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Date:      Sat, 25 Apr 1998 18:21:01 +0200 (MESZ)
From:      Rainer M Duffner <Rainer.Duffner@konstanz.netsurf.de>
To:        "Maximiliano A. Eschoyez" <meschoyez@ubp.edu.ar>
Cc:        freebsd-newbies@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: KDE
Message-ID:  <Marcel-1.42-0425162101-b49Zsav@duffner.konstanz.netsurf.de>
In-Reply-To: <19980425152512194.AAA218.270@webmail>

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On Sat 25 Apr, Maximiliano A. Eschoyez wrote:

> * Why people under UNIX-like OS try to emulate a MS 'Operative
> System' *

To try to make even the dumbest Windiot aware of UNIX and its
possibilities, to persuade these "point-an-click"-people, who'd normaly
refuse to enter a command in a DOS-shell (horrible though that
anyway...) into actually looking at Unix as an option, not an
alternative. From reading various letters-to-the-editor in Unix-aware
computer magazines here, I'd say that ATM IBM loses a great share of
private OS/2 users to Linux/KDE (perhaps more than to NT) - for the
simple fact that there is more and often better software available for
less (mostly ZERO) money.

OK, there's StarOffice even for OS/2, but GIMP ?

> You know, I'm a newbie because I've been istalling Free-BSD
> since 15th of April (my PC only boots, that's a good goal).

The beginning is always slow. But why hurry ?
Better understand all what you do slowly-but-safely than just going mad
with the ports-collection and install a lot of useless stuff (useless
for you, not generally useless, of course)

> It's very hard to move from DOS to UNIX-like OS with only one book
> (The Complete Free-BSD).

Nemeth, Snyder, Sebas, Hein:
Unix System Administration, ****2nd edition****
Prentice Hall
Also available in a German edition (though they messed up some of the
jokes...)

> I'm doing a hard work, because I'm studying Free-BSD alone, but

Herearound, even unix-aware people haven't even heard of FreeBSD.
Sad but true - but market-presence (or maket-awareness) was never a sign
for quality or a personal goal of mine.
I want to have the best thing for the job.
And for almost anything TCP/IP-related, FreeBSD is the best, even though
the amount of money thrown towards Linux is orders of magnitudes larger.

> it's interesting 'cause I want to learn about networks (for my
> career) and always UNIXs are the most estable System for that.

HeHe. Almost all modern TCP/IP implemtations (WIN-Sockets etc) are based
on the same BSD-4.4 sources that come with FreeBSD.
Guess what: What runs best, the original or the Windoze-port ! ?

I wonder anyway; all these South-American countries that are cronically
'broke' would be 10000 times better served (pun intended) buy moving
large parts of their IT-infrastructure to FreeBSD/Linux. How can your
University afford all these NT/Win95 licenses, how can it afford the
24-months HW-upgrades ? OK, so you couldn't 'teach' M$-Visual Studio,
but who exactly needs Visual Studio to compile the general "HelloWorld"
C-proggies of first-level CS ?

cheers,
Rainer
-- 
 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|Rainer Duffner, E-Mail: duffner@fh-konstanz.de  |
|        &   Rainer.Duffner@konstanz.netsurf.de  |
|Fachhochschule Konstanz, Germany                |
|"What's a Network ?"  - Bill Gates, early 1980s |
|   WWW:http://www-stud.fh-konstanz.de/~duffner  |
 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


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