Hi :)
Some people find Ubuntu, Mandriva, OpenSUSE, and other noob friendly or gateway
distros to be too much about eye-candy and point&click making them quite
"bloated" and difficult to get "under the bonnet". Some people prefer
different
themes and styles and even at a deeper level each distro make choices which can
then be modified or else just switch to a distro that does do things the way
they prefer or is easier to modify to that way.
An initial switch from Windows is a huge step but moving between different
distros or even to Bsd is comparatively trivial. Moving between distros is
much
less effort than moving between Xp, Vista and Windows 7 or 8. The move from
Mac
is also quite a big move but less so as Mac also have things such as package
managers and stuff.
A lot of linux users start off with Ubuntu and then try other distros such as
Mint, Mageia or head for the very pure Slackware or Arch, Gentoo or other
distros that would be a nightmare for most beginners. Quite a lot of Gnu&Linux
users have more than one distro that they use quite a lot, often even on the
same machine and often sharing the same data&settings (by sharing the /home by
having it on a separate partition). Different distros aim at different
markets,
such as tiny machines (netbooks or smaller) or at really powerful machines or
different types of usages.
The key thing for me was that once i had a Windows system up & running to move
to another one would often mean hosing the one that did work with no guarantee
that the new one would work. With Gnu&Linux you can have a new one alongside
the one that you have got working or even alongside Windows in a
dual/multi-boot. So if something works you can keep using it while taking the
'new' one for a test drive when you have time.
Regards from
Tom :)
________________________________
From: Fred J <[email protected]>
To: "[email protected]" <[email protected]>
Sent: Fri, 22 July, 2011 15:08:27
Subject: Re: [Evolution] Search folders and new messages
<snip />
I'm a digital artist and ALMOST bought a Mac, but was converted to
Ubuntu when I saw its bling and security. I'm no techie, so aesthetics
- combined with my powerful machine - appeal to me. And a lot more
creatives are now using Ubuntu, as a result. Which is a good thing. :-)
In conclusion, this may be an Ubuntu thing and not an Evo thing?_______________________________________________
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