On 11/24/2010 04:56 PM, Robert Derman wrote: > ..........snip.........
> I haven't followed this particular thread very closely, but nevertheless > one thing seems to be appearant, and that is why Linux only has a few > percent of the PC OS market and Windows has the vast majority of it. > Most people who use computers are not computer experts, or computer > hobyists, and don't want to be, for them a computer is a tool they need > to use in order to acomplish what they need to. Learning how to do > command line entry is not something they want to do. Perhaps they > actually have a life, a spouse, kids other things they want to spend > their time on. They want programs that install by clicking on Install, > Next, Next, Next, Finish. As long as Linux doesn't work that way, they > will stay away from it. > > Most people don't actually buy Windows, it comes installed on the laptop > they buy, so why would they want to bother with an operating system that > they have to install? Especially if it isn't easy to install. And why > would they want to bother with applications that don't install easily? > I suspect that this is why most copies of OOo and in the future LO will > be Windows compatible versions. > Robert, I agree with your statement, as far as it goes, but there is another factor that is also involved. There are as yet, as far as I know, no schools that teach Linux. The closest is those colleges and universities that teach UNIX which, at the command line, is very similar. College and University are expensive, and many people, unless they are intending to go into computers in some professional capacity, just can't afford that expense. Many people don't know what man pages are or how to use them. And for those that do, the man pages are about as informative as a Microsoft help file: absolutely correct information that provides no real guidance or help. [Insert old joke about the helicopter pilot and the Microsoft campus here] That leaves those who ARE willing to learn in a difficult position, unless there are helpful friends around that can provide the guidance they need. Very often we, and I am included in that small population, not only don't know the answers to how to do something, we don't even know the questions (which is why I tell people that I'm a perpetual n00bie. Despite what I DO know, there's still too much that I don't and don't even know how to ask about). For Linux purists here's a clue: help your fellow person. Don't assume that they have to know everything in order to use a Linux system, but provide them with the guidance they need so they can. Craig Tyche -- Unsubscribe instructions: E-mail to discuss+h...@documentfoundation.org Archive: http://www.documentfoundation.org/lists/discuss/ *** All posts to this list are publicly archived for eternity ***