Linux is un-hackable....and my computer has been hacked many times...even
with Kaspersky installed.   I have, or should I say HAD, many controversial
files in Law and Medicine which I have to now go and find again...I'll get
there, but there are forces out there hacking Windows, your landline, your
mobile and your credit cards every day.... with Linux that is nigh
impossible.

Bluey

2009/1/4 Graham Todd <[email protected]>

>
> On Sat, 3 Jan 2009 17:07:46 +1000
> "Kevin Morgan" <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > I never actually use headsets, I just use the mike in the laptop,
> > which worked just fine before I lost Windows XP....in fact EVERYTHING
> > worked just fine before I changed to Linux/Ubuntu/gOS
> >
> > I just want everything to work like it did before, but without using
> > Windows (spyglass).
> >
> > Cheers  Bluey
>
> If you want it to work just as it did before, why do you want to move
> from Windows?
>
> I know why I don't: I don't want to buy into the cycle of
> one-type-of-software-only supported hardware, I want to preserve
> freedom in the use of the software that I choose, and I want to
> preserve the real benefits of community (albeit surrounded by my type
> of software).
>
> However, the world doesn't always play fair and the way that I want.
> Large corporations such as Micro$oft and Apple try to slope the playing
> field so it is always to their advantage and make deals that require
> the licencing of Windows software to make hardware work.  Their
> business practices are immoral (or more properly amoral) and often
> illegal.  You have to pay in time and trouble to use Linux and other
> free (as in freedom) operating systems.
>
> For instance, why use a proprietary protocol such as that used by
> Skype, when you can use an open protocol such as SIP, when you have an
> excellent softphone in the repositories in the shape of Ekiga.  You'll
> have to change your provider to one which uses the SIP protocol (such
> as Gizmo or Freespeech) but you won't need to have only one provider
> with your softphone - Skype - because any will do that uses the SIP
> protocol.  Its the standards you are using, not something that is
> linked to a proprietary piece of software.
>
> So if you want Linux to use the same software as Windows to the same
> lengths of proficiency, you will find that it conflicts with a licence
> somewhere.  Use the alternative on offer then you'll be free of all
> that most likely.  Personally, I'd like gOS not to have reference to
> the Gadget for Skype, but to a SIP service.
>
> Now why do you want to use Linux - is it merely to mimic Windows?
>
> --
> Graham Todd
>
> >
>

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