'not having permission' to do everything to your system at all time is actually a good thing.

                              D Offline
                              D Offline
                              dpminusa
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #14

                              The LAMP environment runs a lot of what is out there. This includes Google, Facebook, etc., etc. At lot of the popular languages/dialects like Python, Ruby, Node.js... were developed on Linux. Linux is a different approach, not just a different way of doing the same things. "You cannot get there from here" applies to both Linux and Windows depending on the project. Apple has tweaked BSD forever. Although I have a lot of SCO and Linux experience, I did not find an Apple easier to use than Windows and Linux. But I have not spent much time with it. The time I spent was painful. I use the Windows GUI and VS 2010, or Gentoo Linux for development. Vi is great once you get used to the syntax, but no intellisense. Intellisense is great. Both have their place. Neither should go away, they feed each other - IMHO.

                              "Courtesy is the product of a mature, disciplined mind ... ridicule is lack of the same - DPM"

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                              • J jpg 0

                                I had been using Windows and Windows-only since Windows 3.0, until months ago I got myself a mac book pro, this is the first time I really get into the Linux world, but I hate it, however, this experience bring me to another level, Windows isn't the only thing out there, so I install Ubuntu on one of my system, Wow! I love it, as a Windows user, I found most thing hard to understand, the overall concept, the file system, everything, but after a couple weeks of trial and error, trying to undersand how permission works in the Linux world, how to execute a bin file, etc., at this point I feel a lot better with the Linux system. Up to this point I would say that I actually like Linux more than Windows, learning to 'not having permission' to do everything to your system at all time is actually a good thing.

                                I Offline
                                I Offline
                                IatricSMW
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #15

                                Oh yes....much more. I have programmed professionally for both, and the programming is in some ways much easier on Linux. In others, it is less easy, but also far less prone to random errors. And library management (shared objects, dll's, assemblies, pick your poison) is a LOT better. From a system administrator point of view, there is no contest for me at all. If I can make it run on Linux, it does. 1 Linux admin can handle many servers. 1 Windows admin can effectively manage only a few, due to all of the high clicky GUI overhead requirements to administrate.

                                G 1 Reply Last reply
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                                • K Keith Barrow

                                  .jpg wrote:

                                  sudo 'not having permission'

                                  FFTY. I marginally prefer Linux, more so when the price tag is factored in. I'm just getting back into it after a too-many-years break, I've just set myself up a dirt-cheap laptop, anything post Windows XP wouldn't run on it due to the low RAM but Ubuntu is zippy-quick.

                                  Sort of a cross between Lawrence of Arabia and Dilbert.[^]
                                  -Or-
                                  A Dead ringer for Kate Winslett[^]

                                  A Offline
                                  A Offline
                                  Alexander DiMauro
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #16

                                  Keith Barrow wrote:

                                  FFTY FTFY

                                  FTFY ;)

                                  The world is going to laugh at you anyway, might as well crack the 1st joke! Have you tried turning it off and on again? Have you tried forcing an unexpected reboot?

                                  1 Reply Last reply
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                                  • J jpg 0

                                    I had been using Windows and Windows-only since Windows 3.0, until months ago I got myself a mac book pro, this is the first time I really get into the Linux world, but I hate it, however, this experience bring me to another level, Windows isn't the only thing out there, so I install Ubuntu on one of my system, Wow! I love it, as a Windows user, I found most thing hard to understand, the overall concept, the file system, everything, but after a couple weeks of trial and error, trying to undersand how permission works in the Linux world, how to execute a bin file, etc., at this point I feel a lot better with the Linux system. Up to this point I would say that I actually like Linux more than Windows, learning to 'not having permission' to do everything to your system at all time is actually a good thing.

                                    C Offline
                                    C Offline
                                    craigsaboe
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #17

