I have been using Linux on my primary system / desktop for 18 months now. I've been using Linux for various server chores much longer, but when openoffice and ximian looked like winners to me I finally brought Linux to my desktop as well.
In the last year I have pushed the entire development group in my company to do the same with good results. I have also converted my wife's classroom (she's a gradeschool teacher) to 3 Linux hosts and 1 Win2k host. In both locations Win2k systems run various Windows-only apps and Linux users run those apps through terminal services connections. Amazingly the 5th graders have taken to this arrangement with less difficulty than some of the members of my development department. Through all of this I recognize that there are some things about Linux and Linux Apps that are annoying for users experienced or not. For example, Mozilla Netscape and Galeon all fall short of users browsing expectations in one way or another. While there are various reasons for this the general mood of the users is one of mild annoyance in that the web browsing experience is less reliable than when using WinX with IE. Try installing a JVM in IE and then try doing the same with plugger in Netscape - its just more tedious / less intuitive for the end user. It may be argued that IE falls short in the opinions of some, but my point here is really that end users like things to be simple, and in migration to Linux some of the high visibility features seem less simple to the users. My 2 cents. On Fri, 2003-11-07 at 11:53, Jim Ray wrote: > whadaya mean start emerging? it is there. it works. it works well. when > i started out w/ rh v4.2, i couldn't even get a nic to work (i still > consider myself a linux beginner and might always...no dissertation on the > meaning of eth0, please). > > w/ rh-9, no problem using linux on the desktop or recommending it to a > customer for most all computing tasks one may choose. > > -----Original Message----- > From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Behalf Of Tanner Lovelace > Sent: Friday, November 07, 2003 11:18 AM > To: Triangle Linux Users Group discussion list > Subject: Re: [TriLUG] Use Windows not Linux > > > Well, it seems to me that for the last 10 years linux has been getting > to the point where the underlying stuff was stable enough for a desktop > to start emerging. And, what do you know, that's been happening. -- Ryan Leathers <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Global Knowledge
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