AeroMan wrote:
Sig999 wrote:
*shrug* the first step in solving a problem is admitting there is a problem, and theres such a very fine line between advocacy and zealotry.
I'm not saying it is not a problem, neither comparing today's systems with my A1200, but let's face it: you can't use Linux without going to the shell. It is a matter of time.
I used Kurumin, and now moved to Ubuntu, and still have to type stuff. Most Linux enthusiasts I know prefer the shell. I don't know a Linux user that doesn't use it (there should be some).
I've used it since Slackware - before running xwindows was viable to run because of system resources and beyond into the birth of RedHat linux - from it's win95 lookalike onto the start of Mandrake with it's prefs for KDE - till today.
Yes - you can use the shell - and in cases you should use the shell, and indeed for somethings the shell is preferable.
But unfortunately this is not what you said.
You said that you can't set things up without going to the shell, that you can't use it or set things up without it. This is false. My wife, who finds opening the software box complex when it comes to computers installed Linux on her machine unassisted and flawlessly - setting up everything from her mouse, graphics tablet, external usb drives, and scanner - from setting up the gimp to initializing her network card and getting it on the internet....
....all without typing a single shell command.
You are comparing to five or six years ago - Linux has matured - gotten smarter in it's setup, and being made more user friendly. Every year it improves.
And you can't say that Windows doesn't eats your computer's performance. It is pretty clear if you compare 98 and XP on the same machine. (yes, I have crashes with both! Surprisingly, more with XP)
What do I compare it to on the same hardware? Linux? I think Linux handles things better but pays a significant overhead using Xwindows - so - comparable. 95 crashed a lot - 98 crashed a fair bit. See what I wrote above, I didn't take the time to type it for amusement. The machine I'm typing this on hasn't crashed in quite a long time. And I use it for a lot of video compositing and editing with Avid. It gets QUITE a workout... Windows XP is an improvement on 95 and 98. I think your statements are exaggerated.
I don't have as much fun on this machine as others - but as a workhorse it does its job.
Those are problems for solving too. They exist, but most people say "ok, it is the way it is". It is not a matter of zealotry, they aren't close to what I expect from a modern system.
I had a Mac some time ago. Unfortunately, not with OS X, and I know there are loads of differences from the old MacOS.
Mac is REALLY nice, but it is expensive, and it is difficult to find software for it. This is why I don't buy a new one
Am I the only one in the world who's not comfortable with those OSs and thinks a modern Amiga could fills my expectations?
I think you're changing your argument.. if you were comfortable you wouldn't be making broad (and nowadays incorrect) comparisons - you'd be happy with your system.
All OS's have problems - but I find it funny that you're not pointing out the problems with the ones your using while your trying to find fault with the others.
the old Ami guru's more times that 95 hits the BSOD - but hey.. it's old and we should expect that... right?
I'm saying - for once - lets put aside the PC/MAC/LINUX wars (because lets face it - in a glass house we shouldn't throw stones) - and instead look to the things they got RIGHT and try and learn a few lessons... OR we could just continue on the track we're all on now and wait another... hmmm.. 5 - 6 years for OS 6 and whatever lawsuits follow it...