                                    The problem I have with this is that no one uses an OS in a vacuum. It's somewhat like evaluating a car in the lot without driving it and using it in day-to-day situations for a while. That's when you realize the blind spot over your left shoulder sucks, the shape of the frame around the back seat doors makes getting your kids in and out of your car seats difficult, and there's not quite as much room for groceries as you thought. Or, you discover all the nifty little features missing in your old car that make this one so much better than you thought it would be. Over the last two years I've had a lot of experience in all 3 big OSes. I used Linux almost exclusively for a year and a half (Ubuntu 9-11), working on Rails stuff and Linux servers. I bought a MacBook to dual-boot, and used that for 9 months. And around that, I've been a Windows guy doing .Net programming. What I've found is that my experiences had a lot less to do with what I liked or disliked about the OS, and a whole lot more about what I did with it and how much difficulty I had doing so. For Linux, the regular stuff was great. And I really appreciated being able to run a very similar dev. environment on my laptop as on my server. What sucked for me was mostly proprietary stuff that just did not exist for Linux. Printer drivers were hit and miss. Utilities for configuring some electrical meters I worked with were Windows only, and Wine didn't work for them. I had an iPhone and thus needed iTunes, and had a Nook so I used its desktop version a decent amount. And I did have issues with driver support on some of my hardware that I either had to spend a good amount of time Googling for, or simply couldn't fix and just annoyed the crap out of me. Most of this was not Ubuntu's fault, of course, but the driving experience was just not as good as I could expect from either OS X or Windows despite the stuff I really liked about Ubuntu. In the end, my startup decided to take advantage of the MS BizSpark program, so I chose Win 7 over OS X. I would have stayed on Ubuntu had we gone the FOSS route. But all else being equal, I would choose 7 over Ubuntu for every day usage, even with the added license cost.

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                                    • J jpg 0

                                      I had been using Windows and Windows-only since Windows 3.0, until months ago I got myself a mac book pro, this is the first time I really get into the Linux world, but I hate it, however, this experience bring me to another level, Windows isn't the only thing out there, so I install Ubuntu on one of my system, Wow! I love it, as a Windows user, I found most thing hard to understand, the overall concept, the file system, everything, but after a couple weeks of trial and error, trying to undersand how permission works in the Linux world, how to execute a bin file, etc., at this point I feel a lot better with the Linux system. Up to this point I would say that I actually like Linux more than Windows, learning to 'not having permission' to do everything to your system at all time is actually a good thing.

                                      A Offline
                                      A Offline
                                      Alexander DiMauro
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #18

                                      I like both Windows and Linux. Used Windows since 1996, and Linux since 2001. All my computers are dual boot Windows 7 + Linux Mint (my favorite distro). It's hard to say if I like one better than the other. They both have their strong points and weak points. I don't really prefer one over the other, but I do prefer having both OSes on dual-boot over just one or the other.

                                      The world is going to laugh at you anyway, might as well crack the 1st joke! Have you tried turning it off and on again? Have you tried forcing an unexpected reboot?

                                      1 Reply Last reply
                                      0
                                      • J jpg 0

                                        I had been using Windows and Windows-only since Windows 3.0, until months ago I got myself a mac book pro, this is the first time I really get into the Linux world, but I hate it, however, this experience bring me to another level, Windows isn't the only thing out there, so I install Ubuntu on one of my system, Wow! I love it, as a Windows user, I found most thing hard to understand, the overall concept, the file system, everything, but after a couple weeks of trial and error, trying to undersand how permission works in the Linux world, how to execute a bin file, etc., at this point I feel a lot better with the Linux system. Up to this point I would say that I actually like Linux more than Windows, learning to 'not having permission' to do everything to your system at all time is actually a good thing.

                                        M Offline
                                        M Offline
                                        mjohns07
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #19

                                        I like Linux lots more than Windows. #1, when you use Linux, you aren't really aware of any part of your disk other than what's in /home/username. That's the only part of the disk that you have to organize. #2, when I install software from my standard repositories, there are no license agreements and configuration steps that I have to walk thru. Software installation happens in a matter of seconds with no user input. Pretty nice. I've been using Linux only since 2009 and I taught myself everything that I know. -Mark (Debian Linux user)

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                                        • J jpg 0

                                          I had been using Windows and Windows-only since Windows 3.0, until months ago I got myself a mac book pro, this is the first time I really get into the Linux world, but I hate it, however, this experience bring me to another level, Windows isn't the only thing out there, so I install Ubuntu on one of my system, Wow! I love it, as a Windows user, I found most thing hard to understand, the overall concept, the file system, everything, but after a couple weeks of trial and error, trying to undersand how permission works in the Linux world, how to execute a bin file, etc., at this point I feel a lot better with the Linux system. Up to this point I would say that I actually like Linux more than Windows, learning to 'not having permission' to do everything to your system at all time is actually a good thing.

                                          O Offline
                                          O Offline
                                          Orlin Georgiev
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #20

                                          Linux is worth something only to people whose time is worth nothing.

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