Hi :)
Ok, so i have posted 'a few' anti-MS posts but not everyone is ready to 
suddenly jump into the alien world of the scary sounding GNu&Linux or 
unix-based OSes.  Windows is supplied on almost every machine bought anywhere 
in the world so why change at all?!  

If you have realised why then how to go about it?  

Many first-timers fail because they try to "burn their bridges" and completely 
suddenly switch without much planning, or perhaps with too much planning.  

A frequently successfully route that many have followed (often as a 2nd attempt 
to get into it) is often found to be to  first familiarised yourself with the 
programs that run on both Windows and Gnu&Linux: programs such as Firefox 
(instead of IE), Thunderbird or Evolution instead of Outlook, Gimp instead of 
Photoshop, LibreOffice instead of MS Office.  That way once you arrive at "the 
big switch" you have familiar 'friends' on your desktop and in 
forums/mailing-lists.  Documentation can help pull you through too.  

A good next step is to resurrect some ancient machine from a junk heap or 
cupboard and try as a "Live Cd" (booting straight from the Cd without 
installign anything) and then next is to install as a dual-boot.  Chances are 
that first time you try to do a dual-boot it goes wrong even though it's the 
default for almsot every distro and basically requires you do the equivalent of 
just clicking "Next".  If it's an old machine anyway then you don't lose much 
AND you get to learn how to do it properly before risking yoru main machine.  

I was really quite keen  but oddly reluctant to escape from MS but it took me 
about 2 years between the time i got my neighbour to install a dual-boot of 
Mandriva alongside my Windows.  At first i booted mostly into Windows but about 
1/month might boot into Mandriva by mistake.  by the end of the 2 years it had 
become more and more often and more deliberately especially after i found a 
decent game and then found i really could work from it too.  

To be fair i had an impression that Gnu&Linux was like Unix and therefore big, 
scary and all based on the command-line.  I'm still a little intimidated by the 
command-line so i was glad to find that actually even back then Mandriva was 
almost entirely point&click.  Then Wolvix and Ubuntu seemed to take that 
further and now i am mostly in Ubuntu nearly all the time but even now i do use 
Windows from time-to-time.  

Once i had made the switch i found myself getting irrationally angry about all 
the odd things that i had been forced to do unnecessarily over the years to 
maintain Windows.  A bit like a hostage released from captivity after long-term 
imprisonment.  All the slow-downs, antivirus, sudden forced reboots, forced 
updates, pop-ups grabbing focus and generally being slave to the machine.  All 
of which vanished with Gnu&Linux (weirdly the grabbing focus thing seems to 
have been added to Ubuntu since then).  i became obsessed with freeing people 
who didn't want to be freed.  I guess that is roughly where Andreas is now with 
Base but has been stuck there a while.  Really there is no need.  

Nowadays i can mostly sit back and just laugh at the ridiculous things people 
put themselves through with Windows and then claim that Windows is easier as 
though they have tried anything else when they clearly haven't even picked up 
an iAnything.  

It's not easy to avoid trying to help especially when a little help can often 
go a long way.  

The mistake a lot of people make when they are new to Gnu&Linux is trying to 
force other people to use it.  This earns a bad reputation and really there is 
no need for it.  if people would rather dig with a spoon than a shovel then let 
them.  Just smile wisely and move on to help a person that does appreciate it.  

Regards from
Tom :)  

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