Date: Sun, 13 Jul 1997 23:44:30 -0500 (EST) From: John Fieber <jfieber@indiana.edu> To: "Joel N. Weber II" <devnull@gnu.ai.mit.edu> Cc: m230761@ingenieria.ingsala.unal.edu.co, freebsd-chat@FreeBSD.ORG Subject: Re: My opinion about freebsd (fwd) Message-ID: <Pine.BSF.3.96.970713225549.3129C-100000@fallout.campusview.indiana.edu> In-Reply-To: <199707140006.UAA26526@psilocin.gnu.ai.mit.edu>
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On Sun, 13 Jul 1997, Joel N. Weber II wrote: > windows 95 is usable? I found getting networking to work on it was > much more difficult than getting networking working on Linux... How so? (No, that isn't a troll, I'm honestly curious. Also, the difficulty depends quite a lot on the network you are trying to hook into.) > I don't think you're buying usablity. I don't think people conciously > choose Microsoft over a free system. Microsoft has arranged to be > the default choice, and their marketing people promise more. Well, true to a degree, but overly simplistic. Some people make careful, calculated choices about what hardware and system software they want, then they cobble together applications that work on that system. Free unix-like systems are likely to be found among this crowd. You would find OS/2 users users here as well. The identifying trait here is that the OS *is* the primary application---after all, what is unix if not the ultimately customizable application? :) Some people make careful, calculated choices about what applications they need, then they get whatever OS will run the software. Some unix systems here, but Microsoft Windows with its huge application base dominates. When an organization is choosing how to outfit desktops with machines, the question isn't "what is the coolest, cheapest OS to use", but "what OS runs Excel the best". Sure, you can run windows applications on some Unix or OS/2 systems, but if all your main applications are Windows, it really isn't worth the extra overhead. The long life of MS-DOS is a testament to the triumph of application over OS--users wouldn't touch Windows until their applications migrated and proved themselves. To this day, WordPerfect for DOS is alive and well. A combination of these two are users whose choice of operating system or application software based substantial pre-existing investments in either category. In the case of substantial (windows) application investment, Windows NT has a very secure foothold in this corner of the universe. Microsoft has told us where *they* want to go today and have conveniently provided us with a yellow brick road to get there, with "Microsoft" carefully enscribed on each and every brick. Finally, some people just take what is given to them and if it seems to server their needs without too much pain, they could care less about some hacker yo-yo claiming that their free unix-like system multi-tasks more efficiently. Microsoft has, of course, secured this market by making sure every new Intel based machine comes with Windows 95 pre-installed. -john
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