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Date:      Fri, 7 Dec 2001 18:15:17 +0100
From:      "Anthony Atkielski" <anthony@atkielski.com>
To:        "Paul Robinson" <paul@akita.co.uk>, <chat@FreeBSD.ORG>
Subject:   Re: A breath of fresh air..
Message-ID:  <000b01c17f42$c23ab140$0a00000a@atkielski.com>
References:  <0112071641320B.01380@stinky.akitanet.co.uk>

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The author of the article is obviously laboring under some serious
misconceptions.  Most of what he writes seems to be an apology for Linux
being different from Windows, and he spends most of his time trying to prove
how closely Linux can approach the look and feel and ergonomy of Windows.
He seems to overlook the fact that he is effectively negating the whole
utility of Linux; after all, if you want something that looks and works like
Windows, your best bet is to install Windows, not an imitation.

He also says:

"More and more, people get Linux from a commercial distribution packager,
install it (often with help from members of a local Linux Users Group), and
don't tamper with the kernel or other "underlying" system processes at all."

In other words, buy Linux just as you buy Windows, and become dependent on a
Linux packager instead of Microsoft.  What's to be gained by this?  You're
in the same rut either way.  You are still beholden to a commercial vendor,
you are still paying money for your software, and you are still dead in the
water if something goes wrong, since you never bothered to figure out how
anything behind the pretty package actually works.  If you want a
commercial, turnkey desktop package, buy Windows--or, if you can't stand
Microsoft, buy a Mac.

This article is further evidence that a lot of Linux users are quite
clueless.  I don't know exactly what motivates them to toss all the
strengths of UNIX aside and spend their time reinventing the wheel, but it
seems pretty pointless.  Do people really hate Microsoft so much that they
are willing to increase their own work and inconvenience by orders of
magnitude just to have whatever Microsoft provides in every detail except
the name?

Robin goes on further to say:

"None of these advances in Linux usability have much to with "classic"
command line Linux, but so it goes. The ever-improving GUI (Graphical User
Interface) is the future of desktop computing, no matter what operating
system is running behind the user's monitor."

Seems Robin has forgotten that UNIX is a server operating system.  A GUI may
be the future of the desktop (actually, that future is already here under
Windows, which he seems to ignore), but why must the desktop be the future
of Linux, or of any other version of UNIX?

It's kind of like buying a high-performance racing car, and then trying to
prove that it can haul sand and manure just as well as any pick-up truck.
But if your purpose is to haul sand and manure, why not just buy the
pick-up?

My concern is that Robin and others like him (or her--not sure if it's a he
or she) are going to kill off UNIX by trying to make it work as a
desktop--where it will never come anywhere close to Windows, in all
likelihood--while ignoring its obvious superiority as a server.  Just
because some of the Linux kiddies have never _seen_ a server doesn't mean
that servers aren't important, too.  I don't think that Hotmail and
EverQuest servers are running Windows 98.


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