El 02/12/09 19:08, Michael Beckwith escribió:


To be fair, Nicu, and me going back to the version I know best....XP,
Windows doesn't really offer a mail/calendar/etc client, voIP/video,
word processor, or much of a photo viewer with simple editing, out of
the box. Not sure where exactly to get Outlook, but it's not there by
default. MS Word and Office in general is one of their real cash cows
and they keep that seperate, video/VoIP you have to go download MSN
Messenger. Regarding a browser, yeah they include IE but really the best
use for that is downloading Firefox, which we offer by default.

I beg to disagree... I'm no M$ apologist, but XP is a longshot of their *current* offerings. Besides, XP (for those netbooks that are still sold with it) DOES offer media capabilities, browser and e-mail client, Outlook Express is installed by default with XP.

Nowadays, though, and for the last two versions of Windows, Microsoft has included more "functionality" into their software offerings:

From XP to 7:

   * Basic word processing (what else if not is Wordpad?)
   * Image viewer (Fax-image viewer in XP, Windows Gallery in Vista/7)
   * Basic image editing (what else if not is Paint? Which from XP on
     supports saving as jpeg, png and gif)
   * Media player (WMP, anyone?) which supports library management, and
     is a music/video player.
   * IM/VoIP (XP DOES install by default MSN.
   * Web Browser (sure, IE is the lamest excuse of a browser, but a lot
     of people don't know better)

All of the above can be found in a default Windows install from XP onward, and like I said, I'm no Windows apologist, but I'm not blind either to what they do offer and what we offer in Fedora either, and the exclusion of GIMP though a sensible loss for many, gives additional room for other packages, functionality NOT found in XP (I can't speak for Vista/7 in this regard, though), offered by default:

   * Gnote.
   * Cheese.
   * Dictionary.
   * Archive manager (sure, XP onward support viewing .zip files as
     "compressed folders", but limits to one type, and is no real
     "manager")
   * Tabbed file-browsing (Nautilus from 2.26 IIRC supports this).
   * Multiple virtual desktops (sure, a GNOME feature, but a feature
     nontheless :D)

Of course there IS room for improvement, and the real comparison shouldn't be done against Windows IMHO, but against other Linux distributions like OpenSuSE Live, Ubuntu, Mint, etc, and choose accordingly (of course we'd never include proprietary drivers with the Live images!)
_______________________________________________
design-team mailing list
[email protected]
https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/design-team

Reply via email to