Comment Re:It would be good... (Score 1) 682
A couple of months ago, I setup a new laptop for dual booting Windows and Ubuntu. (Ubuntu is my primary environment, but I need Windows around for testing). After installing Ubuntu Gutsy, the following "just worked":
- Wireless networking
- Wired networking
- Native screen resolution / acceleration*
- Bluetooth
- Printer Detection on the LAN (TCP / IP)
- Compression / Decompression support for a wide array of formats
- Playback of virtually any multimedia type
When I installed Windows, I got none of this out of the box, aside from a crappy zip tool. Also, it's great fun to have to go to another computer, download drivers to a thumb drive, and copy them over, just to get the ethernet card to work (with a reboot, of course).
Now, there's a ton of other great software for Linux that I use all the time but didn't mention, because the point is that there are basic things that "just work" with a Linux installation and don't work without experiencing some pain in Windows.
While the original discussion was about the "usability" of Windows vs. Linux, part of that usability these days consists of the "usability" of a newly rebuilt a system; let's face it, a majority of those dreaded calls that we get from friends / family (you know, the ones that start with "Well, I double-clicked Screensaver.exe") end with either rebuilding their system from scratch or spec'ing out a new one and transferring their stuff over to it. The clear winner right now is Ubuntu (and probably many other distros).
* required a simple dialog to download and install nvidia driver
- Wireless networking
- Wired networking
- Native screen resolution / acceleration*
- Bluetooth
- Printer Detection on the LAN (TCP / IP)
- Compression / Decompression support for a wide array of formats
- Playback of virtually any multimedia type
When I installed Windows, I got none of this out of the box, aside from a crappy zip tool. Also, it's great fun to have to go to another computer, download drivers to a thumb drive, and copy them over, just to get the ethernet card to work (with a reboot, of course).
Now, there's a ton of other great software for Linux that I use all the time but didn't mention, because the point is that there are basic things that "just work" with a Linux installation and don't work without experiencing some pain in Windows.
While the original discussion was about the "usability" of Windows vs. Linux, part of that usability these days consists of the "usability" of a newly rebuilt a system; let's face it, a majority of those dreaded calls that we get from friends / family (you know, the ones that start with "Well, I double-clicked Screensaver.exe") end with either rebuilding their system from scratch or spec'ing out a new one and transferring their stuff over to it. The clear winner right now is Ubuntu (and probably many other distros).
* required a simple dialog to download and install nvidia driver