Comment To be realistic... (Score 1) 766
Hi! I wanted to discuss this for a long time, so thank you for asking this question! I have been thinking a lot
about the question, if Linux is ready for non-techy people. I came to the conclusion, that it is not.
I lately started writing two wikis about installing Ubuntu:
https://help.ubuntu.com/community/Aspire1810TZ/Karmic and https://help.ubuntu.com/community/MacBook4-1/Karmic
Both the MB and the Aspire Netbook are very popular laptops. The size of the wikis tells you, how much tweaking you have to do,
to get it half-descent to work (The mic of the netbook won't work anyway).
After discussing the subject "documenting Linux installations" in the Ubuntu forums, I had the impression, that most people (or kids?) really think that
a discussion thread in a forum serves as a installation documentation.
What makes Linux not recommendable for non tech-interested people is for example, that when you have to compile drivers manually into the kernel (like for the Intel GMA 450 on the EeePC), your system will be broken after a kernel update.
Also, the quality of Linux software is often not that good. This is true for both free and closed source software (Flash is lame, skype has a lot of problems with audio and video devices, the login screen after hibernating the system is buggy, ...)
In conclusion, I am not recommending Linux at all to the real world people.
Friendly regards, beauman